|
Following the German occupation of the city, her institution was placed at the disposal of the invading army, and despite being offered the chance to return to Britain, Miss Cavell decided to remain with her nurses.
In addition to her humanitarian work, over the following year Edith Cavell is credited with helping some 200 Allied soldiers to escape from German occupied territory. On 5 August 1915, she was arrested by the German authorities along with five of her associates. Brought to trial on 7 October, she was executed five days later by firing squad on the orders of the Governor General of Brussels.
![]() |
The Imperial War Museum acquired its collection of Edith Cavell papers over a number of years and from diverse sources. Of particular significance are the fragments of the diary kept by Miss Cavell during the German occupation of Brussels; the letters she wrote to her family and to members of her nursing school from the outbreak of war to her last days in prison; and the German documents relating to her arrest, trial and execution.