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[5] Base Hospital No.5 was organized in February 1916 and mobilized in May 1917, stopping at Fort Totten, before boarding the RMS Saxonia for Falmouth, England. [2] It was the second hospital unit to leave for Europe after the first, No. 4. [6] The hospital personnel were some of the only passengers on the ship, which was carrying munitions.
The nine hotels had a total capacity of 3,600 and were titled the Convalescent Hospital No. 1 but when Base Hospital NO. 99 arrived on November 26, 1918 its title was changed to "Base Hospital." [2] The first patients, 252 French wounded, arrived on April 9, and the first American patients, 358 in number, were admitted April 11, 1918. This ...
Base Hospital No. 2, Camp Meade, Maryland, February 1919 ... Base Hospital No. 23, Camp Upton, New York, May 1919 ... Named Hospital Centers, American Expeditionary ...
American Base Hospital No. 1; American Base Hospital No. 5; American Base Hospital No. 17; American Base Hospital No. 20; American Base Hospital No. 36; American Base Hospital No. 57; American Base Hospital No. 116; American Base Hospital No. 238
The following are former United States Army medical facilities. This category includes medical care facilities (hospitals, clinics, etc), but excludes strictly medical research facilities (not primarily for patient care) run by the Army, which have their own category.
This position was, officially, part of the American Red Cross. [5] Roberts was stationed at the American Base Hospital Number 2 at Étretat, on the coast of Normandy, working as head of one of the wards for wounded soldiers. [1] [6] The hospital was responsible for caring for American and British casualties of the war.
American Base Hospital No. 1; American Base Hospital No. 5; American Base Hospital No. 17; ... This page was last edited on 23 May 2020, at 23:58 (UTC).
In February 1919 five of these hospital-bound Thai soldiers died at the American Base Hospital No. 57 in Paris. [2] The unit returned to America on August 22, 1919, aboard the Kaiserin Augusta Victoria, and was demobilized soon after. [2] [4] Medical Officers Training Camp, Camp Greenleaf – 1918