Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
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.
Rockefeller War Demonstration Hospital (Also known as United States Army Auxiliary Hospital No. 1.), 5 April 1919 [1] United States Army General Hospital, Fort Bayard , New Mexico, Transferred to United States Public Health Service , 1920 [ 2 ]
American Base Hospital No. 238; A. American Base Hospital No. 1; Template:American base hospitals during WWI This page was last edited on 7 October 2024, at 03:52 ...
Amabel Scharff Roberts (1891-1918) was an American nurse who was the first nurse from the U.S. to die in France during World War I. [1] Roberts was born in Madison, New Jersey. [2] She graduated from Vassar College in 1913. [3] Roberts then went on to work and study at Columbia University's Presbyterian Hospital, completing her coursework there ...
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.
Base Hospital No. 116 was the third unit to arrive in the area. Taking control of a type A barracks, with crisis expansion in marquee tents, giving a total capacity of 2,000 beds. Its first patient was received June 2, 1918, with its new operating room opening just days before the above photograph was taken on June 15, 1918. [ 2 ]
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
[1] Base Hospital No. 17 was the first American organization to arrive at that station, where it functioned as an independent hospital, until January 8, 1919. At Dijon, the unit was assigned the Hospital St. Ignace (French Auxiliary Hospital No. 77), then operated by the French Army. The French had about 230 patients in the hospital when the ...