A beautifully constructed private hospital, the Austrian Hospital at Choubra, was commandeered and staffed by the First Australian General Hospital, and provided 250 beds. This hospital also was, however, soon transferred to the Imperial authorities, and administered as a British hospital.
As the demand for accommodation for infectious cases increased, the artillery barracks at Abba.s.sia were taken over by the Australian authorities, and converted into an Infectious Diseases Hospital which ultimately accommodated 1,250 patients.
The needs continuing to press, the Montazah Palace at Alexandria was offered by His Highness the Sultan to Lady Graham as a convalescent hospital. The offer was gratefully accepted by the combined British and Australian Branches of the Red Cross Society. It is the only hospital in Egypt in the administration of which the Australian Red Cross takes part.
In addition to these major activities, there were many other minor changes. The introduction of cholera from Gallipoli was feared, and in the grounds of the Casino a cholera hospital was erected in antic.i.p.ated need, under the direction of the Board of Public Health, Egypt.
Fortunately it was never required, but it was ready for use, and would have been staffed by the First Australian General Hospital.
The final result, then, of all these expansions was as follows. The 520-bed hospital which landed in Egypt on January 25 had expanded into:
Beds
Heliopolis Palace Hotel 1,000 Luna Park 1,650 Atelier 450 Sporting Club 1,250 Choubra Infectious 250 Abba.s.sia Infectious 1,250 Venereal Diseases, Abba.s.sia 2,000 Al Hayat, Helouan (Convalescent) 1,250 Ras el Tin (Convalescent) 500 Montazah Palace (Convalescent, Australian moiety) 500 Grand Hotel, Helouan 500 ------ (Approximately) 10,600 ======
Almost the whole of this work was undertaken by the staff originally intended to manage a 520-bed hospital, at all events until the latest developments. Reinforcements did not arrive until June 15, and even then they were not long available.
To house the reinforcements of nurses two other buildings were taken at Heliopolis: Gordon House, opposite Luna Park, and the Palace of Prince Ibrahim Khalim, on the outskirts of Heliopolis.
It will be noted that the greater part of the expansion took place in the immediate vicinity of the Palace Hotel. This step was alike deliberate and necessary, for reasons that will be explained hereafter.
METHODS ADOPTED IN ORGANISING HOSPITALS
The methods adopted in organising these hospitals varied. In the first instance Lieut.-Col. Barrett was deputed by the D.M.S. Egypt to seek for the necessary buildings, and when these were approved to negotiate with the owners respecting the rent. This proceeding proved very tedious and difficult, and in pursuance of a General Army Order another and simpler plan was adopted by the appointment of an arbitration commission under the chairmanship of Sir Alexander Baird. To this commission the determination of rent and compensation was referred when the acquisition of the buildings received the sanction of the Commander-in-Chief. It need hardly be said that a good deal of tact was necessary in these proceedings, and every attempt was made to meet the wishes of owners with regard to the buildings commandeered.
Up till June 15 the number of nurses available was small, and it became quite obvious that, owing to the rush of sick and wounded, and the hot weather, some of the nurses would experience a breakdown. Lieut.-Col.
Barrett accordingly visited Alexandria, and arranged with the Australian and Egyptian branches of the British Red Cross Society to take over and equip two buildings as Rest Homes. These houses had been generously offered for this purpose to Her Excellency Lady MacMahon, wife of the High Commissioner for Egypt. One of these buildings was a large house belonging to a distinguished Egyptian and was situated in Ramleh, not very far from the beach, and the other was about eight miles from Alexandria at Aboukir Bay, the site of Nelson's victory. The latter consisted of a large seaside bungalow owned by Mr. Alderson, with an excellently fitted house-boat anch.o.r.ed some little distance from the sh.o.r.e.
The Australian Government undertook to pay for the maintenance of the nurses in these homes, which were placed under the management of a joint committee of the two branches of the Red Cross Society, under the presidency of Lady MacMahon. Nurses were then sent to these homes for a week at a time, and derived great benefit from the sea-bathing. These vacations formed a welcome and healthy break in work of excessive severity.
The following table indicates the dates of the princ.i.p.al changes which took place in the First Australian General Hospital.
CHRONOLOGY OF THE FIRST AUSTRALIAN GENERAL HOSPITAL
January 14.--Arrived at Alexandria.
January 24.--Arrived at Heliopolis.
February 7.--Established Aerodrome Camp.
April 6.--Luna Park taken over.
April 19.--Established Venereal Hospital, Abba.s.sia.
April 26.--The Casino taken over.
April 29.--Arrival of wounded.
May 1.--Prince Ibrahim Khalim's Palace taken over.
May 5.--Al Hayat Hotel taken over.
May 26.--The Atelier taken over.
May 27.--Gordon House taken over.
June 10.--Sporting Club taken over.
[Ill.u.s.tration: THE SPORTING CLUB, HELIOPOLIS.
_To face page 40_]]
THE POLICY OF EXPANSION
It has frequently been said in criticism of the Auxiliary Hospitals that it would have been better to have taken over Shepheard's Hotel, or the Savoy. Neither Shepheard's nor the Savoy (particularly the former) is very suitable for hospital purposes, since hotels containing a large number of small rooms involve much labour, and consequently a large staff, and the authorities were faced with the fact that there was no staff available. Surgeon-General Williams had cabled to Australia for reinforcements long before the crisis, but the reinforcements did not arrive until the middle of June. Clearly the sound policy was to obtain buildings as close to Heliopolis as possible, to administer them with a small staff, and to use them as overflow hospitals. Shepheard's or the Savoy would have required a very large staff, and it was not existent.
Even at Helouan the employment of civilians as officers was necessary in order to carry on. Arab servants were extensively employed by reason of the shortage of staff. They acted as menservants, sweepers, and the like.
MOTOR AMBULANCES
When the _Kyarra_ arrived in Egypt the British authorities did not possess any motor transport. There were some motor ambulances belonging to the New Zealand authorities and a few motor ambulances which accompanied the hospitals on the _Kyarra_, and which had been allotted to special units. It became obvious, however, that units might be placed in circ.u.mstances in which they did not require their ambulances, and others in circ.u.mstances in which they required more than their share; and accordingly Surgeon-General Williams decided to park the whole of these motor ambulances in two garages, a major one at Heliopolis and a smaller one at Ghezira, near No. 2 General Hospital. The garage at Heliopolis held at least thirty motor ambulances. It belonged to the Heliopolis Palace Hotel, and was equipped and furnished with a repairing plant at the expense of the Australian branch of the British Red Cross.
The Ghezira garage was dealt with in like manner, and in addition the rent was paid in the first instance by the Australian branch of the British Red Cross. The organisation of these garages involved considerable difficulty. The drivers employed were not recruited by the Commonwealth Government as belonging to the motor transport, since there was not any motor ambulance establishment, and they consequently only received the ordinary private's pay. Furthermore promotions were very difficult to effect. Nevertheless they saved the position. For a long while Egypt was absolutely dependent on these motor fleets for the removal of the sick and wounded, British or Australian. The work was excessive but the drivers responded splendidly. Difficulties arose through different units endeavouring to commandeer motor ambulances for their own use. This was met by a decision of the D.M.S. Egypt that ambulances were to be kept in the garages, and telephoned for when necessary. From the outset, the lack of runabout motors was severely felt, and ambulances were frequently employed for purposes which would have been better effected by runabouts.
[Ill.u.s.tration: THE FLEET OF AMBULANCES, HELIOPOLIS.
_To face page 42_]]
THE ARRIVAL OF THE SICK AND WOUNDED FROM THE FRONT
The end of April was reached. The bulk of the forces had disappeared from Egypt, and their position was only known by rumour; the hospital was gradually emptied of patients; Mena Camp had been abandoned, and Maadi Camp was reduced to small proportions. The weather was beautiful, and any one might have been easily lulled into a sense of false security. On April 28, however, a train-load of sick arrived. Its contents were not known until it arrived at the Heliopolis siding. The patients had come from Mudros, and numbered over 200 sick, including some 60 venereal cases, a matter of some interest in the light of subsequent events.
On the following day, however, without notice or warning of any description, wounded began to arrive in appalling numbers. On April 30 and May 1 and 2 no less than 1,352 cases were admitted at Heliopolis.
The expansion already indicated at Luna Park was at once effected, and some relief was obtained by transferring the lighter cases to Mena House--some seventeen miles distant. The last train-load of wounded arrived in the early morning of May 2, and deserves special notice, as many of the men were very seriously injured. There were about 100 cases; the train arrived at midnight, and was emptied by 4 o'clock in the morning. The bearing of the men badly injured was past praise. At 4 a.m. the main operating-room of the hospital bore eloquent testimony to the gravity of the work, which had been going on for many hours, and the exhausted condition of the staff further demonstrated what had occurred.
The staff at the hospital was quite inadequate to cope with the rush, notwithstanding the willingness of every one concerned, and accordingly volunteers from some of the Field Ambulances, and from the Light Horse units which were still in Egypt, were called for and readily obtained.
With the aid of the volunteers and by dint of universal devotion to duty the work was done, and on the whole done well.
The following table shows the staff available from April 2 to August 18, and the work required of it:
STAFF, ETC., OF NO. 1 GENERAL HOSPITAL AT HELIOPOLIS, INCLUDING AUXILIARY HOSPITALS
--------+---------+--------+---------+----------+------- Date.
Officers.
Nurses.
Rank and
Patients.
No. of
File.
Beds.
--------+---------+--------+---------+----------+------- April 25
28
92
163
495
893 26
29
92
187
504
893 27
28
92
184
479
897 28
28
92
184
479
895 29
28
92
197
631
925 30
28
92
204
1,082
1,100[1]
May 1
26
92
216
1,324
1,100 2
26
92
236
1,465
3
32
92
236
1,425
4
28
109
221
1,427
5
30
107
221
1,389
6
30
107
209
1,362
2,108 7
30
107
198
1,353
8
30
107
198
1,454
9
29
107
201
1,432
10
26
107
201
1,485
11
26
107
209
1,618
2,493
[Ill.u.s.tration: THE OPERATING ROOM, HELIOPOLIS PALACE HOTEL.
_To face page 44_]]
--------+---------+--------+---------+----------+------- Date.
Officers.
Nurses.
Rank and
Patients.
No. of
File.
Beds.
--------+---------+--------+---------+----------+------- May 12
26
107
209
1,846
2,487 13
28
107
249
2,293
2,592 14
29
107
244
2,302
2,726 15
29
107
244
2,218
2,705 16
32
107
261
2,208
2,679 17
30
107
259
2,165
2,646 18
30
107
252
2,187
2,940 19
30
107
274
1,911
20
30
107
302
1,904
21
29
107
290
1,889
22
29
107
287
1,856
23
29
107
287
1,812
24
29
104
287
1,811
25
32
104
299
1,777
26
32
104
295
1,768
27
32
104
295
1,805
28
32
104
317
1,781
29
35
143
319
1,931
30
35
143
322
1,918
31
35
143
322
1,820
June 1
35
143
322
1,876
2
35
143
315
1,873
3
36
143
314
1,869
4
36
147
277
1,866
5
35
147
277
1,872
6
36
147
264
1,786
7
36
147
264
1,627
8
34
147
253
1,709
9
34
147
253
2,474
2,805 10
32
133
247
2,211
11
32
133
247
2,605
12
32
133
262
2,375
13
32
133
263
2,384
14
34
133
264
2,324
15
34
133
264
2,324
16
54[2]
171[3]
463[4]
2,269
17
54
171
463
2,328
18
55
165
462
2,259
19
55
165
449
2,266
20
55
165
443
2,339
21
55
165
439
2,335
22
55
165
439
2,357
--------+---------+--------+---------+----------+------- Date.
Officers.
Nurses.
Rank and
Patients.
No. of
File.
Beds.
--------+---------+--------+---------+----------+------- June 23
55
165
439
2,159
24
55
165
438
2,157
25
55
163
438
2,003
26
55
163
429
1,926
27
55
163
429
1,887
28
55
163
429
2,121
29
54
163
429
2,150
30
55
163
429
2,135
July 1
55
163
430
2,332
2,956 2
58
163
430
2,305
3
58
163
405
2,187
4
55
163
403
2,131
5
55
163
395
2,131
6
55
157
325
2,032
7
55
157
395
1,982
8
56
157
395
2,107
9
55
157
397
2,120
10
56
157
393
2,145
11
56
157
399
2,115
12
52
157
399
2,072
13
52
155
394
2,130
14
52
155
394
2,087
15
52
155
391
2,101
16
52
153
407
1,930
17
51
155
410
1,885
18
51
153
561
1,785
19
73
234
616
1,713
20
73
234
616
1,782
21
79
231
565
1,716
22
79
231
374
1,487
23
78
223
570
1,450
24
75
226
568
1,476
25
75
226
548
1,438
26
75
226
548
1,447
27
74
226
555
1,434
28
74
226
555
1,692
29
75
226
544
1,695
30
75
224
449
1,452
31
70
224
457
1,362
Aug. 1
70
224
457
1,588
2,876 2
70
224
457
1,610
3
71
224
447
1,652
4
71
224
447
1,631
5
61
224
447
1,759
6
60
224
456
1,731
UNLOADING THE HOSPITAL TRAIN, HELIOPOLIS SIDING.
_To face page 47_]
--------+---------+--------+---------+----------+-------- Date.
Officers.
Nurses.
Rank and
Patients.
No. of
File.
Beds.
--------+---------+--------+---------+----------+-------- Aug. 7
60
224
456
1,793
8
60
224
424
1,927
9
59
224
432
1,902
10
58
224
432
339[5]
11
357
12
542
13
42
216
416
454
14
47
216
462
504
15
45
216
462
535
16
45
216
480
587
17
47
216
484
485
18
48
216
460
470