Actions

Difference between revisions of "1st Australian Dermatological Hospital"

From Our Contribution

(Patients)
(Soldier Patients by date admitted)
 
(93 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 6: Line 6:
 
| subheader      =  
 
| subheader      =  
  
|  image        = [[File:Bulford_Hospital_overview.jpg|400px|]]
+
|  image        = [[File:1st_ADH1.jpg|400px]]
| caption        =  
+
| caption        = 1st ADH Colour Patch
|  image2      = [[File:Bulford_Hospital.jpg|400px|]]
+
|  image2       = [[File:Bulford_Hospital_overview.jpg|400px|]]
| caption2       = Bulford Military Hospital (1ADH)
+
| caption2      =
 +
|  image3       = [[File:Bulford_Hospital.jpg|400px|]]
 +
| caption3       = Bulford Military Hospital (1ADH)
  
  
Line 38: Line 40:
  
 
==General Information==
 
==General Information==
 +
Initially established in Abbassia, Egypt during 1915. It later in August - September 1916 relocated to Bulford in England.
 +
 
The British Army had started to build training camps and garrisons on the Salisbury Plain in Wiltshire in the late 1890’s. Once such location was at Bulford which was greatly expanded during the war, becoming home to a number of the New Zealand Regiments. The site also included a hospital and this was passed to the jurisdiction of the Australians who established it as a specialist hospital for venereal diseases, becoming known as 1ADH.  At its peak 1ADH was able to accommodate over 1,500 patients, some of which were under guard. Security however was not tight and going absent without leave relatively simple. Eventually criminal patients were treated at Lewes Prison in Sussex.
 
The British Army had started to build training camps and garrisons on the Salisbury Plain in Wiltshire in the late 1890’s. Once such location was at Bulford which was greatly expanded during the war, becoming home to a number of the New Zealand Regiments. The site also included a hospital and this was passed to the jurisdiction of the Australians who established it as a specialist hospital for venereal diseases, becoming known as 1ADH.  At its peak 1ADH was able to accommodate over 1,500 patients, some of which were under guard. Security however was not tight and going absent without leave relatively simple. Eventually criminal patients were treated at Lewes Prison in Sussex.
  
Line 44: Line 48:
 
Today Bulford Camp is one of the main garrisons for the British Army.
 
Today Bulford Camp is one of the main garrisons for the British Army.
  
 +
==Staff==
 +
*[[Walter David Francis Kerridge]] 20 Jun - 27 Nov 1917
 +
 +
===Soldier Patients by date admitted===
  
 +
The number of days includes not only the time in Bulford, but other hospitals prior to admittance as it is the number of non effective days charged against the soldier's pay
  
==Staff==
+
''1916 Abbassia Egypt''<br />
 +
* † [[David Dickson Waddell]] 15 Jan - 17 Mar 1916 (62 days)
 +
* [[Henry Thomas (Harry) Brear]] 8 Apr - 9 May 1916 (33 days)
 +
* [[William Edward Reed]]  2 - 16 May 1916 (total 124 days)
 +
* [[Cyril Augustus Tonkin]] 13 May - 16 Jun 1916
 +
* [[Alexander Robinson]] 15 May - 12 Jun 1916 (total 39 days)
 +
* † [[Ernest Clifford Noyce]] 22 May - 16 Jun 1916 (total 28 days)
  
==Patients==
+
''1916 England''
''1916''<br />
+
* [[Arthur Patrick Joyce]] 2 Aug - 11 Sep 1916 (total 41 days)
*[[John Alexander Adamson]] 13 Oct 1916 - 21 Apr 1917 total 193 days
+
* [[Henry Ernest Howard]] 10 Aug - 30 Sep 1916 (total 52 days)
 +
* [[Herbert Fuhrmann]] 1 Sep 1916 - 22 Jan 1917 (total 143 days)
 +
* [[Fritz Robert Jaentsch]] 9 Sep - 11 Nov 1917 (total 77 days)
 +
* [[Stanley Victor Coney]] 11-29 Sep 1916 (total 19 days)
 +
* [[William Edward McKenna]] 11 Sep - 27 Oct 1916 (total 72 days)
 +
* [[John Alexander Spilsbury]] 13 Sep - 29 Oct 1916 (total 46 days)
 +
* [[John Alexander Adamson]] 13 Oct 1916 - 21 Apr 1917 (total 193 days)
 +
* † [[Thomas Joseph Sheehan]] 14 Nov - 18 Dec 1916 (total 158 days)
 +
* [[Angus Dearden]] 9 Dec 1916 - 26 Feb 1917 (total 77 days)
 +
* [[Ernest Wright Holroyd]] 16 Dec 1916 - 14 Mar 1917 (total 89 days)
 +
* [[James Owen Horrocks]] 16 Dec 1916 - 15 Mar 1917 (total 89 days)
  
 
''1917''
 
''1917''
*[[Charles Blunt]]  10 - 20 Mar 1917 total 69 days
+
* [[Charles Blunt]]  10 Jan - 20 Mar 1917 (total 69 days)
*[[William Bowman]] 31 Mar - 8 Aug 1917 total 131 days
+
* † [[James Willie Bush]] 3 Mar - 12 May 1917 (total 68 days)
*[[Beverley Loxton Bennett]] Oct/Nov 1917
+
* [[Ernest Ball DCM]] 27 Mar - 15 May 1917 (total 50 days)
*[[John James Lynes Chester]] 25 Oct - 29 Dec 1917 66 days
+
* [[William Michael Bowman]] 31 Mar - 8 Aug 1917 (total 131 days)
*[[Henry Ogilvie Allom (Jnr)]] Nov- Dec 1917 total 38 days
+
* [[John Donald Stalker]] 24 Apr - 16 May 1917 (total 23 days)
*[[Claude Francis Cooper]] 27 Dec 1917 - 9 Mar 1918) 50 days
+
* [[Francis William Swann]] 24 May - 12 Jun 1917 (total 20 days)
 +
* [[Frank Halliday]] 3 - 21 Sep 1917 (total 19 days)
 +
* † [[Beverley Loxton Bennett]] 24 Jul - 21 Aug  1917
 +
* [[Arthur Patrick Joyce]] 2 Aug - 11 Sep 1916
 +
* [[Patrick Joseph O'Brien]] 1 Oct 1917 - 26 Mar 1918 (total 177 days)
 +
* [[John James Lynes Chester]] 25 Oct - 29 Dec 1917 (total 66 days)
 +
* [[Richard Evans MM]] 21 Nov - 31 Dec 1917 total 41 days)
 +
* [[Henry Ogilvie Allom (Jnr)]] Nov- Dec 1917 (total 38 days)
 +
* [[George Weston Firns]] 15 Nov 1917 - 16 Feb 1918 (total 96 days)
 +
* [[Arnold Thorp]] 11 - 20 Dec 1917 (10 days)
 +
* [[James Owen Horrocks]]16 Dec 1917 - 15 Mar 1918 (total 42 days only)
 +
* [[Claude Francis Cooper]] 27 Dec 1917 - 9 Mar 1918 (total 50 days)
 +
* [[Douglas Campbell Wills Winning]] several visits from mid 1917 until early 1918
  
 
''1918''
 
''1918''
*[[Hubert Maitland Armstrong MM]] 13 - 25 Apr 1918 and  - 6 May 1918 (total 17 days)
+
* [[Ellis Henry Hill]] 13 - 18 Feb 1918 (Non VD)
*[[Albert George Bullock]] 12 Jul - 7 Oct 1918 (88 days)
+
* [[William Henry Gibbs]] 28 Mar - 15 Apr 1918 (Non VD)
*[[George Sydney Cook]] 20 Oct 1918 - 7 Mar 1919 (129 days)
+
* [[Hubert Maitland Armstrong MM]] 13 - 25 Apr 1918 and  - 6 May 1918 (total 17 days)
*[[John Thomas Clements]] 27 Dec 1918 - 25 Feb 1919 (total of 148 days includes hospitals in France)
+
* [[Albert Helliwell]] 27 May - 1 Jun 1918 (Non VD)
 +
* [[George Charles Unwin]] 29 May - 1 Jun 1919
 +
* [[William Thomson]] 26 Jun - 7 Oct 1918
 +
* [[Albert George Bullock]] 12 Jul - 7 Oct 1918 (total 88 days)
 +
* [[Sydney Chadwick McDonald]] 17 - 21 May 1918
 +
* [[Sidney Herrick Carter]] 2 days in June 1918
 +
* [[Clarence Victor Watson]] 23 - 28 Jul 1918
 +
* [[Claude Francis Cooper]] 8 - 26 Aug 1918 (total 19 days)
 +
* [[Frazer Paterson Henderson]] 6 Sep - 28 Nov 1918 (84 days)
 +
* [[George Sidney Cook]] 20 Oct 1918 - 7 Mar 1919 (total 129 days)
 +
* [[George Joseph Harris]] 25 Oct - 26 Dec 1918
 +
* [[Clarence Victor Watson]] 26 Oct - 2 Nov 1918
 +
* [[Albert John Llewellyn Reed]] 5 - 23 Dec (19 days)
 +
* [[John Thomas Clements]] 27 Dec 1918 - 25 Feb 1919 (total of 148 days includes hospitals in France)
 +
* [[Hubert Maitland Armstrong MM]] 31 Dec 1918 (several short periods)
  
 
''1919''
 
''1919''
*[[Lyndon Vivian Brady]] 16 Jan - 15 Feb 1919 (31 days)
+
* [[Charles Henry Partridge]] 11 Jan - 17 May 1919 (total 127 days)
*[[Henry Ogilvie Allom (Jnr)]] Apr 1919 total 3 days
+
* [[Lyndon Vivian Brady]] 16 Jan - 15 Feb 1919 (total 31 days)
*[[George Charles Unwin]] May 1919
+
* [[Eric Oswald Strang]] 14 - 17 Feb 1919 (total 51 days )
 +
* [[Aubrey Turner]] 18 - 20 Feb 1919 (total 3 days)
 +
* [[Leo Patrick Kane]] 3 - 22 Mar 1919 (total 30 days)
 +
* [[Harold Empsall]] 19 - 22 Mar 1919 (total 13 days)
 +
* [[Egbert Robert Trethowan Reeves]] 21 Mar - 11 Jul 1919 (total 113 days)
 +
* [[Henry Ogilvie Allom (Jnr)]] Apr 1919 (total 3 days)
 +
* [[Edwin Lawrence Reed]] 19 Apr - 27 May 1919 (42 days)
 +
* [[Henry Ogilvie Allom (Jnr)]] 28 Apr - 1 May (8 days)
 +
* [[George Charles Unwin]] May 1919
 +
* [[John George (Jack) Ray]] 17 May - 12 Jul 1919
 +
* [[John George (Jack) Ray]] 22 May - 12 Jul 1919 (total 56 days)
  
  
Line 75: Line 136:
  
 
[[Category:Hospitals]]
 
[[Category:Hospitals]]
 +
[[Category:AIF Units]]

Latest revision as of 19:18, 21 August 2024

1st ADH1.jpg
1st ADH Colour Patch
Bulford Hospital overview.jpg
Bulford Hospital.jpg
Bulford Military Hospital (1ADH)
History
Name 1st Australian Dermatological Hospital
Where formed Bulford
Date formed November 1916
Capacity 1,500 patients
Locations Codford, England

General Information

Initially established in Abbassia, Egypt during 1915. It later in August - September 1916 relocated to Bulford in England.

The British Army had started to build training camps and garrisons on the Salisbury Plain in Wiltshire in the late 1890’s. Once such location was at Bulford which was greatly expanded during the war, becoming home to a number of the New Zealand Regiments. The site also included a hospital and this was passed to the jurisdiction of the Australians who established it as a specialist hospital for venereal diseases, becoming known as 1ADH. At its peak 1ADH was able to accommodate over 1,500 patients, some of which were under guard. Security however was not tight and going absent without leave relatively simple. Eventually criminal patients were treated at Lewes Prison in Sussex.

The Codford Anzac Cemetery contains the graves of 31 Australians and 66 New Zealanders.

Today Bulford Camp is one of the main garrisons for the British Army.

Staff

Soldier Patients by date admitted

The number of days includes not only the time in Bulford, but other hospitals prior to admittance as it is the number of non effective days charged against the soldier's pay

1916 Abbassia Egypt

1916 England

1917

1918

1919