1st Australian Auxiliary Hospital
From Our Contribution
General Information
Opened 19 January 1915 at Luna Park, Cairo, Egypt. Closed 10 July 1916, and designation transferred to Harefield establishment.
In November 1914, Mr and Mrs Charles Hillyard-Leake (Australians resident in the UK) had offered the property known as "Harefield Park", Harefield, Middlesex, to be used as a home for convalescent wounded soldiers of the A.I.F. Their offer was accepted in December 1914.
At the time it was accepted, authorities estimated that the house would accommodate 50 soldiers in winter and up to 150 during spring and summer. At the height of its use the property accommodated over 1,000 beds.
The first staff for this hospital left Australia on HMAT A54 Runic in April 1915 and comprised 1 Captain Commanding Officer and his staff, along with a Matron and five nurses. Staff levels in 1916 were: Medical Staff of 1 Lieutenant Colonel, 5 Majors, 12 Captains, 2 Hon Lieutenant Dentists; Nursing Staff of 1 Matron; 20 Nursing Sisters; 36 Staff Nurses; 6 Masseuses (male or female); Administration/Support Staff of 1 Sergeant Major, 15 Sergeants/Staff Sergeants, 10 Corporals, 9 Privates, and a large number of volunteers.
The hospital was tasked with providing a rest home to allow soldiers of all ranks to recuperate after sickness or injury, and as a depot for collecting invalids for return to Australia. However, in time all hospital functions were performed, and by 1918 it was a centre for eye, ear, nose and throat diseases. Mostly they were surgical cases and it was possible for special attention to be given to amputees before their return to Australia.
The war hospital closed on 31st December 1918, but today the site is home to Harefield Hospital, one of the top cardiac hospitals in the world. Links to its Australian past remain, with pictures of the men that were treated at the hospital in the Anzac Centre, opened in 2003 and home to the Out-Patients Department, Echo-cardiology, the transplant clinic and two cardiac operating theatres. In addition the annual Anzac Day service is held at St. Mary’s church where 112 Australian servicemen from the First World War are buried.
At its peak there were more than 40 buildings in use. A small magazine titled Harefield Park Boomerang was regularly produced (a 2 volume bound collection of these are held at the Australian War Memorial Library).
Staff
- John Thomas Buckland 1 Oct to 12 Nov 1917
- Edith Marion Wilson 22 Nov 1917 to 4 Nov 1918
Soldier Patients by date admitted
Egypt
1915
- John Alexander Adamson 26 Sep - 22 Nov 1915
- Edward (Ted) Harry Darby 8 Aug - 28 Sep 1915
1916
- John Francis Grabham MM 31 Jan - 13 Mar 1916
- Victor Thomas Emanuel Compassi 9- 19 Mar 1916
- Herbert William Coxhead 25 May 1916
England
1916
- William Edward Clarence Green 31 May - 24 Jun 1916
- Arthur Charles Cam 14 - 20 Jun 1916
- William Harrington Edward Watson 5 - 11 Jul 1916
- James Barber 30 Aug - 8 Sep 1916
- John Paterson Henderson 6 Sep - 12 Nov 1916
- Edgar Leslie Livermore 13 Sep - 25 Oct 1916
- John Hall 16 Nov - 7 Dec 1917
- Reginald Peter Lewis 27 Nov 1916 - 8 Jan 1917
- Patrick Wilford Kelly 8 - 20 Dec 1916
1917
- Thomas Bird 24 Jan - 20 Feb 1917
- William Heath 11 Apr 1917 - 26 Apr 1917
- George Henry Aspinall 25 Jun 1917 - 3 Jul 1917
- Donald Gordon Melville Huggins 17 - 24 Jul 1917
- John Thomas Buckland 21 Aug - 16 Sep 1917
- Albert Victor Berry 27 Aug - 3 Sep 1917
- Arthur Candish 28 Aug - 4 Sep 1917
- John Hall 3 Oct - 27 Nov 1917
- John Humphrey Coyle 19 - 23 Oct 1917
- Albert Edgar Bishop 27 Nov - Dec 1917
- Leslie Jeffery Harvey 18 Dec 1917 - 5 Jan 1918
- John Thomas Buckland 27 - 31 Dec 1917
1918
- Albert George Bullock 10 Mar - 10 Apr 1918
- William Francis Clements 22 May - 1 Jun 1918
- Ernest Henry Chisholm 23 Feb - 8 Mar 1918
- John Humphrey Coyle 3 - 13 May 1918
- David Forbes Abernethy 17 Sep 1918
- William Grenfell 3 - 20 Nov 1918
- Joseph Clough 10 Dec 1918 - 14 Jan 1919