- Contributed by听
- Genevieve
- People in story:听
- Pat Davies (Nee Cowling)
- Location of story:听
- North Staffs. Royal Infirmary in Stoke-on-Trent
- Background to story:听
- Civilian
- Article ID:听
- A5179827
- Contributed on:听
- 18 August 2005
At lunch-time, about twelve o鈥檆lock, some nurses went off to have their lunch. The others stayed on and helped to feed the patients and then they would go to lunch.
After lunch, it was visiting. We had to go around and make sure all the patient鈥檚 hair was combed and there wasn鈥檛 a spot of anything on the sheets; if there was, we had to change it 鈥 even in war time. The linen was dated and we had to put certain dated linen on the bottom - it was the bottom sheet because it was older, and the better, more recent sheet on the top. It was very nice linen actually. We weren鈥檛 allowed to leave any patient with a spot of anything. If you鈥檇 just done the bed and washed them and anything was spilled, you had to change it straight away. We weren鈥檛 allowed to leave anything looking messy. Anyway, we鈥檇 go around he patients, comb their hair, and sit them up then the visitors came in and we had all these flowers brought in and the Junior Nurse had to arrange the flowers.
As a Junior Nurse, I was on a women's surgical ward and I had this letter. It was from a naval officer from a corvette who was visiting his sister - 鈥淒ear Flower Lady, Dear Lady of the Flowers, I don鈥檛 really know your name but will you go out with me?鈥 I went out with him once or twice.
After the visitors went it was bed-pans and washings because patients were in bed much longer in those days; they weren鈥檛 ambulant as they are now.
On the surgical wards, you had lots more bad chests because the anaesthetics were longer and different so of course the patients were quite ill with these chests. Working in a mining community, if you left your apron on the chair under your bedroom window it was all spattered with black soot!
This story was submitted to the People鈥檚 War site by Becky Barugh of the 大象传媒 Radio Shropshire CSV Action Desk on behalf of Patricia Davies and has been added to the site with her permission. The author fully understands the site's terms and conditions.
See more of Pat's stories:
- 1) I suppose it was inevitable鈥
- 2) Getting used to being on the wards
- 3) The unchanging rota
- 4) Othopaedic Wards
- 5) The Miners
- 6) Keeping coffee warm in the sterilizer
- 7) Mouth gags and tongue clips
- 9) Theatres
- 10) The Nurse鈥檚 Home
- 11) The 鈥楪uinea Pig Club鈥
- 12) Mice in the washing and other tricks
- 13) Enamel washbowls on your heads
- 14) Extra Work
- 15) Shake and Shake鈥
- 16) Little Nurse
- 17) A lot of things were introduced during the War
- 18) Only two nights off
- 19) Making and Breaking
- 20) My little bucket and I
- My visit to post-War Germany
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