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The 24th Field Hospital
The 24th Field hospital was activated at Camp White Oregon on August
19, 1942. Initially, the cadre consisted of 24 enlisted personnel
and one officer. When fully staffed the Field Hospital could perform
approximately eighty operations a day. A field hospital platoon
supported an infantry division and was usually located at the level
of the clearing station. Its function was to operate solely on
casualties hit in the chest, abdomen, or large bone of the leg. Of
course, other wounds were fixed at the same time, but the idea was
to bring major surgery as close to the line as possible. All other
casualties followed a route back to the evac hospitals. Each of the
field hospital's three platoons consisted of about 60 enlisted men,
six nurses, and about a half dozen surgeons.
The first commanding officer of the 24th was 1st Lieutenant Alvin M.
Josephs, M. D. By November or 1942, the 24th would have two other
commanding officers with Lt. Col. L. B. Hanson, M. D. assuming
command on that date.
>Evacuation hospitals had 53 nurses each and could accommodate up to
750 patients. Doctors operated on patients sent from field
hospitals. Patients with postoperative stomach wounds were routinely
kept in an evacuation hospital ten days before they were sent on,
and those with chest wounds were usually kept at least five days
before they were evacuated. Critically wounded patients needing
specialized treatment were air evacuated to station and general
hospitals. Stable patients requiring a long recuperation were sent
on via hospital ship. Station and general hospitals advanced more
slowly than field and evacuation hospitals and were usually housed
in semipermanent locations.
Over 85 percent of those soldiers operated on in field hospitals
survived. When postoperative patients grew strong enough, they were
transported by ambulance to evacuation hospitals.
The Camp White Hospital was opened on August 19, 1942, it was served
by the Medical Division, Service Command Unit 1913. Initially
military personnel were treated at the Sacred Heart Hospital in
Medford, but on the 24th of July, 1942, temporary buildings were
made available for the care of the less serious cases.
When finished, the Station Hospital was the best equipped 1400 bed
military medical facility on the west coast and contained more beds
than both Medford Hospitals do today. It has been said that it was
constructed of brick rather than wood because of the shortage of
timber caused by military camp construction throughout the United
States. It was also rumored that the brick construction was the
result of the military realizing that they would need several
hospitals to treat the injured after the war. By April of 1945,
casualties were returning from overseas at 1200 a day with 50,000
having returned during the previous 3 months.
A second hospital training facility was located in the north-west
corner of the Camp. This was the Evacuation Hospital. It was
designed for the tactical units and would train more field hospitals
than any other post in the country. One of these, the 20th field
hospital' would be honored for it gallantry in the March, 44 issue
of Life Magazine. The 20th was cited for it's action on Attu.
SCU 1913 not only staffed the post medical facility but also was
involved in the training of the Tactical Hospitals. By August, 1943,
these included 81st, 80th, 79th and 83rd General Hospitals, the
316th, 318th Station Hospitals, the 23rd and 24th Field Hospitals,
the 45th, 44th, 43rd, 42nd and 41st Portable Surgical Hospitals.
Each 1000 bed General Hospital had a compliment of 105 nurses, 55
commissioned officers and 500 enlisted men. Because of the shortage
of authorized medical officers assigned to the station hospital,
medical personnel from the tactical hospitals were assigned to the
Station Hospital and provided medical service as well as serving as
teachers in the Station Hospital's medical school.
The 24th would eventually see service in the Pacific Theater serving
on Bouganville and Japan
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