On 1 November 1917, Base Camp Hospital No. 5 took over the BEF hospital that had been operating out of the casino in Boulogne-sur-Mer. In this location, so close to England, they provided temporary care, food, and beds for those waiting to be transported home, as well as their usual duties. The threat of air raids continued at their new site, and the casino was an especially easy target. On 22 December 1917, bombers hit the medical stores, the base's bakery and other sites, killing 52 people and wounding 172. This constant threat added to the great relief felt by the personnel when leave was granted after nine months of work. The transition to General Hospital No. 13 also marked changes in staff. Around this time other American units were arriving, and many of the senior medical staff were in high demand for training or for detached units. Maj. Harvey Cushing, Cpt. Elliott Cutler, Cpt. Samuel Harvey and Lt. William Terhune were all transferred to AEF hospitals to help train them as they arrived. Head Nurse
Carrie Hall was called up to be the chief nurse for the American Red Cross for Great Britain in May 1918 and was succeeded by Rose Butler at the hospital. A number of other staff were detached to Mobile Hospital No. 6, which was set up in Deuxnouds-aux-Bois for the
Meuse-Argonne offensive. General Hospital No. 13 was considerably smaller than No. 11, but with the arrival of AEF forces, it meant for the first time they were often treating American casualties. First, a large influx of wounded from the
33rd American Division who had been at the
Somme. And soon after, when the British began their final assault on the
Montdidier area in early August 1918. From them until the end of the war, they saw a heavy succession of casualties from those of the
27th and
30th Infantry Divisions fighting at
Kemmelberg and
Messines Ridge on the
Hindenburg Line with the British, and from the
37th and
91st serving with the French in Belgium. Even after the armistice was declared, sick and wounded continued to arrive from forward hospitals through November and December. Finally, at the beginning of February 1919, the hospital stopped taking patients. In the twenty months of active service, Base Hospital No. 5 treated over 45,837 patients, both surgical and medical (41,015 were British and 4,822 Americans). The record number of patients treated in one day was 964. Many of these included those suffering from the
1918 flu pandemic. Numbers of fatalities were kept to a minimum through the careful study and experiments of Cpts. A.V. Bock, and G.P. Denny, with the vigilant attention of the nurses in the quarantine wards: Eva Clements, Ruth Conklin, Mary Cummings, Gertrude Gerrard, Margaret Leavitt, Edna Moir, and Eva Parmelee. The highest number of casualties the hospital received in one day was 964. On 6 April 1919, the enlisted men boarded the
SS Graf Waldersee and sailed for New York. They remained at
Camp Merritt for six days before arriving at
Camp Devens to be demobilized between 29 April and 2 May 1919. ==
The Vanguard==