Sometime around 1949, Shell was reoccupied by
Mission Aviation Fellowship.
MAF recognized the importance of Shell due to its
airstrip and road access to Quito. They used it as their main base of operations for
mission work in Ecuador, and it was also the home base of MAF pilots
Nate Saint and Johnny Keenan. In 1954 Saint, a former member of the
U.S. Army, welcomed General
James Doolittle to Shell. Doolittle was an
Army Air Forces aviator who rose to fame during what became known as
"Doolittle's Raid" over
Tokyo in 1942. General Doolittle was visiting Ecuador for then-
President Eisenhower on a fact-finding mission for the
CIA. World-wide attention focused on Shell in January 1956 at the news of the disappearance of Saint and four other missionaries –
Jim Elliot,
Pete Fleming,
Ed McCully, and
Roger Youderian. They had been trying to reach the
Huaorani tribe, and had been making
aerial reconnaissance missions. When they landed in Huaorani territory they were killed by the natives, their bodies thrown into the
Curaray River. Once again, Shell served as a base of operations, this time for the families of the victims and rescue workers. Two years later, in 1958, the Hospital Vozandes Del Oriente opened its doors as the first hospital in that region of Ecuador. The hospital was the dream of Nate Saint, who donated both land and time to work on its construction before his death in 1956. It served an estimated 65,000 people who lived on the eastern side of the Andes and in the jungle. In 1985 a new Hospital Vozandes was opened on the other side of the Motolo River, and the old hospital was converted to a guest house, lasting until 2007 when weather and
termites forced it to be torn down. The new Hospital Vozandes Del Oriente was closed at the end of 2013, after 55 years of service in Pastaza. In August 1964, Nate Saint Memorial School opened in Shell for missionary children. The school was founded by Charlotte Dillon Swanson, wife of Wallace Swanson, a missionary physician at the HCJB Hospital Voz Andes. She began by teaching her own children at home in 1962 and later expanded the school to include other missionary children. After she raised money for a building she named the school in memory of Nate Saint. ==Today==