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Reproduced with permission from
The Beacon Supplement July 29, 1987
Contributed by Carol (Mercer) Walsh - Class 1954
NURSE ROSE SHEPPARD RECALLS HER DAYS AT THE OLD GANDER HOSPITAL
Though
she served only a short time at the Sir Frederick Banting Memorial
Hospital, Rose Gallaher-McGettigan, now Mrs. Doug Sheppard, has fond
recollections of the institution and of the spirit of good will that
prevailed among its small staff.
A native of
Ireland, Rose received her nursing training in England and, because of the
nursing shortage here, was recruited in 1953 to serve at the Banting
Hospital on Gander Airport. At that time, she says, there was one doctor,
Dr. James G. Paton, and three or four registered nurses on staff. Dr.
Paton was later joined by Dr. A.E. Shapter.
The nurses
worked a 60 hour week and had one weekend a month and one half-day a week
off. The doctors worked practically around the clock. They were always
on call, attending to the medical emergencies that occurred after hours,
many of which were maternity calls, considering that Gander was made up
essentially of young married couples.
Nursing
assistants at the hospital were untrained, but, says Rose, did a wonderful
job. They were quite a help at the facility with such a small staff and
large
area to serve.
The staff was so limited, in fact, that
only one nurse would be on night duty. This nurse would handle all
admissions and needs that would crop up during the night.
The hospital served not only Gander but
the entire area and was usually filled to capacity. People from Gambo or
the Gander Bay area would sometimes arrive in the middle of the night and
wait until they could see the doctor the next day. “They accepted the
long wait and never complained,” says Rose, “They realized how busy the
doctor was.”
The facility
contained male, female and children’s wards as well as an operating
theatre. The patient wards were open, but there were a couple of
semi-private maternity rooms. The doctor and nurses residence adjoined
the building which was painted a “terrible” green, Rose remembers

Left: Sometimes the stork races a plane in to Gander. This German wife of
a U.S. Army Sergeant, while enroute to join her husband, deplaned at
Gander to become a mother. She is shown here with her baby being helped
aboard an A.O.A. plane to resume her journey to the United States.
The maternity and children’s wards were
the busiest, although a lot of minor surgeries were performed. Anesthetic
was ether given by the nurses as there was no anesthesiologist on
staff. “Considering the basic facilities, there were very few
complications resulting from these surgeries,” she says.
The hospital provided other services
such as pre-natal care known as a well-baby clinic. Children were
inoculated at the hospital and dental services were provided every few
month when a dentist would visit from St. John’s. Dental service was very
poor at that time and receiving dental care usually meant getting the
bothersome tooth pulled.
The hospital also contained a “crash
ward.” This ward was never used while Rose was working there but she
remembers it being always kept sterile and ready in case of an emergency.
No one was allowed to use the ward as she found out innocently enough a
short time after arriving at Bunting.
Rose was working night duty alone on
one occasion when a group of people showed up, prepared to wait and see
the doctor the next day. Not believe that these people should have to sit
up and wait all night, she put them all to bed in the Crash Ward. The
nurse arriving on duty the next morning nearly had a heart attack, Rose
chuckles, when she saw the people sleeping comfortably in the Ward.
Needles to add, Rose never put anyone to bed there again.
Rose spent approximately a year and a
half working at the Bunting Hospital. She served a few months before
moving on to Placentia Cottage Hospital to become nurse-in-charge there.
She later returned to Banting to finish out her planned two year stay in
Newfoundland. In 1965 she moved to Nova Scotia but later moved back to
Gander with her new husband, Doug Sheppard, now mayor of Gander.
The years that followed continued to be
a very busy time for the hospital. In 1961, when terrible forest fires
threatened many places in northeast Newfoundland, the hospital played a
major role in caring for the many elderly, bedridden patients who had to
be evacuated from their homes.
Conditions improved at the institution
staff wise but the old military building was gradually deteriorating,
almost beyond repair. The town of Gander was growing rapidly and all
buildings near the runways, as was the hospital, were being demolished.
It was inevitable that the old hospital should be replaced and planning
for the new building began in 1960.
Dr. Paton spent many hours searching
for the ideal site for the new building and was deeply involved in its
planning up until his untimely death in February of 1962.
The first sod for the new hospital was
turned by Premier J.R. Smallwood august 7, 1961. Construction and
furnishings were completed in May of 1964. Recruitment of additional
staff had been ongoing for several months under the supervision of the
first Administrator, George Cummings.
On May 25, 1964, patients were
transferred from Banting Memorial to the new hospital which was officially
opened later that fall and appropriately named the James Paton Memorial
Hospital.
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