Hospital Ship"Solace 1915" |
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Within sixteen days, she renamed SOLACE and fitted out as an "ambulance ship," complete with a large operating room, steam disinfecting apparatus, ice machine, steam laundry plant, cold storage rooms, and an elevator. She could accommodate two hundred patients in her berths, swinging cots and staterooms. Her hurricane deck was enclosed with canvas to be used as a contagious disease ward. The vessel's fresh water tanks held 37,000 gallons of fresh water, and her system of evaporators and distillers maintained the supply. She was given gifts of supplies and equipment from groups such as the Rhode Island Sanitary and Relief Association and the National Society of Colonial Dames, gaining an X-ray machine, a carbonating machine, etc. SOLACE's crew included a surgeon, three passed assistant surgeons, three hospital stewards (one of which was a skilled embalmer) eight trained nurses, a cook, four messmen and two laundrymen. The ship and her crew had "the honor of inaugurating antiseptic surgery at sea. "The vessel also had twenty contract nurses who were members of the Graduated Nurses' Protective association.
The vessel was commissioned on April 14, 1898 and placed under the command of Commander A. Dunlap.
After being resupplied and outfitted with an additional ice machine in New York, she again steamed south to the war zone.
In February of 1899, she steamed for California, going by way of Europe, the Middle East, Far East, and Hawaii, reaching Mare Island on May 27, where she was overhauled.
Recommissioned on June 3, 1908, the vessel traveled in the Pacific, before steaming to Charleston, South Carolina to be decommissioned again on April 14, 1909.
On Jannuary 1, 1919. the vessel aided in rescuing the crew of the NORTHERN PACIFIC of Fire Island, New York, which was returning from Europe with wounded World War One veterans. |
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