Interviewer: The Dieppe raid took place in August, 1942.
Did you get casualties from that?
Oh we did, yeah. When we knew when the Dieppe raid, the raid was
going to happen, they evacuated our hospital.
Everything, we didn't have a patient. But to keep the people in
the district thinking we were still going back and forth,
we wore our full uniform, our veils and everything.
On our bicycles, we went over to the hospital, the time we'd go
over to go on duty. The time we'd come off duty, we'd come back
to our quarters, and stayed there, to fool the public.
Interviewer: But the hospital was empty. (Yes, we had nobody at
all) and being made ready for these casualties?
Yes that's right and when we got to Dieppe and we had mostly
Winnipeg Camerons, that's what we had most of all.
I was on the surgical ward. And I had near all the Officers.
It was the Officers ward I was on, at the time.
I had some precious patients, believe me.
Interviewer: So their spirits were good?
Oh yes.
Interviewer: After the devastating loss at Dieppe, was the morale
of the men affected?
No, they were all ready to go more, they wanted to get back.
No we didn't have, it was really surprising. But one patient
that we had at Bramshott, he was an engineer. I don't know if
you've ever heard of him, Allen Piper. He lost both arms with a
grenade, and this is before we ever went overseas.
And ah he was in the Officers ward too. He was a Lieutenant at
that time. He had no arms and he was just a joy to look after.
He was blind, he had shrapnel in both eyes, he couldn't hear.
But if the door would blow closed form the wind of anything,
he would get it opened somewhere. He'd get attention, someone to
open the door for him. But, I still hear from him.
He's in Peterborough, Ontario.
He was the first one to have artificial arms.
And he wanted to go to the Officers mess. He wanted, they were
having a party, and he wanted to go over. He was a beautiful
dancer and he wanted to know if he could take one of the nursing
sisters. And I got a nursing sister to go with him over to the
engineer's. And he came back, he had a little cap made to put on
the stump of the arm with a pen in it, and a knife and fork in
another one, like a little dog muzzle.
Interviewer: That would be fairly revolutionary at that time?
At that time they had no artificial, it was some time after that.
And then that night he went to the dance, he could not dance.
He lost his balance with both arms gone but I still hear from him
Beautiful writing, and that's a joy.
I should have left that in the...
Interviewer: But have you kept in touch with many of the patients
that you'd had?
Oh, quite a number of them, yeah.