Tag Archives: Cenacle Patient Corporal Beck Liverpool Scots 1916.

20TH JUNE 1917: ONLY FOUR EMPTY BEDS HERE NOW – I HAVEN’T FOUND ANOTHER ARTIST YET.

Quarter Master, The Cenacle, Red Cross Hospital.

NURSE G. LEATHAM*. B.R.C.H. Atherton Street, New Brighton (1): LETTER to Pte BERTIE HIBBETT, 95, Foden Rd Walsall.

20th June 1917.

My Dear Hibbett,

Very many thanks for your photograph & the card you sent with it – it was just like you to do something out of the common.

Corporal J. Beck. 

Beck (2) told me that you had a job close your home now (3). I’m so glad that you were so lucky & I hope you’ll keep it till the end of the War – that is, of course if the work is congenial.

We have only four empty beds here now – some  (new patients) are Canadians (4) – but I don’t think there is anybody from your part of the world.

I haven’t found another artist yet, so I have to print my own labels etc. but I’m glad to say I have not run short of the Engagement Lists (5) yet – I should not like to come down to written ones again!

Fazakerley Hospital entrance, Liverpool.

I remember you asked in your letter for all the news of the King’s visit (6)– I cannot tell you very much as none of the staff went over to Fazakerley (7)– only the patients.

They started very early in the morning & went over in motors & ambulances & then had to stand for about two hours until the Queen came. The King was not with her  – she passed by all the men & spoke to one or two who were in front of our patients – then they came home.

Matron Gertrude Bellow

All the people here are well. Sister (8) is away for a week & Matron* has a bad cold.  I have been off with a bad septic throat – but fortunately it has made up its mind to leave me in peace.

The Sands, New Brighton.

Will you be coming up here for your summer holidays?(9).

I hope you and Mrs Hibbett are keeping well. 

 

What pictures are you painting now if you have any spare time?  The Dining Hall still looks O.K. (10).

Kindest regards.                                                                                                        Yours sincerely,

 

 

G. Leatham*

 

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ELIZABETH HIBBETT WEBB

‘Only four empty beds’. With the beginning of the 3rd Battle of Ypres the pressure on Hospitals back Home was mounting.

Nurse Leatham seems to have had an administrative post; maybe she is the Nurse in the photo above labelled ‘Quarter Master’ – probably in charge of Patient appointments & Nurses’ rotas, as well as stocks. She is obviously missing my father’s  artistic & calligraphy skills; he had made himself very useful in the nine months he had spent at The Cenacle. 

(1) Address ‘B.R.C.H. Atherton  Street’ – not found as separate Red Cross Hospital – most likely a Cenacle extension, to accommodate increasing numbers of wounded in the battles of 1917. 

(2) Corporal J. Beck: 1/10th Liverpool Scottish Regt., one of the 5 friends who shared Ward 10 at the Cenacle from July, 1916. Note in Pte Bertie’s Autograph Album:  ‘J. Beck underwent 10 operations‘ on his arm, presumably at Fazakerley Hospital, Liverpool).

(3) ‘A job close your home’: My father may have continued his mining surveyor apprenticeship with Mr C.F. Nightingale, Lichfield Street, Walsall, the year before entering Lichfield Theological College, in1918.

Vimy Ridge Memorial from the air.

(4Canadian Expeditionary Force. C.E.F.  Canadians arriving at The Cenacle by 20th June 1917, may have been wounded in Battle of Messines 7-14th June, one of opening battles of 3rd Battle of Ypres. 

Canadian Victory, Vimy Ridge. 9th-12th April 1917.

NB Many UK emigrants to Canada (including perhaps men of my mother’s family) returned immediately War broke out, to serve in their local regiments. Others joined the C.E.F.  In the Battle of Arras they captured the notorious Vimy Ridge 9th-12th April, 1917. (10,000 killed and wounded). My father fought there with the South Staffords in 1916. Hibbett Letters: 13th; 26th March; 2nd;14th;16th April 1916.

Vimy Ridge Memorial to Canadian Missing.

The Vimy Ridge Memorial  commemorates 11,285 Canadians killed in WW1 who have no known grave.

 

 

Walter Seymour Allward. 1876 -1955.

An awesome sight, set high on the lofty hill to draw eye & foot from miles around, the Memorial was designed by Walter Seymour Allward (Canadian sculptor) & erected on land ceded to Canada by France in 1922.

5) Engagement List: Red Cross volunteers’ names with dates of engagement. [Ida Neal Hibbett’s Red Cross Record gives her date as 1/09/1918]

Queen Mary of Teck. 1867 -1953.

(6) King George Vth & Queen Mary of Teck visited Red Cross Hospitals in France & UK during WW1.

(7) Fazakerley Hospital, Liverpool: see Hibbett Letters: 25th Nov. 1916 -10th Dec. 1916 (apologies for mis-spelling name).

(8) Sister Dorothy Clive?

(9) Summer Holidays: Hibbett Family holidays, before & during the War, alternated between Abergele in Wales and Whitby.  

(10) Dining Hall: ref. to a mural? – or perhaps a frieze of flowers – like those my father painted at Tathwell Vicarage, Lincs in 1940-50s.

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NEXT POST: 12th July 1917.  Pte Bertie Hibbett Discharged the Army – ‘no longer physically fit for further War Service’.

4th AUG. 1916: ‘WHERE ONCE THE NUNS PACED TO & FRO NOW WOUNDED SOLDIERS COME & GO’.

THE CENACLE RED CROSS HOSPITAL, NEW BRIGHTON: Pte BERTIE HIBBETT, MATRON, NURSES & WOUNDED PALS. 1916 -1917.

a.H.H.
The Cenacle Garden. Pen & Ink Drawing. A.H.Hibbet. Oct 1916.
Bertie
Pte Bertie Hibbett in mufti  & holding a cigarette on New Brighton beach July 1916.  He appears to have a plaster on his neck under his right ear covering a wound received when running out of the trenches.1.7.1916.

Pte BERTIE HIBBETT’S eldest brother, Harold, took most of these photographs during visits to The Cenacle between July 1916 -1917. As a Chemist he would have developed & also printed them.

As well as drawing the house & grounds, Pte Bertie Hibbett tried his hand at a poem dedicated to The Cenacle.

Where once the Nuns paced to and fro’, Now Wounded Soldiers come and go, They liken the Cenacle to a herbal cure For the Matron and Nurses are so good and pure.

Oh! to sleep in a cosy bed On pillow soft to rest my head And have my sore wounds dressed by a kind nurse, Whose virtue is mercy and nothing worse.’ Oct 1916.

Matron & Nurses, Front door The Cenacle, Red Cross Hospital, New Brighton.
Matron & Nurses. Front door, The Cenacle, Red Cross Hospital, New Brighton.
Matron
Matron Gertrude Bellow.

Matron's-Signature-The-Cenacle

3 Nurses.
The Cenacle. Sister F.M.Clive with Red Cross Nurses G. Wilkinson & D. Puddicombe.
J. Turnbull, x x Bertie Hibbett, ?
Patient Heads at the The Cenacle Entrance: H. Turnbull, Beck, (Unknown but in photo 30th July post) , Bertie Hibbett & Bostock Byrd.
2 Nurses.
The Cenacle Red Cross Nurses: Sonia  Langdon & Kathleen Hay. April 12th 1917. 

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ELIZABETH HIBBETT WEBB
ELIZABETH HIBBETT WEBB

It is clear from these photographs of smiling faces that the Matron Sisters & Red Cross Nurses at the Cenacle were indeed kindness itself.  I hope that readers researching their Mothers, Grandmothers & Aunts who were Red Cross Nurses in WW1 may find their relatives & their signatures here.

Patients appear to have been allowed to wear mufti when they had visitors. See photo below (most probably taken at the same time as the one of my father above with his arm in a sling). N.B. I think the names given refer to the Red Cross Nurses, N. Cockeram and N. Higson. A note under the photo states the man on the left was an Irishman – in which case he could be Pte Kelly, S. Irish Horse, who sang & played a Song entitled ‘Goo Goo Eyes!‘ at a Cenacle Concert. Oct. 1916. 

Cenacle-with-nurses-July-1916.

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NEXT POST: 16th AUG. 1916.