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Unequal Treatment

Heroes Remember

Transcript
And so I worked in the venereal disease building. Anything privates and sergeants even the sergeant major I guess, if they had venereal disease and they had to be treated from the moment their treatment started when they came before a medical officer or came into the hospital they had to go into the hospital, they would lose pay. They wouldn't be paid until they got out again and it would be written in their pay, in their book. We had little books. And I always thought that was most unfair because the officers came and got their medication while they drank tea with us and their treatments and they didn't lose any pay.
Description

Ms. Carter describes working on the venereal disease ward at a hospital in Horsham.

Doris Carter

Doris Carter was born in Birkenhead, England on June 9, 1910. Her family emigrated to Woodstock, New Brunswick and in 1932 she enrolled in Nursing at the Royal Victoria Hospital in Montreal. Ms. Carter graduated in 1935, and was recruited to a wartime surgical team, prior to the war's onset. On November 30, 1940 she went overseas with #1 Military Hospital to nurse civilians injured in the bombings of Coventry and Birmingham. Ms. Carter was then sent to the Mediterranean with #5 Military Hospital. She served in North Africa, Sicily, Italy and Northwestern Europe. After the war, Ms. Carter pursued a career in Public Health Nursing.

Meta Data
Medium:
Video
Owner:
Veterans Affairs Canada
Recorded:
March 8, 1999
Duration:
0:54
Person Interviewed:
Doris Carter
War, Conflict or Mission:
Second World War
Location/Theatre:
England
Branch:
Army
Units/Ship:
Royal Canadian Army Medical Corps
Rank:
Lieutenant
Occupation:
Nurse

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