RAF Hospital Wegberg

The former Royal Air Force Hospital Wegberg, commonly abbreviated to RAF(H) Wegberg, was a Royal Air Force (RAF) military hospital located in Wegberg, near the city of Mönchengladbach, in the then West Germany.[1] It was opened in 1953 to serve the British Armed Forces personnel already in the area, and in anticipation of the construction and opening of the large RAF Rheindahlen base, nearby.

Royal Air Force Hospital Wegberg
Royal Air Force, part of
Ministry of Defence (UK MoD)
The front of RAF Hospital Wegberg, September 1998.
Geography
LocationWegberg, Mönchengladbach, North Rhine Westphalia, Germany
Coordinates51°09′26.21″N 6°18′19.81″E
Organisation
Care systemBritish Forces Germany
FundingGovernment hospital
TypeMilitary hospital
Affiliated universityGuy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust, London
NetworkRAF Medical Services
History
Construction startedFebruary 1953 (1953-02)
Opened1 November 1953 (1953-11-01)
Closed1 April 1996 (1996-04-01)
Links
WebsiteRAF(H) Wegberg
ListsHospitals in Germany

Construction and opening

Construction of the hospital commenced in February 1953 (1953-02) by No 5357 Airfield Construction Wing of the Royal Air Force, and it was completed in only 111 days on 31 May 1953 (1953-05-31). The hospital opened to patients on 1 November 1953 (1953-11-01).[2] The official opening ceremony was held on 16 November 1953, when Lady Foster, wife of the Commander in Chief of 2nd Tactical Air Force, unveiled a tablet in the main entrance hall.

The hospital was built in a unique manner. There was an outer wide U-shaped ring of single-storey buildings, and an inner U-shaped ring of two-storey buildings. They could be described as one horseshoe within another. The outer ring mostly consisted of wards, outpatients and clinical areas, while the inner mostly contained the administrative and support services and a central kitchen area. They were connected by radial and spoke corridors that, with other areas, could be converted into wards in the event of major emergencies or conflict. The psychiatric ward, boiler house, stores, messes, single personnel accommodation, and married quarters were separate from the main hospital building. A one-way ring road encircled the main building, with a north entrance from RAF Rheindahlen, and a south entrance from Wegberg town.

Patients

The hospital functioned as a general hospital for the British military personnel, associated British civilian support staff, and their families, from all services of British Forces Germany (BFG), over a wide area of North Rhine Westphalia, the Netherlands, and Belgium. In one year, the hospital maternity ward could deliver up to 1,000 babies, while other wards had an in-patient number of 6,000 per year, and out-patient of 32,000 during the peak years of activity. Intensive care facilities and a special care baby unit were added. During the 1990 Gulf War, forces members of the hospital were detached to serve in the Middle East, which strained hospital numbers so much so that they had to recruit civilian nurses and staff to fill the void. All detached members returned safely.

In March 1972, the celebrated Rugby Union player Cliff Morgan had a severe stroke in Cologne after commentating on a match for BFBS. He spent three weeks in RAF Hospital Wegberg, and spoke very highly of his treatment there.[3]

I was born to RAF parents on 21 June 1957 by C-section in RAF Wegburg two months premature, and weighing only just over 1 pound (0.45 kilograms). I was not expected to live, and the hospital chaplain was called, and the delivering surgeon and midwife became my godparents for what was a very quick service so that I would die having been baptised. It is now 2020, and I am coming up to my 64th birthday. My mother told me that I was in the intensive care baby unit for almost six months before she could take me home, but it shows how amazing was the care provided in a hospital that had only been built a few years earlier, in the rubble that was still post-war Germany. I never knew the names of those wonderful people who stepped up for my emergency baptism, but because of them I have a name and a life. My parents stayed in the RAF until I was 14 years old, and we travelled from Germany to Aden to Singapore to England, and round again. My life is full of stories that would not have happened were it not for the amazing staff and facilities back in 1957 RAF Wegburg. Thank you whoever you are from the bottom of my heart!

History and reduction of facilities

Hospital facilities were temporarily disrupted in June 1980, by extensive damage caused by the explosion of a propane cylinder in the dental laboratory. In January 1987, the hospital was forced to close to all except emergency admissions when severe winter temperatures led to burst water pipes. In September 1987, the roof of the postnatal ward was severely damaged by a blaze accidentally caused by workmen.[1]

The School of Nursing closed in 1984, having provided a large part of the training of both Enrolled (SEN) and State Registered Nurses (SRN) who studied there. Student nurses from RAF Hospitals in the UK were detached to Wegberg, especially for training in obstetrics.[1]

From 1992, British Government economies dictated the number of beds being reduced from 171 to 90, with the closure of the paediatric and special care baby units in December 1992, and in 1993, the combination of the medical and surgical wards and the closure of the maternity unit.[4]

Closure

View of the front of the former RAF Hospital Wegberg in November 2015
The reception hall of the former RAF Hospital Wegberg in November 2015

RAF Hospital Wegberg closed after 43 years as a general hospital, and on 1 April 1996, it was formally handed over to United Kingdom Support Command (UKSC) at JHQ Rheindahlen. From 1996, a small in-patient psychiatric unit, and some community services remained on the site, while all other secondary care was transferred to local German hospitals.

Post hospital years

From 1996, a small in-patient psychiatric unit and some community services remained on the site, and it also became the home of the Headquarters of the British Forces Germany Health Services (HQ BFGHS) from 1999 to September 2010. The whole hospital site was then formally handed back to the German authorities.

A group of former personnel visited the hospital in October 2010, and reported that it was in as perfect condition as when it was fully functioning before closure. That is a testament to the original builders and the careful maintenance over 57 years. A video news report was made of this nostalgic visit.[5]

The BFGHS was a partnership arrangement between the Ministry of Defence (MoD); the Soldiers, Sailors, Airman and Families Association (SSAFA); and Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust, London, to provide primary care services, community and outpatient services to the British Forces community throughout Germany.

The hospital's motto was Inter Fera Salus (Latin: In midst of ferocity, healing),[6] and its badge is a wild boar passant overlaid with a Staff of Asclepius.[7]

In November 2015, the hospital site appeared abandoned and derelict, and had suffered much damage from vandalism, fires and theft.

On 15 April 2017, further damage was caused by a large fire. The firefighting was difficult.[8]

See also

References

  1. "RAF Hospital Wegberg". www.RAF.mod.uk. Royal Air Force. Archived from the original on 5 October 2012. Retrieved 8 October 2012.
  2. Mary Mackie, SKY WARDS, pg. 241
  3. Cliff Morgan: The Autobiography - Beyond the Fields of Play.
  4. Mary Mackie, SKY WARDS, pg. 322.
  5. "Wegberg Hospital handover". www.YouTube.com. 19 October 2010. Archived from the original on 21 December 2021.
  6. Pine, L G (1983). A Dictionary of mottoes. London: Routledge & K. Paul. p. 115. ISBN 0-7100-9339-X.
  7. "Badges of RAF Miscellaneous Units". www.rafweb.org. Retrieved 19 December 2021.
  8. "Großbrand am ehemaligen JHQ in Mönchengladbach". www.RP-Online.de. RP ONLINE. Retrieved 17 April 2017.

Bibliography

  • Mary Mackie: WARDS IN THE SKY – the RAF’s Remarkable Nursing Service (The History Press, UK, 2014, ISBN 9780750959568).
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.