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Difference between revisions of "No. 3 RAAF Hospital"

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==Brief History==
 
==Brief History==
No. 3 RAAF Hospital was formed at RAAF Base Richmond, New South Wales, on 15 Oct 1940. A collection of buildings, which included the previous station sick quarters, provided a bed capacity of 34, an outpatient section and a dental section. Manning was initially 12 officers, five nurses, one warrant officer and 32 other ranks. Expansion and additions to buildings and staff increased the bed capacity to 122 by the end or June 1941. In May 1942 the unit moved to Bradfield Park and towards the end or 1942 it was again re-located to the
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No. 3 RAAF Hospital was formed at RAAF Base Richmond, New South Wales, on 15 Oct 1940. A collection of buildings, which included the previous station sick quarters, provided a bed capacity of 34, an outpatient section and a dental section. Manning was initially 12 officers, five nurses, one warrant officer and 32 other ranks. Expansion and additions to buildings and staff increased the bed capacity to 122 by the end or June 1941.  
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In May 1942 the unit moved to Bradfield Park in Brisbane and towards the end or 1942 it was again re-located, this time to the
 
Army General Hospital Concord. The bed capacity rose gradually to 500 by the end of 1945.  
 
Army General Hospital Concord. The bed capacity rose gradually to 500 by the end of 1945.  
  

Revision as of 01:12, 21 July 2020

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Brief History

No. 3 RAAF Hospital was formed at RAAF Base Richmond, New South Wales, on 15 Oct 1940. A collection of buildings, which included the previous station sick quarters, provided a bed capacity of 34, an outpatient section and a dental section. Manning was initially 12 officers, five nurses, one warrant officer and 32 other ranks. Expansion and additions to buildings and staff increased the bed capacity to 122 by the end or June 1941.


In May 1942 the unit moved to Bradfield Park in Brisbane and towards the end or 1942 it was again re-located, this time to the Army General Hospital Concord. The bed capacity rose gradually to 500 by the end of 1945.


The hospital continued as an operational unit post ww2, and was particularly busy receiving patients evacuated by air during the Vietnam WAr.

Patients

Individual Honours

Notes

Content has come from Units of the Royal Australian Air Force - A Concise History - Volume 9 Ancillary Units - Australian Government Publishing Service - 1995


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