A Staff Nurses report on an Emergency District Case
“In the early hours of the morning, we received an urgent call to attend a patient in the 2nd Quarry, Upper Signal Hill.
On arriving we founding appalling conditions of poverty […]. A tiny dilapidated zinc erection housed the patient, her husband and three small children. The patient was lying on a torn mattress on the bare ground. The rain was pouring in through the roof, and we moved her into a drier corner. With great difficulty we managed to heat some water in a tin on a wood fire outside the shack, sheltering it from the rain as best we could.
A messenger was sent back to St. Monica’s for clothing for both mother and babe. We tidied the shack. The sheltered fire burned brightly, the babe cried lustily, and the patient looked bright and happy; and as the necessary clothing etc. had arrived both were soon made as comfortable as possible, and we left them feeling happy and touched at the gratitude expressed by both patient and her husband.
The next day a friend supplied an old bedstead. The torn mattress was lifted onto it, so that the mother and babe were raised off the damp ground.”
– St. Monica’s Annual Report 1934