Rebuilding a badly burned
nose required a pedicle, or temporary bridge of tissue
between chest and nose. Flight Lieutenant Charles Goldhamer,
Patient with Pedicle, charcoal.
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| Canadian War Museum,
19710261-3889. |
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The nature of air force casualties was quite different from those
in the army or navy. Many pilots and bomber crew casualties suffered
debilitating injuries and disfigurement when their planes were shot
down or otherwise crashed. The fate of a fighter pilot could be
especially grim, sitting directly behind the plane's fuel tank,
which often ignited causing horrific burns. The Queen Victoria Cottage
Hospital in East Grinstead, 50 kilometres south of London, became
an air force hospital specializing in burns and plastic surgery.
The hospital was run by a New Zealander, Dr. Archibald McIndoe,
and a Canadian Wing was opened in 1944 led by Dr. Ross Tilley of
Bowmanville, Ontario. The men treated at the Queen Victoria each
faced a difficult recovery:
When a man is lying in bed bandaged from head to
toe, with eyelids gone, without a nose, it is hard to think of
a useful life to come, harder still to believe there might be
love and joy in his future. His life has crashed and burned and
he is perhaps nineteen, perhaps twenty-one. Does he want to die?
Quite possibly. He is in agony. If he is from a farm he remembers
the merciful way a gravely injured animal is put down. Does he
want to live? Hard to imagine when everything he once saw in his
future, a few days ago, has disappeared in a blinding flash (Rita
Donovan, As for the Canadians: the Remarkable Story of
the RCAF's "Guinea Pigs" of World War II, 2000,
p. 18-19).

Canadian Ward at Queen Victoria Cottage Hospital, East
Grinstead.
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| Department of National
Defence / National Archives of Canada / PA-205331. |
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Fortunately, McIndoe was a visionary who did not allow orthodoxy
or military bureaucracy to interfere with the treatment of his patients.
Among other unusual measures, he arranged for the elimination of
rank segregation, standard in other military hospitals, as well
as the hated patient garments, because a "man lost his identity
in the hospital blues... McIndoe felt that if anyone had earned
the right to wear their uniforms it was these men" (Donovan,
p. 19). McIndoe and other members of the staff believed that their
duty was to do more than return their patients to their units; with
such horrible injuries, caring for the patients' emotional needs
could be just as important as healing the physical wounds. He decided
that because these men would normally have been "going out
for a drink and flirting with the girls", beer should be made
available in the hospital ward. Regular outings to local pubs in
East Grinstead were arranged, so patients would be forced to conquer,
early in their recovery, their fear of being seen by "normal"
people. "As for the girls, well, [McIndoe] reasoned that any
young man, scarred or unscarred, was interested in a pretty face.
So he recruited the best-looking nurses he could find. After all,
an attractive woman who would talk to and joke with a patient would
make that patient far more likely to start feeling good about himself"
(Donovan, p. 20).
The men who came to the Queen Victoria kept self-pity in check
with the realization that "there was always someone worse off
than you were" (Donovan, p. 25). McIndoe's compassion coupled
with new techniques-saline baths, sulfa, and penicillin being more
widely used while the traditional treatment with tannic acid went
into decline-made possible a more complete recovery than in earlier
times. The camaraderie born from the sharing of similar, difficult
circumstances led the patients to christen themselves The Guinea
Pig Club. The Club, in true wartime spirit, even had its own anthem:
We are McIndoe's army,
We are his Guinea Pigs.
With dermatomes and pedicles,
Glass eyes, false teeth and wigs.
And when we get our discharge
We'll shout with all our might:
'Per ardua ad astra,'
We'd rather drink than fight.
John Hunter runs the gas works,
Ross Tilley wields a knife.
And if they are not careful
They'll have your flaming life.
So, Guinea Pigs, stand steady
For all your surgeon's calls;
And if their hands aren't steady
They'll whip off both your ears.
We've had some mad Australians,
Some French, some Czechs, some Poles.
We've even had some Yankees,
God bless their precious souls.
While as for the Canadians-
Ah! That's a different thing.
They couldn't stand our accent
And built a separate Wing.
(quoted in Donovan, p. 16)
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