Forty-one years in India eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,042 pages of information about Forty-one years in India.

Forty-one years in India eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,042 pages of information about Forty-one years in India.
great joy, her recommendations were accepted by Lord Dufferin and his Council, and her note upon the subject was sent home to the Secretary of State, strongly backed up by the Government of India.  Lord Cross happily viewed the matter in a favourable light, and consented, not only to a certain number of nurses being sent out the following year as an experiment, but to the whole of the cost of the movement being borne by the State, with the exception of the provision of ‘Homes in the Hills’ for the nursing sisters as health resorts, and to prevent the expense to Government of their having to be sent home on sick-leave when worn out by their trying work in the plains.  The Secretary of State, however, declared these Homes to be ‘an important part’ of the nursing scheme, ’and indispensable to its practical working,’ but considered that they should be provided by private subscription, a condition my wife undertook to carry out.  She appealed to the Army in India to help her, and with scarcely an exception every regiment and battery generously responded—­even the private soldiers subscribed largely in proportion to their small means—­so that by the beginning of the following year my wife was able to set about purchasing and building suitable houses.

[Illustration:  LADY ROBERTS OF KANDAHAR. From a photograph by Messrs. Johnson and Hoffmann.]

‘Homes’ were established at Murree, Kasauli and Quetta, in Bengal, and at Wellington[1] in Madras, and by making a further appeal to the officers of the army, and with the assistance of kind and liberal friends in England and India, and the proceeds of various entertainments, Lady Roberts was able to supply, in connexion with the ‘Homes’ at Murree and Kasauli, wards for the reception of sick officers, with a staff of nurses[2] in attendance, whose salaries, passages, etc., are all paid out of ‘Lady Roberts’s Fund.’  My wife was induced to do this from having known many young officers succumb owing to want of care and improper food at hotels or clubs on being sent to the Hills after a hard fight for life in the plains, if they were not fortunate enough to have personal friends to look after them.  Although it is anticipating events, I may as well say here that the nursing experiment proved a complete success, and now every large military hospital in India has its staff of nurses, and there are altogether 4 superintendents, 9 deputy superintendents, and 39 nursing sisters, in India.  There are many more wanted in the smaller stations, where there is often great loss of life from lack of proper nursing, and surely, as my wife pointed out in her first appeal, ’when one considers what an expensive article the British soldier is, costing, as he does, L100 before landing in India, it seems certain that on the score of economy alone, altogether setting aside the humane aspect of the question, it is well worth the State’s while to provide him with the skilled nursing care’ which has up to now saved so many lives.

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Forty-one years in India from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.