A view of staff anaesthetising a patient, in an anaesthetic room at Bangour Emergency Hospital

Date:
22 Jan 1942
Location:
Bangour Emergency Hospital, Broxburn
Show all locations
Bangour General Hospital, Broxburn
Reference:
MED01/01/2562
Type:
Photograph (Print)
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Description

The original caption may contain language which is historic and which may no longer be considered appropriate. It has been retained in the record in the interest of historical accuracy.

The caption on the reverse of the photograph reads: “Bangour Hospital Scotland. Picture shows the anaesthetic room in one of the new emergency theatres. All gases enter the block through pipe lines from a main supply.”

The Bangour Village Hospital officially opened in 1906 as a psychiatric hospital. In both the First World War and the Second World War it was requisitioned for use as an emergency hospital and psychiatric patients were moved elsewhere; the hospital’s name was changed to the Edinburgh War Hospital for the duration of the Second World War before reverting to its original name. The Bangour Emergency Hospital, later the Bangour General Hospital, was built as a hutted complex in the hospital’s grounds during the Second World War and was run under the Emergency Hospitals Scheme. It has not been possible to differentiate between these hospitals in some photographs; in these instances a location of Edinburgh War Hospital has been assigned. See also MED01/01/2558-2561 and MED01/01/2563-2585. High-resolution copies of this image are available for free for non-commercial use. Please Enquire to place an order.

Content

This is part of the Series: MED01/01 Series of prints; within the Collection: MED01 Topical Press Agency Medical Collection

Rights

Source: Historic England Archive

People & Organisations

Photographer: Topical Press Agency Limited

Photographer: Harrison, Norman Kingsley

Keywords

Hospital, Operating Theatre, Second World War, Health And Welfare