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The "sicker"
Posted: Wed Oct 18, 2006 1:25 pm
by JamesF35
I've been reading through the CH website and notice it refers to a "Health Centre" which has five beds for ill people.
Is the "health centre" the same building as the Infirmiry in my days ? If so, why only five beds - there used to be around ten cubicles and two wards on the upper floors.
The infirmiry is/was such a large building - what's it all used for now ?
Posted: Wed Oct 18, 2006 1:37 pm
by blondie95
one floor on the ground is used as heartford which is for girls to go into on their deps if they dont want to remain in their house, a few buts are flats for various people andi m not sure what else
Posted: Wed Oct 18, 2006 1:40 pm
by Scone Lover
Thats a very good point James. Going by age, you were two years ahead of me. Did you ever volunteer for the Dr Hoskins flu jabs?
Any YOBs able to enlighten us?
Posted: Wed Oct 18, 2006 1:42 pm
by Mid A 15
I went back for a Maine A reunion in May and part of it is the museum.
Top floor I think either that or I'm getting old

Posted: Wed Oct 18, 2006 1:45 pm
by Scone Lover
So what happens when an epidemic hits? We had two, one chicken pox and one flu. Both times house dorms got turned into sicker extensions
Posted: Wed Oct 18, 2006 1:50 pm
by Richard Ruck
Scone Lover wrote:So what happens when an epidemic hits? We had two, one chicken pox and one flu. Both times house dorms got turned into sicker extensions
I think they just send the kids home........
Posted: Wed Oct 18, 2006 1:52 pm
by Scone Lover
I can just picture Victoria station full of a couple of hundred sneezing puking wretches!
Posted: Wed Oct 18, 2006 1:55 pm
by JamesF35
Scone Lover wrote:Thats a very good point James. Going by age, you were two years ahead of me. Did you ever volunteer for the Dr Hoskins flu jabs?
Oh yes, only once, in my first term - and I got flu bad ! I ended up in the sicker for an extra two days after the end of term. I was well pleased as you might imagine.
I managed to avoid another stay until my very last term at CH but by then it wasn't too much of a chore as I was more interested in the nurses. I remember one evening the young nurse asking me if I would go upstairs and see if there was anything amiss as she had heard a strange noise. She was too frightened to go up but she told me I was "very brave". I just wasn't brave enough at that age to do any more than accept the cup of coffee she made me and some biscuits !
Do you remember the long queues along the corridor to see Doc Hoskins every morning ? It was a good way to get off first period if you hadn't done your prep.
Posted: Wed Oct 18, 2006 1:59 pm
by Scone Lover
I used to make sure I got that wonderfully pointless job of siting in the corner stamping everyone's card and making a note on this sheet that had to be completed. Bye bye first period
Posted: Wed Oct 18, 2006 2:04 pm
by DavebytheSea
Mid A 15 wrote:I went back for a Maine A reunion in May and part of it is the museum.
That's because some of the Maine A OBs are relics of a bygone age.
Posted: Wed Oct 18, 2006 2:06 pm
by Scone Lover
Oh what a shot! I can't wait for the response
Posted: Wed Oct 18, 2006 2:17 pm
by Mid A 15
DavebytheSea wrote:Mid A 15 wrote:I went back for a Maine A reunion in May and part of it is the museum.
That's because some of the Maine A OBs are relics of a bygone age.
very sharp David! I do feel like an old relic at the moment. I think you've given me your virtual cold except it isn't virtual.
Posted: Wed Oct 18, 2006 2:22 pm
by DavebytheSea
My cold is the sort that would have landed me in the Sicker. Perhaps too, Dr "Tommy" Scott with his invariable regimen of starvation diet and penicillin injections thrice daily for all ills would have had me cured by now!
Alas, my membranes still ooze uncontrollably and, it seems, I have infected nearly everyone on the forum. Those who had it from me in its early stages are now well on the road to recovery.
Posted: Wed Oct 18, 2006 3:27 pm
by J.R.
DavebytheSea wrote:My cold is the sort that would have landed me in the Sicker. Perhaps too, Dr "Tommy" Scott with his invariable regimen of starvation diet and penicillin injections thrice daily for all ills would have had me cured by now!
Alas, my membranes still ooze uncontrollably and, it seems, I have infected nearly everyone on the forum. Those who had it from me in its early stages are now well on the road to recovery.
Was Tommy there in your days, David ?
Yikes ! He must have done all his
'time' at Horsham as he was still there when I left in 63 !
He scared the hell out of some people, but when I was in the Sicker after a couple of bee-stings, courtesy of Rip Kirby, (the discovery of my allegy to bee stings), I found him a lovely humane guy ! 2 bee stings and a whole week in the Infirmary. Wow !
Posted: Wed Oct 18, 2006 3:50 pm
by Mid A 15
J.R. wrote:DavebytheSea wrote:My cold is the sort that would have landed me in the Sicker. Perhaps too, Dr "Tommy" Scott with his invariable regimen of starvation diet and penicillin injections thrice daily for all ills would have had me cured by now!
Alas, my membranes still ooze uncontrollably and, it seems, I have infected nearly everyone on the forum. Those who had it from me in its early stages are now well on the road to recovery.
Was Tommy there in your days, David ?
Yikes ! He must have done all his
'time' at Horsham as he was still there when I left in 63 !
He scared the hell out of some people, but when I was in the Sicker after a couple of bee-stings, courtesy of Rip Kirby, (the discovery of my allegy to bee stings), I found him a lovely humane guy ! 2 bee stings and a whole week in the Infirmary. Wow !
He was there when I started too John. I reckon he retired about 1968. Hoskins (another OB) then took over.