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Seaborn's Scrapbook
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Scrap Book 1916-1919 Shortly following Canada’s involvement in the First World War, Western University offered to establish a hospital unit for overseas service. This offer was initially declined by the government, but in March 1916, Seaborn, and two other Medical Faculty members formally requested that the University renew its offer. Seaborn met with the Acting Minister of Militia in Ottawa later that month, prompting the War Office to accept Western’s offer to furnish a 400-bed hospital. The Board of Governors named Dr. Seaborn Commanding Officer of the newly branded No. 10 Canadian Stationary Hospital on May 2, 1916. Seaborn and a small unit of additional Western appointees embarked for England in July, 1916. There, Seaborn assumed command of the hospitals in Sussex before proceeding to Calais, France in December, 1917. During the War, No. 10 Hospital treated more than 16,000 patients until it was demobilized in April, 1919. Seaborn understood the historical, and at times cathartic, benefits of keeping a record of his own life, which is why he strived to preserve the historical voice of the many before him. (ARCC Edwin Seaborn Fonds AFC 20-2) |
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