PITT COUNTY
MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
First isolette in hospital, 1956
League Observes its Silver Anniversary, 1963
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           The Greenville Service League started in 1938 when Trissie Brown found that Greenville was considered too small to support a Junior League. She had moved to Greenville from Philadelphia where she had been active in the Junior League. She sent to Philadelphia for the League’s material and adapted it for use in Greenville. About 50 women were invited to a tea and organizational meeting held at the old Greenville Women’s Club.

By May 1988, the Service League had raised about $1 million through its projects, and used the money to fund equipment purchases for PCMH. There was much to commemorate at its annual luncheon in May 1988, concluding its celebration of its 50th anniversary. As usual, two service awards were to be given, the President’s Tray to a member of the board of directors, and the Ormond Service Cup to the member who had shown the most interest in league projects.

Even the semicentennial observance could not overshadow the league’s first celebration, the first Benefit Ball, held in 1939. Mrs. Brown said, “The ball was held at East Carolina Teachers College auditorium, and music was provided by Dean Hudson and his Lance Band. The cost per couple was $1.50. Newspapers from as far as Raleigh covered the event, and ‘a gay time was had by all.’” That year the Laughinghouse Hospital Bed Fund was established in memory of Dr. Charles O’Hagan Laughinghouse, whose daughter, Helen Laughinghouse Stokes, was first president of the league. The annual Charity Ball started the following year.
The league’s members agreed that they should try each year to meet one major need in the community. Their first major project was the Thrift Shop located over Guaranty Bank on Dickinson Avenue. Here the ladies sold used clothing and household articles, their main customers being needy residents in the area. They remembered with affection one of their charter members, an old gentlemen who purchased a china cup, remarking, “Now I don’t have to drink out of a tin can any more.”

The focus of the league’s efforts became providing transportation for blind people, mothers in need, and others who lacked transportation. The league participated in the World War II “Bundles for Britain” by rolling bandages. They collected sugar ration stamps from those who did not use them and made cakes for bake sales. They published a cookbook “Grandmother-Granddaughter,” with a section of no-sugar recipes. On the corner at Penders Store on Evans Street, they sold 25-cent bunches of flowers gathered from members’ yards. Each year the league gave a Boy Scout and a Girl Scout scholarship for summer camp. The group supported Community Chest and other drives, provided Christmas baskets each year, and set up the Lending Chest. All these projects had continued through the years to 1988.

In 1951, the group opened the hospital Coffee Shop. Each league member volunteered to work during nine months of the year and to pay workers to run the shop during the summer. The food was prepared in the members’ homes: chicken salad, pimento cheese, vegetable soup, country ham sandwiches, chili for hot dogs, cup cakes, and brownies. So many people bought the food by the quart to take out that overworked members complained they were in the catering business. Profits from the coffee shop were used for hospital activities, chapel expenses, and hospital equipment. Later, the league leased the space for the coffee shop to a private firm, turning over all the income from the lease to the hospital.

In 1976 the league established a Gift Shop separate from the Coffee Shop, with a cart that was pushed through the hospital twice a day with magazines, paperbacks, toiletries, and other items. Members also served in the nursery, attended to patients’ flowers, placed pictures in hospital rooms, and did needlepoint for the chapel.

In1984, the group made its largest contribution to date, $190,000, to be used for purchasing advanced heart monitoring equipment for the new cardiac surgery intensive care unit. This donation put the league’s total contributions to the hospital over the half million mark.

In October 1986, Dr. Ulrich Alsentzer, medical director of the PCMH Regional Rehabilitation Center, and Deborah Davis, vice president of rehabilitation services gave a report to the league on special programs that the center would offer. The league had donated $125,000, with a further $50,000 to be given in the spring, for purchasing equipment to be used in three new programs: an orthotics and prosthetic program, an electrophysiology laboratory, and a rehabilitation engineering program. The Daily Reflector stated that no other hospital in the state had a support organization like the Greenville Service League.

For the annual awards luncheon in 1993, two special requests for funding from PCMH were approved, including a mobile intensive care unit to transport critically ill patients from other regional hospitals, and an Extra-Corporeal Membrane Oxygenation Unit, to be used for children or babies in preparation for surgery or following heart surgery.

On the day before the luncheon, Jane Whichard, past president and Service League board member, described in an interview some of the projects that the organization had undertaken over its 50-plus years. Its seal, which showed “a woman’s hand holding a lighted torch to light the way to service,” she said, expressed its unchanging purpose. “The league furnished the first critical care unit in Pitt Memorial Hospital . . . In May 1964, members voted to give $4,500, the cost to furnish the unit. This money was provided through profits earned in the hospital Coffee Shop. Members further voted to give additional funds to the unit when requested by hospital administration.”

Another contribution to the hospital facility was the furnishing of the chapel in both the old and new hospitals. The chapel provides a quiet place for hospital staff as well as patients and their families. A personal touch was added when members used their needlepoint skills on cushions for the pews. League volunteers cleaned the chapel twice weekly.
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