NURSING
GROUP
Pitt County Memorial Hospital
August 7, 2000
Interviewer: Beth
Nelson
The following retired
nurses were in attendance:
Hannah Gaylor
Verta Manning
Blanche Brooks
Doris Skinner
Olive Jones
Hilda Norris
Grace Turner
Vera Smith
Rena Jones
Also present: Betty
Bailey and Sally Lucido
Beth Nelson: For the purpose of differentiation,
hospitals will be referred to as the Johnston Street Hospital, Old Hospital
(Fifth Street), and New Hospital (Stantonsburg Road.) This was done for
the purpose of everyone referring to the proper hospital.
I would like to go
around the table and have everyone tell us a little about their background.
Blanche
Brooks:
I came to the old hospital in 1957. I had received my nursing training
in Taylor Hospital in Washington and the patient capacity where I came
from was about thirty or forty patients a day. When I came to Greenville
I thought I had walked into Duke Hospital. I loved my work and stayed
there twenty-nine years and I loved everything I did there. In the last
hospital I worked on the second floor. I worked the surgery floor and
then I transferred to orthopedics, which I dearly loved and I stayed there
all those years. I loved the doctors and there wasn't the turnover there
like there was on the surgery floor. Surgery was too big a turnover for
me and it was driving me crazy. An orthopedic patient would come in and
stay four or five days and sometimes two weeks and we got to know them.
Beth
Nelson:
So you have only been retired a few years?
Blanche
Brooks:
I retired in 1986.
Doris
Skinner:
I came to Greenville on November 4, 1950 and I worked at the Johnston
Street Hospital for three months. I came prepared to work days and I got
stuck in pediatrics for the 3-11 shift. Then finally I got into the operating
room and then I transferred to the new hospital (Fifth Street) and worked
in the delivery room and then I worked every floor in the hospital. I
supervised and ended up working in the pharmacy for a number of years.
I did everything in the pharmacy. We did not have a registered pharmacist
at the hospital. However, we had pharmacists in town who were on call
and if I had a problem of any sort I would call one of the pharmacists.
My sister was Phyllis
Martin, who was the first Director of Nurses at the hospital. She and
I both graduated from South Baltimore General Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland
and then when she came down here she had been working with the University
of Maryland Hospital and South Baltimore Hospital, both places at the
same time. Then she came down here in 1950.
Beth
Nelson:
What brought you here from Baltimore?
Doris
Skinner:
She did. The doctor who taught OB/GYN in Baltimore was Dr. James Brown
and he was from Greenville. His brother was Dr. Billy Brown who had worked
here for years and he had a brother who had a pharmacy here and he had
a brother who was a lawyer and another brother in Chicago who was a doctor,
and that is how we got down here. Dr. James Brown recommended Phyllis
and then she brought me down. I have been here ever since. When I came
to Greenville I thought I was at the end of the world. You have no idea.
I mean there was nothing here. There were very few doctors. The only doctors
that are still living that were here on opening was Dr. Malene Irons,
Dr. Fred Irons and Dr. Steve Bartlett. I don't know of anyone else who
was here. I am talking about the ones who are still living. Allen Taylor
was not here when we opened because we had a doctor from Washington who
would come in.
Olive
Jones: I
came to Greenville and went to work at the hospital on Johnston Street
in 1937 and worked there until the hospital on Fifth Street opened. I
was there on opening day. I went over the day before and helped to set
up the emergency room and the pharmacy.
Doris
Skinner:
The first day we moved in to the Fifth Street hospital we delivered babies
and had surgery. If I remember correctly, Dr. Fred Irons had an OB patient
that came in and he was trying to induce her and I told him he wanted
to have the first baby in the new hospital but somebody else beat him
to the draw. I told him we couldn't induce that patient, as we were moving.
Beth
Nelson:
So, Ms. Jones, you were there on opening day in the Fifth Street Hospital.
What areas did you work in?
Olive
Jones: I
worked in the emergency room and the pharmacy and relieved part of the
time on different floors when they needed me.
Beth
Nelson:
What is your background and education?
Olive
Jones: I
graduated from St. Luke's Hospital in New Bern in 1934. It closed many
years ago. I retired from PCMH in May of 1982.
Beth
Nelson:
So you worked in all three hospitals. That would probably be true for
a number of you having experience at Johnston Street, Fifth Street and
what I call the new hospital.
Olive
Jones: Well
I worked for a couple of years at St. Luke's after I graduated in the
operating room.
Beth
Nelson:
Was St. Luke's a predecessor to Craven?
Olive
Jones: No,
it was way before then and it was a small hospital. I don't think we had
more than fifty patients.
Beth
Nelson:
What organization supported that hospital? Was it owned by doctors?
Olive
Jones: By
doctors.
Beth
Nelson:
Was it tied to a denomination of any kind?
Olive
Jones: No,
not when I graduated but later it was Catholic. It wasn't open too long.
They did have a training school in Greenville for a short while at Pitt
General. They sure did. The nurses had to be sent away for their last
year I believe.
Beth
Nelson:
Affiliated with what group?
Olive
Jones: Pitt
General Hospital.
Beth
Nelson:
The hospital had its own nurses training?
Olive
Jones: Well,
the doctors did the teaching and they also did the teaching in St. Luke's
too.
Doris
Skinner:
The hospital in downtown Greenville was upstairs in one of those old stores.
I think that was the very first one.
Beth
Nelson:
Right, and when the doctors found out they were going to go to the Johnston
Street Hospital, they were so anxious and there was such a demand for
their services that they chose to open a temporary hospital upstairs above
the store and they say it smelled of feed, tobacco and everything. It
was a very different environment from what you might imagine for a hospital
to be but I guess they had to start somewhere.
Grace
Turner:
When they had a very serious case sometimes they had to send them somewhere
else. My father had a ruptured appendix and they took him on the train
to Kinston to the hospital. I don't remember what year that was.
I'm Grace Turner and
I got my training at James Walker Memorial Hospital in Wilmington. I got
another year of college over here at East Carolina and I worked six months
right after I finished training during the polio epidemic in Hickory but
Greenville was my home so in March of 1945 I came back to Greenville and
I nursed in the old Johnston Street Hospital on the obstetrical floor,
third floor, for awhile. Then I set up the first Central Supply in Greenville
which was one room next to the operating room on the third floor. Back
in those days hospitals even during all of our nurses training gloves
were washed and dried and powdered and sterilized. Anyway, I did all that
and they brought in gloves from the emergency room. We also patched gloves
back in those days.
You took an old glove
and cut a little circle large enough to cover the hole that was in the
glove. You didn't use these gloves for sterile procedures but you used
them for other things like rectal. Anyway, back at that time the hospital
had just started getting penicillin and we didn't get much penicillin
because the Army and so forth got most
of it when it first came out. We had to make up all of that penicillin
and I did all that and I mixed it up. There was a short supply because
of the War and it was a new drug and it was just coming out in the hospital.
Hospitals got it during the War but hospitals all over the United States
didn't begin getting it until around 1950 and 1951.
Beth
Nelson:
Did you also work in the Fifth Street Hospital?
Grace
Turner:
Yes, well let me get back to my story. I worked in central supply until
I planned to get married and then Ms. Lethia Clark was our Director of
Nurses at the time and she left here and became Director of Nurses at
Duke School of Nursing.
Anyway, I handed in
my resignation in a period of time before I was supposed to get married
because I knew I would be going out of town and Ms. Clark was so upset
with me. She was a stout lady like I am and she didn't know why. When
I got off work one afternoon I told her I needed to talk to her and I
told her why and it was all right, it was fine then. After she knew why
I was going out of town it was fine. Anyway, I got married and nursed
in Dallas, Texas in nineteen different hospitals while I was there with
private duty. I did private duty all the time I was out there and then
went to Louisiana for awhile and did private duty in a hospital there
and then I came back to the Fifth Street Hospital in April of 1951. I
worked in the nursery and it was on the third floor and at that time they
only had one nursery nurse at a time. We spent time making up formulas
for the whole hospital. You had to go across the hall and put on all your
stuff and your mask and everything else to make formula. We had a big
old autoclave in there that we autoclaved. In the meantime you had to
run to the door and peek through at the babies. You put all the babies
in front of the windows that you possibly could so that you could see
that they were doing all right. We didn't have a resuscitator in the nursery
at that time so you had to run back to the operating room to give them
some oxygen right quick.
I worked in the nursery,
I believe, for around three years and then I went back to private duty
and I went to the other hospital and did private duty right up until about
five years ago. I worked from 7-5.
Beth
Nelson:
When you came back in 1951, were you there on opening day?
Grace
Turner:
I came in April and I think you all moved over there before April.
Beth
Nelson:
It was a brand spanking new hospital when you moved in. Compared to the
hospitals you had seen in Texas and Louisiana, how did it compare in terms
of modernization, quality and that kind of thing?
Grace
Turner:
Well, of course, naturally, everything was new and everything huge and
there were differences in those hospitals. Some of them were more modern
than others but there was not a lot of difference.
Beth
Nelson:
Did you have a sense that it was a very up to date and modern facility
for its time?
Grace
Turner:
Yes.
Vera
Smith: I
came to the hospital on Johnston Street in 1948 and two of my classmates
came with me and one is supposed to be sitting right here and couldn't
come today, Mabel Baker. We came in 1948 on Johnston Street and did a
little bit of everything. I did my nursing training for three years at
Carolina General Hospital in Wilson. All three of us graduated together.
Pauline Cox who just died recently came as a supervisor two weeks before
we came so there were four of us from the hospital in Wilson that came
here. I wanted to work in pediatrics and I didn't get the chance to work
in pediatrics much. They even put me on OB but I wanted to work in pediatrics.
The first baby that I had to watch in the delivery room was Booger Scales.
I was scared to death and he was a nervous wreck. It was the most horrible
night I ever spent. I came to the hospital when it opened in February
but the last of March I left and headed to Washington, D.C. and took a
post graduate course in pediatrics so I could work in pediatrics. Then
I went to another hospital and worked a year. They had a new hospital
and they didn't have a pediatric ward so I set up one there. Then I came
back here in 1952. I was here from then on. I had thirty-six years. I
helped move all the new babies from the Johnston Street Hospital to the
Fifth Street and then I helped move all the little babies from the Fifth
Street Hospital to the new hospital.
They opened the first
little ambulatory unit over at the Holiday Inn and I helped set up over
there and then we moved back to the hospital and I helped set up over
there. I got out of pediatrics after the medical school came. My thinking
was too old fashioned for the new building. I was there for a long time,
not in the new place they have now. I was in pediatrics for twenty-seven
years. Then I went to private nursing and there have been a lot of things.
I remember moving all those little kids and you know we didn't have all
this modern stuff. We had these little croupettes that you put the babies
in and you had to put ice in the back of them. We moved some from Johnston
Street in the ambulance.
Beth
Nelson:
Describe a croupette. I am trying to get a visual image of what a croupette
was.
Vera
Smith: It
was plastic and then we had some that were metal so they more room. Actually
they are what you know as isolettes. The old oxygen tents they used to
bring the plastic over the bed and it came down to about midway. Croupettes
were smaller and they didn't have a machine, they had ice. You had to
keep the ice in the back.
Beth
Nelson:
How long would they have been in use? Since the sixties?
Vera
Smith: I
think so, they were in use then.
Hilda
Norris:
I came to work in Pitt in 1965 and they didn't have them so it was the
beginning of the sixties they stopped using those croupettes, probably
in 1962 or somewhere around then.
Beth
Nelson:
So, was an isolette a more mechanized and more electrified unit?
Hilda
Norris:
Yes.
Doris
Skinner:
It was invented by a doctor who taught me when I was in training.
Rena
Jones: I
came to the hospital on Fifth Street in the spring of 1966. I graduated
from a three-year diploma school in Suffolk, Virginia, Obici, and I was
there the first year that hospital was built. We affiliated through Medical
College of Virginia in Richmond for Psych and Peds for six months and
I went when I was a senior. I came here because my husband was from here.
We had met and married in Suffolk, Virginia and he wanted to come back
to Pitt County. I came and went in to see Phyllis Martin and told her
my background and Phyllis told me that when I got ready to move and get
here for me to just come back to see her and she would give me a job.
This is what I did. I came back and applied for my reciprocity in North
Carolina and she put me to work on old first and Mabel Baker ran the floor
I was on and it was a wonderful experience working with Mabel.
I want to go back
a little bit to where Grace was talking about central supply and supplies
and so forth. We used to have so many patients on old first back then.
We used to have all kinds of patients on that floor, all kinds. We had
two labor beds standing there right across from the elevator and you had
to watch people in labor and get them on the elevator and get them to
third floor to deliver them. We had everything down there and most of
the time the halls were full. To finish our day's work we had to autoclave
down there and also this little boiling machine down there and if you
played out of the things you needed to finish your day's work with you
washed and rinsed them very well you autoclaved and you boiled which you
did to finish your day's work. Ms. Martin sent for me to come around to
her office one day and asked me how many months I had been working with
Mabel. Like I said, it was a wonderful experience and she was a wonderful
teacher and Mabel told me before I went around to the office that I had
better watch it because Ms. Martin probably wanted to give me something
else to do. Well, she was right. After that, for several months until
in September of 1967 Dr. Pott was my doctor and made me stop work twenty-one
days before I had my first child but I circulated the hospital. Back in
those days when I circulated the hospital on the 3-11 shift I usually
went on old second and sometimes I had an RN in the emergency room and
other than that the hospital was covered by LPNs and anything they couldn't
do or had a question about they called you and anything that couldn't
be handled in the emergency room. We went to labor and delivery for all
deliveries. You also entered and exited everything out of the morgue when
you circulated. We sometimes filled drugs as Doris told you, depending
on what was needed.
Beth
Nelson:
Are you talking about accompanying deceased patients into the morgue.
and what was involved?
Rena
Jones: Yes,
they all had to go through you. They bombarded you with paperwork. If
they weren't locals, being sure that it was the right person. Back in
those days we had funeral homes that fought over the deceased. I was relieving
one night and before the sun rose one of the funeral homes was there to
get that person and I hadn't even been able to get anybody there to give
me any information on the person. It was the next morning before sunrise.
Here was this fellow who said he was coming to get this lady and I told
him that was strange and asked him who sent him because I hadn't any family
member and that I had no information. It was kind of like that and you
were the check system.
Also you covered for
anybody who didn't come in on duty and you also covered the private duty
register when people wanted a private duty nurse. You did the calling.
Those were some of the things that we did. We gave anesthesia for people
in the delivery room under the supervision of a doctor.
Then I left here due
to the terminal illness of my mother in 1958 when my first child was about
eight months old and I went back to my home school and did that same sort
of thing. I worked with the person who had been my supervisor in school
and worked on the 3-11 shift back in my home school. I left in 1958 and
returned in 1964 to Fifth Street and again they gave me a job right away
and I worked on what was then A-1 around the corner from the one I had
previously worked on. It was medicine and peds at that time. I was expecting
my third child then and I came back here in August and I worked right
on until nine days before I had the baby.
Beth
Nelson:
That would have been very uncommon back then as most of the women were
encouraged to stay home long before that.
Rena
Jones: I
came in on a Saturday morning and picked up my last paycheck and had the
baby on Monday morning. Then they did some renovating and some changing
things and I went back to work on nights on that same floor that I was
working on that summer. That winter of 1964-1965 it was a forty-bed surgical
unit and I worked night duty for the next five years on 2-A. Sometimes
I would be pulled to another floor which was so busy and they didn't have
anybody and Dr. Ira Hardy's first patient was put there in one of my four-bed
rooms and the first radiation therapy room was put down there in a two-bed
room.
Beth
Nelson:
I want to go back to something you said just a minute ago about when you
were the 3-11 circulating nurse you talked about how few RNs were in the
house all together. Typically during that time there would be LPNs and
Aides and you and two other RNs would be supervising the house. How many
patients would there have been in the house all together?
Rena
Jones: I
think that before they ever added on that other wing I think we had a
capacity of about eighty-five patients and then I am not sure when they
added on how many more.
Beth
Nelson:
Now, that would scare a lot of people that the house had only three RNs.
People at the maximum level of training and experience to do all of that
and that a lot of things can go wrong in a hospital.
Doris
Skinner:
When I was in training we had a supervisor on 3-11 and the whole hospital
was run by student nurses at St. Lukes.
Beth
Nelson:
So the way we were staffed was pretty typical of the times that you were
living in?
Rena
Jones: At
the time that I did five straight years of night duty on that newly opened
surgical floor we did all our additives to all our IV fluids ourselves.
Whatever it was and a lot of times I had ten and twelve continuous IVs
then and you got people from xray and surgery the next day. There were
no recovery areas. You got them ready and they would come back to you
when I did surgery on A-1.
Beth
Nelson:
Before I forget, there may be things, artifacts we will call them, that
you all may have at home that might be of benefit that you might want
to donate or loan to the archives of the library. What we want to do is
ideally have a display - if you had any instruments, or early nursing
caps that would have been worn in all three hospitals. When we went to
the new hospital in 1977 there were still nurses who wore caps, not many
but there were still some that did. To me an interesting thing to display
would have been a nursing cap that would have survived through the expansion
of three hospitals in Greenville. If there is any things like that you
would like to donate outright or to loan, they would be identified as
having been donated or loaned by you. I have even asked people if they
had copies of their old hospital bills perhaps from the Johnston Street
Hospital. Some of those kinds of things would be wonderful. We could either
photograph them for the book, possibly for the video, but also we would
display them in the library. I think people would find that most interesting.
I thought I would just mention this to you before I forgot.
Doris
Skinner:
There was something that we nurses did way back and I can't remember what
year it was but Dr. Heizinger who was the OB/GYN doctor who came the same
time I did and Mr. Christopher who was in charge of housekeeping had got
some dolls and I hope they are still at the hospital. We dressed those
dolls. They had two dolls, a male and a female, and they changed them.
If a doctor was short they cut the legs down and made it short and dressed
the doll just like that particular doctor. We had Mr. Ward and all the
doctors who were on that original staff. Some of the nurses dressed their
dolls in the graduate uniform. I dressed mine in my student uniform and
Phyllis dressed one in the graduate uniform and also a Florence Nightingale
outfit. The purpose was to represent everyone. We put them on display
in the lobby at the hospital. The visitors could all see the dolls. Somebody
told me that they were in the laboratory down there.
Beth
Nelson:
Were they developed for the move to the Fifth Street Hospital?
Doris
Skinner:
This was after we moved into the Fifth Street Hospital when we did all
of those dolls. Different people did the dolls but I think Mrs. Christopher
and Dr. Ann did most of the doctor dolls and they dressed them like they
were dressed. For instance, they also did one of old Dr. Pace. They did
one of old Dr. Crisp-all the doctors that were on the staff at that particular
time had a doll. Dr. Crisp's doll looked just like him, I can remember
that.
Rena
Jones: After
I retired from the hospital I went into some other fields and worked in
alcoholism and developmental disabilities, mental health, did some private
duty in Greenville. The first place that gave me a job back was the new
hospital now. I went to Rehab and worked with them and took a refresher
course back in 1985.
Hilda Norris: I graduated in 1961 from
Kate B. Reynolds in Winston-Salem. I took my training at Baptist. I worked
at the hospital in Ahoskie from 1962-1965 in that little nursery they
had there. We had isolettes back then too. I came to Greenville because
I married a man who lived here and Dr. Andrew Best told me to come on
to Greenville that he would give me a piece of land for $1.00 so I did
it. I gave him the $1.00 for the piece of land which was on the corner
of Ward and Nash Streets in West Greenville.
I wanted to work in
the nursery. At the time there were no policies or procedures in place
although there were in Ahoskie. Phyllis Martin asked me to write a policy
and procedures manual for the nursery. I introduced formula to the hospital.
There were no apnea monitors and no billi lights. The first billi light
was put in because I went into Mr. Ward's office and took his lamp off
of his desk and several weeks later he found it. It was a billi light
which was used to help the babies to break down the billirubin in the
blood. We used to raise the curtains so the babies would be in the sun
and we didn't have this. So, I was in Mr. Ward's office and I saw this
big light so I just unloaded it and walk out of the office. After Mr.
Ward found it he came and laughed.
When I came there
were not any policies and procedures written. There was not a book. Everything
you had to look for a procedure was on a piece of paper stuck on the corkboard.
It said you did this for a certain thing. Nothing was documented right
on how you did anything. None of this was in writing, just little pieces
of paper all over the board and I had to write a procedure manual. It
was for treatment of babies in the nursery. Ms. Martin told me to write
this so people who would come behind me would know what to do. The things
were put into notebooks and we added to them. It spoke to blood exchange,
circumcision, how to take a temperature, how to feed a baby, how to burp
one, how to read the monitor and all of those sort of things. These things
had to be put down in writing.
We were making milk
from primitive goat's milk, powered milk, for pediatrics and the newborn
nursery for twenty-four hours. We would do it a day in advance. Newborn
took six bottles and preemies took eight bottles and we had to make the
sterile water and the glucose and when first floor had pediatrics we had
to make it for them too. Across the hall was the only formula room. They
had an autoclave and the bottles; you had to stretch the nipple across
the bottle. You had a plastic or paper to put on top of them and I would
take a box of those home and write everything done for the next day ready
to stick on the bottles. While doing this you also had to keep checking
on the babies, which were right in front of, the glass window and you
would go and peek them and make sure everyone of them was breathing. Dr.
Haar would worry me to death making formula for him every thirty minutes.
When you would walk
into the nursery over to the right were the big babies. To the left was
the intermediate nursery which could hold six babies at maximum and they
were prematures. The little small prematures would sometimes have what
we call apnea episodes. A baby would stop breathing and would forget to
breathe until you stimulated him. In order to get to them I took gauze
and tied the gauze on their ankle and hung it through the isolette hole
and slipped it through. When the baby looked blue you could just pull
on this and it would stimulate him. Now they have apnea monitors so that
when a baby stops breathing it beeps and you check that way. If you took
the time to wash your hands before we had monitors it might have been
too late so I was able to pull on the gauze. We used cloth diapers and
the pins were rusty and dull. I told the hospital staff that we could
not use these and that we had to have Pampers. I went to Mr. Ward and
he agreed and the Pampers came rolling in. The old cloth diapers came
all thrown in a big white cart and you had to fold them. Sometimes you
had to fold one right quick and put it on the baby.
Verta
Manning: I
came here in 1951 and I circulated the whole hospital. I supervised and
when we supervised at night we had to circulate in the operating room.
Also when someone came and had a baby we had to help with that too. I
worked until 1965 and then I worked elsewhere.
Beth
Nelson:
What about technology. Did you have a sense that our hospital at that
time was up to date with what was available in the rest of the world?
What was your perspective of it?
Verta
Manning:
I think it was up to date, I really do.
Beth
Nelson:
Do you remember any particular new equipment or technology that came on
board when you were there?
Verta
Manning:
No because we still had the oxygen tents.
Hannah
Gaylor:
I did my training in Hamlet Hospital. I came to Greenville in 1951 and
lived in the nursing quarters. They also had a house that Dr. Pace owned
on Jarvis Street and Verta and I lived in that one. When the hospital
on Fifth Street opened we were still living on Jarvis Street and we had
to get a taxi back and forth to the hospital because the nursing quarters
was not finished. We started working night duty and worked straight for
about three months and we worked all the floors, we supervised and we
did everything. We knew everybody and just had the best time. Then we
started alternating shifts. I had worked 3-11 on the surgical floor and
we were only making $165 a month and I thought if we relieved help for
four days we were supposed to get some extra money but for some reason
I didn't get it. I think that was the maddest I have ever been. I left
in 1974.
Sally Lucido: Let
me ask you a question about the nursing quarters, was your room and board
included in your salary?
Hannah
Gaylor:
Yes, it consisted of about $10.00 a month.
Beth
Nelson:
So the value of your place to stay was $10.00 a month.
Hannah
Gaylor:
And you could eat off of that too. We could eat dinner and lunch.
Beth
Nelson:
Let's talk more about this. There was a nursing home on Jarvis Street,
a duplex. Lets talk to those of you who lived there. How many people could
live there at one time?
Hannah
Gaylor:
We had a housemother and seven to eight nurses lived there and there was
one bath on each side. There were two girls to a room.
Doris
Skinner:
When I first came to Greenville I lived there and I was supposed to be
working in the operating room and they stuck me in pediatrics on 3-11.
Everybody in the nursing residence was working days so in the daytime
I was all by myself and when I got home at night everybody was asleep.
After two weeks of that I told them I was packing my suitcase and going
back or somewhere. That is the way I existed over there in that residence.
I was the only one there. In the daytime I was all by myself and at night
everybody was asleep. That wasn't real nice.
It was a duplex and
we shared bathrooms. We had a little kitchen and a living room and this
was included in our salary. We washed our clothes in the bathtub and we
had a string across the back porch to hang them on.
Beth
Nelson:
When you stayed there you were probably just out of school. Was it mostly
women your age or was it a mixture of older women too?
Grace
Turner:
We had some xray technicians and some lab technicians living there.
Doris
Skinner:
We had to walk from the nurse's residence over to the hospital to get
our dinner.
Beth
Nelson:
What about the idea of living like that? Was that the kind of thing you
did for six or eight months until you found a place to live or got married
or did you stay there for several years?
Doris
Skinner:
You were there until you got married or found another job. Even when the
new residence opened up you lived there until you got married or left.
Most of us all got married the same year.
Beth
Nelson:
The new residence was behind the hospital. Describe that.
Doris
Skinner:
That was very nice. The rooms were supposed to accommodate two people
but there were not that many over there so most of us had a private room.
I had a private room and a bath between my room and the next room. Phyllis
lived over there until she got married and she had a little apartment
since she was DON. She had a bedroom, living room and a private bath.
We had a nice living room over there. We had a hi fi in there and I still
have some of the old records that I used to play on that hi fi over there.
There was no where to go and no way to get anywhere unless you had a car.
We went to the movies every afternoon that we could and walked uptown
but then we got a bike. You really did need a car in Greenville. Phyllis
and I bought our first car together.
Grace
Turner:
When I first worked at the Johnston Street Hospital we made $100.00 a
month. I did not stay in the nursing home, I stayed at home. We worked
a 12 hour shift with the understanding that we were supposed to get two
to three hours off sometime during that shift if they had two on the floor.
You were supposed to be able to go to a bed and lay down if you wanted
to or if you had some way to leave for two or three hours you could do
that.
Olive
Jones: I
remember one night when I was on night duty I took my time to go to bed
and the girls forgot to come down and call me and I woke up and the day
shift was coming on. They forgot to wake me.
Betty
Bailey:
It really has been interesting and I loved hearing about everything. I
was not a part of the Johnston Hospital. I came in 1961 to the Fifth Street
Hospital and Phyllis Martin hired me and she hired me very quickly and
I was six months pregnant and asked her if she hired pregnant people and
she asked me how long I would work and I told her until I had the baby
and Phyllis told me she went into labor in her office with both of her
children. I thought if she could do that I could work and do all I had
to. I came to work in 1961 as a part time person and I worked nights and
it was like one or two nights a week and she was very good to me allowing
me to choose my working hours and I worked PRN which meant that I worked
all over the hospital in every department. Hannah and Verta and I used
to supervise the nights that we didn't do staff nursing and we had the
best time. Everybody loved everybody in that old hospital. I didn't go
back to the days of the "patched glove" as that was before my
time. The new wing had just been completed when I came and I thought it
was wonderful. We did wash our gloves and we had the little sterilizers
that we autoclaved. We did not have a lot of disposables at that time.
One thing that I thought was interesting and I tell the staff now that
when they complain about their salaries that when I started to work in
the old hospital that my salary was quoted at being $12.50 for eight hours,
that was not for an hour. One gal made the comment the other night that
$13.00 an hour wasn't bad to start off in those days and I told her not
an hour but for an eight hour shift. Right after I started to work we
got a little raise of .50 so we made $13.00 per eight-hour shift. Nights
that we supervised we made $1.00 extra, we made $14.00 for supervising
the entire house. I thought Phyllis Martin was very fair. When I was supervising
I always went to the delivery room for the deliveries. I never went to
the operating room but Phyllis used to come in at night and work that
operating room. She took call for the operating room. She must have been
taking call the nights that I supervised because I did not go to the operating
room.
Doris
Skinner:
I remember when Hurricane Donna hit here she was on call that night and
they were doing an appendectomy on an 89 year old women and in the middle
of the night Phyllis called me and asked me if I could come over and baby-sit
as she had to go to the hospital. She went in the middle of the hurricane
and she went to the hospital so she could take call.
Rena
Jones: I
remember on a few occasions when Phyllis Martin was able to cover and
I remember she used to come down on A-1 and do all the paperwork and answer
the phone and she did all this to free us up so we could work.
Hilda
Norris:
I remember that just two weeks after Phyllis Martin had a C-Section she
came back to work and was working at her desk.
Doris
Skinner:
Money was scarce at the old hospital. Phyllis would have loved to give
everybody a raise every time they asked for it but it all had to go before
Mr. Ward and the Board of Directors. They had to approve everything and
sometimes she had to fight tooth and nail for every little thing she got.
She also went down to the stock room and made all the forms like the nursing
note sheet and all these other things to save money for the hospital instead
of having the hospital go to a printer and have them. She would go down
there and she would mimeograph them. Many a time she would come up and
there would be ink all over her. Then she would also pad them.
Beth
Nelson:
Did she retire when she left the old hospital?
Doris
Skinner:
Oh, she went to the ARC. That was the best thing in the world she ever
did. Phyllis never took a two-week vacation in the whole almost twenty
years she worked at the hospital. Once she went to the ARC she had holiday
time, much better pay, vacation time and just better everything. She did
better herself. She was the first DON for the ARC. Once she left Pitt
Memorial they put three nurses in her place. Then they had to hire somebody
else to do purchasing because Phyllis did most of the purchasing for the
hospital.
Hilda
Norris:
They have hired four people at Pitt Memorial to do what I did.
Doris
Skinner:
When Phyllis decided to leave it was at the time that my mother was terminally
ill and some of the doctors even came to the house and asked her to reconsider
and not to leave and they were very upset with it. Finally she said maybe
she had better stay at the hospital. My mother looked at her and told
her she had worked so hard for so little except for the gratification,
if you go back to that hospital I will not talk to you. She told mother
okay she would go to the ARC.
Betty
Bailey:
It was certainly not unusual to be around at night and see her coming
in at 3 a.m. to go to the operating room and circulate. I remember regarding
the equipment that Phyllis said that Dr. Fearrington was going to have
a demonstration on a respirator and we thought what in the world was that.
When we went to the inservice there was this machine that you could maintain
someone with. We used it mainly to give respiratory treatments. I was
so excited. You rolled it around if you had to give somebody a respiratory
treatment. We had one of them in the old hospital and it was probably
in the early sixties. It was the Bennett machine.
Doris
Skinner:
When equipment would not function properly they would bring them to Phyllis
and ask her to fix it for them and she would fix it. I am not mechanically
minded at all but she was and she could fix this, that and the other thing
and I couldn't but she could and she would.
Betty
Bailey:
The other thing I remember so vividly over at the old hospital that we
have not had in the new hospital was that we had patients in the halls
all the time. You had to put a little screen around them. We didn't have
the pump that you regulate IV fluids with now.
Grace
Turner:
I nursed my first patient, Dr. Fearrington's patient, with a cardiac monitor
and at that time that was the kind of monitor that you rolled around from
room to room and that was the first. I nursed the first aortic aneurysm
surgery in Greenville and that was Dr. Longino's patient. He also did
the procedure where they put the catheter up the left femoral artery up
to the heart but I can't remember what it was called but Dr. Longino did
that too. This was in the 1960s/
Doris
Skinner:
Phyllis set up the first ICU unit at the old hospital but I don't remember
what year that was.
Beth
Nelson:
Somebody mentioned earlier that when patients were really ill that if
they couldn't be handled in Greenville they were put on a train to Kinston.
Grace
Turner:
That was way back in the days. When Pitt Memorial first opened up we took
patients to Duke and so forth and they would transport them through Wilkersons.
We used his hearses. Before Dr. Hardy came there was nobody here to take
patients with surgical spine fractures and serious stuff like that. They
were transported by ambulances also.
Hilda
Norris:
All the sick babies went to Duke back then.
Doris
Skinner:
A lot of the heart patients went to Birmingham, bypassing Duke. One of
the doctors in Birmingham was related to the Wilkersons.
Grace
Turner:
We made our first 4 x 4s and you had to stay busy folding them and we
sterilized them. We cleaned our needles, we sharpened our needles and
sterilized our needles over a Bunsen burner back in 1945. You sterilized
the needle over it before you gave a shot.
Doris
Skinner:
We didn't have all these disposable things like disposable enemas like
they have now and every floor had an enema tray. Well, all of a sudden
one time the enema tray was missing from the emergency room and everybody
came up to Phyllis' office telling her we needed to get a new tray and
nobody knew where it was. Once Phyllis went to visit a friend of ours
and she said to us we would go next door and see so and so and we went
over there and guess what - there was the emergency room enema tray sitting
in her house and she had it for weeks and she said Dr. so and so gave
it to her.
Phyllis picked up
the enema tray and told her it was going back to the hospital. The trays
cost $30.00 and that was a lot of money forty or fifty years ago. She
picked it up and took it back. Then another time one of the doctors went
to Phyllis office, and she seemed to get the brunt of everything, and
he was fussing at her because they couldn't find the reflect camera, nobody
could find it. In the meantime she had to take Susan to one of the doctors
and she went there and there is the reflect camera, not just one but two
with Pitt Memorial Hospital written on it. She picked them up and took
them back to the hospital. |