U.S.S. CONSOLATION (AH-15)
[Former hospital corpsman Ted Bobinski
of Laguna Niguel,
California supplied the information below
by loaning a ship’s booklet to The Korean War Educator.]
FIRST!
U.S.S. Consolation (AH-15) was the first hospital ship to:
- Participate in the
Korean action
- Include a female
medical officer on her staff
- Return battle
casualties to the U.S. from Korea
- Utilize an
electroencephalograph (brain wave tracing) machine at sea
- Install and use a blood
bank as standard equipment
- Have a flight deck
installed
- Receive casualties
directly from battle field via helicopter
CONSOLATION IN WORLD WAR II
The
USS Consolation was commissioned in May 1945. She had an overall length of 520 feet, a
normal displacement of 15,034 tons, and a cruising speed of 17 knots. The ship could provide medical and surgical
care to 786 bed patients. Her operating
rooms, laboratories, and clinics were comparable to those of the most modern
hospitals in the entire world, and they were a tribute to the medical and dental
professions.
Her first assignment was to care for the liberated allied
prisoners of war at Wakayama, Honshu,
Japan, and provide them
with transportation to Okinawa. Despite the strain on her facilities, she
treated all with the necessary medical and surgical care and returned them home
in greatly improved conditions. Later,
she took part in operation "Magic Carpet," which repatriated thousands of
patients and dependents from overseas to the west coast of the United
States at the close of World War II.
SERVICE IN KOREA
The Consolation departed from San
Francisco, California, in July
1950, becoming the first American Hospital
Ship to arrive in Korea
to furnish medical support for United Nations Forces. She arrived in Pusan, Korea
in August 1950, just after the Korean War broke out. The ship became the major medical facility in
Korea, treating
patients and evacuating them to Japan.
From Pusan,
the hospital ship was deployed to Inchon
to provide support to the invasion there.
From there, the ship traveled to the east coast to receive casualties
from Wonsan
and Hungnam. After caring for the wounded from these two
campaigns, the ship was selected as the experimental hospital ship to be fitted
with a helicopter flight deck to expedite the transportation of wounded to
hospital facilities. The Consolation traveled
back to the United States,
where a 60-foot by 60-foot landing platform was constructed at the U.S.
Naval Shipyard in Long Beach, California. When the work was completed on 16August, 1951,
the Consolation returned to the Korean theater of war to resume her
mission of medical support.
In December, 1951, anchored off Sokcho-Ri,
15 miles above the 38th parallel, "Operation Helicopter" began
within sight and sound of communist guns on the Korean coast. On 18
December, 1951, at 12:20 p.m.,
the first battle casualty ever flown from the field of battle to a hospital
ship was landed by a Marine helicopter.
This was the beginning of a mission unprecedented in Naval or Medical
history.
In late March of 1952, when battle action increased on the
Korean western front, the Consolation was ordered to Inchon Harbor
to furnish medical support to the troops.
Soon after her arrival, the flow of patients began. By boat and helicopter they came. Battle
casualties were admitted and receiving treatment within minutes of being
wounded. After maintaining a daily
patient census of more than 400 for ten weeks, in June of 1952, the Consolation
was ordered home for a period of upkeep and replenishment of supplies.
During her twenty months of Korean duty, the Consolation
admitted and treated more than 15,300 patients, with another 20,500 treated
as outpatients. In giving 3,840
transfusions to men wounded in the fighting in Korea,
the Consolation used 480 gallons of blood. At one period, the supply of whole blood
reached a dangerously low level. Only
emergency requisitions, delivered by helicopter, enabled the supply to keep up
with the rapid rate of use.
AFTER KOREA
The USS Consolation continued to support UN forces
on the Korean peninsula until March 1955, when she was decommissioned and
donated to the health foundation. She
was renamed the SS Hope. This
ship provided health care and medical teaching services in several parts of the
world under the auspices of "Project Hope."
She was returned to the US
Navy in February 1975, and was sold for scrap.
The USS Consolation (AH-15) earned ten Battle
Stars for Korean War services.
USS CONSOLATION WEBSITE
For more facts, information, and photographs about the U.S.S.
Consolation, visit the official website of its
reunion committee at www.usconsolations.homestead.com. There, site visitors will find the ship’s
log, reunion information, organization contacts, photographs, and veterans’
stories.