MILITARY
PICTORIAL REPORT NO.2 VARIETY FILM ON QM AERIAL SUPPLY COMPANY & STORY OF 8209 MOBILE ARMY SURGICAL HOSPITAL. (MASH) PLUS SHOTS IN KOREA & IN 21 MASH UNIT
1951
b&w - newsreel - Korean War - ambulances on mountain road - sign: Headquarters, Mobile Army Surgical Hospital - MASH - African-American soldiers take wounded out of ambulance and into hospital
10/06/70 C0013682 / COLOR JORDAN: OPERATION FIG HILL, THE AMERICAN SURGICAL HOSPITAL, IN JORDAN:
10/06/70 C0013682 / COLOR JORDAN: OPERATION FIG HILL, THE AMERICAN SURGICAL HOSPITAL, IN JORDAN: UNCUT "OPERATION FIG HILL" SHOWS: WATER PURIFICATION UNIT: COMMUNICATIONS AREA: EXTERIOR OF THE HOSPITAL, WITH MAINTENANCE AND MESS TENTS IN FRONT: BRITISH AMBULANCE PAINTED WHITE AND THEIR COMMUNICATIONS AREA: ONE ROLL IS AN INTERVIEW WITH AMERICAN AMBASSADOR BROWN WITH WILD TRACK SOUND INCLUDED WHICH WAS FILMED IN FRONT OF THE HOSPITAL: INTERVIEW WAS CONDUCTED BY GALE WILEY, STARS AND STRIPES: (SHOT RECENTLY 500FT) DISASTER RELIEF WATER POLLUTION & PURIFICATION - GENERAL JORDAN - POLITICS (RELATED) HOSPITALS (SS) MOBILE ARMY FOREIGN AID - US - JORDAN BROWN, (AMB) XX - SOF WILEY, GALE - SOF US - FOREIGN RELATIONS - JORDAN NBC - POOL / 500 FT / 16 COL / POS / R31250 SEPARATE ROLL MAG TAPE
U.S. Marine Corps 1st Medical Battalion ambulances bring patients at a mobile army surgical hospital in Inje, Korea.
U.S. Army MASH (Mobile Army Surgical Hospital) at K-51 Inje Airfield in South Korea during the Korean War. Litter jeeps of U.S. Marine Corps 1st Medical Battalion come and stop near hospital tents. A sign reads 'United States Naval Medical Center'. One U.S. soldier buttons up his coat as he talks with another soldier. A sign at a medical center reads 'Medical D Co.' . Ambulances pull up. Litter bearers start to carry a man on a litter to a tent. Location: Inje Korea. Date: December 1951.
THANK
CU hand writes 'London, England' Man walks through town square in Mayfair, England CU packages with BWRS (British War Relief Society) stamped on it Man pushes cart with packages Men and women sit a table and discuss relief aid Women handle goods Lady Ward talks to volunteer, volunteer stuffs bag at Dudley House (relief center) Ext. Dudley House Salvation Army officers carry crates Women tend to child, women put coats on men and women CU young child with doll smiles (nice) Buildings burn, bombed city Salvation Army mobile canteens People in front of food truck, CU child eat cake Inside of truck, women hand out coffee and food Ext. truck, women hand out coffee, camera pans ruined building around truck Line of trucks Queen Elizabeth stands in front of 'Queen's Mercy Convoy' truck, queen inspects truck Row of ambulances, women stand at attendance in front of vehicles CU ambulances Women sew Boys play pool, ball falls off table Boys play checkers Teenagers plays table tennis Girls carry coffee cups, girls clean chairs Children in front of building, CU girl cleans chair leg, CU little girls clean, one girl has a wash basin Girl with clothes dryer squeezes water out of wash Children play Row of nurses with prams and babies march (nice), CU three babies per pram Woman and children run in a circle (ring-around-the-rosie) Girls slide down slide, nurse retrieves children from fire chute Children walk and wave washcloths Nurses bathe babies in tubs, all in row CU toddlers' faces, toddlers stand in cribs Baby sleeps Deaf boy talks to nurse, nurse reads to him (pathetic) CU sad children, smiling boy with cast put on stretcher Row of nurses carry children on stretchers to ambulance Doctors and nurses examine man's head in x-ray machine American and British flags over hospital CU nurses outside hospital Surgical team in surgery, CU anesthesiologist giving gas LS nurses with patients in hospital ward Camera pans row of men on crutches with nurses Patients limp towards camera Group of nurses with baby carriages (dozens) Outdoor playground children play on swings and slides CU frowning baby on swing, boy sits on toy train pulled and pushed by boys Children climb on jungle gym Playroom, boys play with boards and girls play cards Girls set tea table (nice) Nurse with tape over her eyes, baby on bed with tape over eyes, CU baby under sunlamp Babies in crib plays Women stand in a line with babies Women sit in a row with babies Woman holds baby upside down Esther Day lifts baby by feet (repeated), she smiles Day hangs toddler upside down from a swing, she lifts her up and down Day holds boy's hand as he walks on a pole (back view) Baby holds onto bar on a bench, Day lifts her legs, baby slides down bench Day holds naked baby in front of a row of naked babies People sit around a table and discuss orphans, all raise hands Crowd of running children Repeat of previous scenes
KOREAN WAR - ARMY MEDICAL CORPS / B-ROLL
BLACK AND WHITE HISTORICAL FILM HIGHLIGHTS THE ARMY MEDICAL CORPS DURING THE KOREAN WAR / CONFLICT.
M.A.S.H. UNITS DURING WWII
During WWII Dr. Drew helped set up the first mobile surgical hospitals near the front lines, saving countless lives. These units later became popularized has M.A.S.H. units.
COMAYAGUA M*A*S*H
00:00:00:00 [Combat support medicos support US military maneuvers]--Mobile Army Surgical Hospitals, inflated tents :28/ sign "Roberto Suazo Cordova Hospital", PB to MASH tent EXT :32/ INT ...
Empty recovery room
An empty room in a surgery recovery area is ready for the next patient.
True Glory, The
Sequence on Canadian or British soldiers in shallow trenches in woods, firing trench mortars, relaxing, cleaning guns, keeping an eye out for the enemy, firing machine gun. Shot of ambulance jeep moving by camera. Sequence on wounded GI being rescued by one of his comrades during spell of street fighting, being cared for in field hospital. Shots of US Army nurse, of doctors operating in tent surgical room. Sequence on mulberry harbour being used, vehicles rolling off, US troops marching. Shots of bad storm that wrecked part of the harbour, of harbour being used after storm. Shots of German soldiers marching in town of Cherbourg, of US mobile units speeding past camera, infantry moving ahead. GROUND TO AIR LS of bombers. CU of masked face of pilot. Various shots of French peasants working in fields, of cows, intercut with GI's in bush, running for cover. Shots of GI's fraternizing with peasants after battle. Sequence on capture of Cherbourg, srtillery barrage, GI's street fighting, Germans surrending, troops. Shots of ruined harbour, of efforts made by Americans to maki it operational. Sequence on Maquis showing sortie against German convoy in mountains, demolition of a bridge. Shots of dozens of dead civilians killed by Germans in retaliation. Shots of German artillery, armour, paratroop battalion, advancing, in action in Caen region. Dawn shots of Canadian troops advancing, armour preparing to open barrage against city. LSs of air raid against Caen. AERIAL SHOT of bombs falling, explosing. AIR TO AIR SHOTs of bombers, intercut with CUs of pilot. Shots of Canadians entering city, fighting door to door, of utter destruction. Shots of Canadian armour and infantry moving ahead on road out of city, across fields. Shot of German field marshal Erwin Rommel. Shots of German tank firing, of German soldiers firing.
U.S. Marine Corps 1st Medical Battalion surgeons perform a surgery in a mobile army surgical hospital in Inje, Korea.
U.S. Army MASH (Mobile Army Surgical Hospital) at K-51 Inje Airfield in South Korea during the Korean War. Interiors of a surgical tent shows U.S. Marine Corps 1st Medical Battalion surgeons putting a mask over a wounded soldier's face to administer anesthesia, and work during a surgical operation. The doctors pass clamps and scissors during the surgery operation. Location: Inje Korea. Date: December 1951.
Pakistan US - US congressmen visit quake survivors
NAME: PAK US 20051231I TAPE: EF05/1151 IN_TIME: 11:02:39:09 DURATION: 00:02:16:00 SOURCES: AP TELEVISION DATELINE: Various, Dec 31 2005 RESTRICTIONS: SHOTLIST: Muzaffrabad 1. Congressional party walks towards hospital 2. Entrance to Mobile Army Surgical Hospital (MASH) 3. Close up of MASH logo 4. Congressmen Jon Porter shakes hands with earthquake patients 5. US army Medical doctor examining child whilst Porters talks to him 6. Close up of sleeping baby 7. US army Doctor checking patient 8. Close up of patient 9. Doctor dressing wound on patient's hand 10. Congressional party leaves hospital 11. Soldiers outside hospital Shinkiari 12. Congressmen shaking hands with US Army Paramedics staff 13. Close up of soldier 14. Various of congressmen with soldier 15. SOUNDBITE: (English) Jon Porter, US congressman: "More importantly, we are here to be a friend of to the country of Pakistan, to offer our support for the relief efforts. Looking in the children eyes and talking to the families, and talking to the mums and dads, we can see that we are making a difference. But we are here to help, we are here to do any thing we can to make sure that the rest of the world realises that this great catastrophe that happened just a few months ago is still here, and we still need to continue your efforts. And we actually need to increase your efforts to make sure we continue to make a difference." 16. Soldiers and congressional party pose for photo 17. Wide shot of Mobile Army Surgical Hospital STORYLINE: An eight-member US Congress delegation headed by Jon Porter visited Muzaffarabad in Pakistan on Saturday, where they met with survivors of October 8th's earthquake at the US Mobile Army Surgical Hospital (MASH). US military units, including the MASH, are part of an international relief operation for victims of the South Asia quake which killed an estimated 87,000 people and destroyed the homes of 3.5 (m) million others. The delegation also visited Shinkiari, a town in Kashmir where a US Marine Corps medical unit is providing medical care for about 200 people a day. "We are here to help," Congressman Jon Porter, a Republican from Nevada, told reporters after touring the hospitals. Also on Saturday Pakistan's meteorological department said the new year was set to begin with snow and rain for those left homeless by the quake, as the long-feared Himalayan winter threatened to hinder relief operations. Using helicopters, roads and mule tracks, aid workers helped by Pakistan's army have been delivering tents, clothes, food and other provisions to survivors.
CHU LAI MARINE BASE & WOUNDED - 1965
Wounded Marines recover at the Chu Lai base in Vietnam.
IL: WWII AND COLD WAR MEMORABILIA AUCTIONED
<p></p>\n<p><b>--SUPERS</b>--</p>\n<p>Monday</p>\n<p>Williamson County, IL</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>:29-:43</p>\n<p>Danny Valle</p>\n<p>Reporting </p>\n<p></p>\n<p>1:05-1:15</p>\n<p>Zac Taylor</p>\n<p>Owner, Taylor Auction & Realty</p>\n<p></p>\n<p><b>--LEAD IN</b>--</p>\n<p>IN ILLINOIS, A ONCE IN A LIFETIME AUCTION IS HAPPENING SOON, WHERE YOU WILL HAVE THE OPPORTUNITY TO TAKE HOME SOME MILITARY HISTORY.</p>\n<p>NEXT MONTH, HUNDREDS OF ITEMS FROM THE COLD WAR AND WORLD WAR TWO WILL BE AUCTIONED OFF. </p>\n<p>DANNY VALLE HAS MORE FROM INSIDE THE BUNKER. </p>\n<p><b>--REPORTER PKG-AS FOLLOWS</b>--</p>\n<p>MOS: "40 to 50 years was the last time it was opened."</p>\n<p>BENEATH THE CONCRETE SKELETON...</p>\n<p>NATS</p>\n<p>...BEHIND THE RUSTY STUBBORN DOOR. </p>\n<p>NATS</p>\n<p>...ITEMS THAT HAVEN'T SEEN LIGHT IN DECADES.</p>\n<p>Voice Of Zac Taylor, Owner, Taylor Auction & Realty: "It feels like going back into time and reliving history."</p>\n<p>butted</p>\n<p>Zac Taylor, Owner, Taylor Auction & Realty: "We got gas masks ... never even been opened."</p>\n<p>INSIDE THIS BUNKER, HUNDREDS OF MEDICAL SUPPLIES - BEDS ... BLANKETS ... EVEN VIALS OF EXPIRED VACCINES.</p>\n<p>Danny Valle Reporting: "During the Cold War the U-S re-purposed this bunker to hold medical supplies in the case of a nuclear event in Williamson County. The plan - if the hospitals in the area were destroyed, they could take supplies from here and make Mobile Army Surgical Hospitals - or MASH units."</p>\n<p>THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT IS WORKING WITH THE COUNTY TO CLEAR OUT FOUR BUNKERS BY THE END OF THE YEAR.</p>\n<p>THAT'S WHERE ZAC TAYLOR OF TAYLOR AUCTION & REALTY COMES IN.</p>\n<p>Zac Taylor, Owner, Taylor Auction & Realty: "We're going to start cataloguing. We're going to start taking photos. We're going to start taking descriptions and we're going to go ahead and start putting that online."</p>\n<p>WE STILL DON'T KNOW WHAT U-S PLANS TO DO WITH THE BUNKERS.</p>\n<p>BUT SOME WE DIDN'T VISIT, STILL CONTAIN LIVE AMMUNITION.</p>\n<p>Zac Taylor, Owner, Taylor Auction & Realty: "There is a lot of military connection out here. We do have the ammunitions plant here in Marion, the General Dynamics, and there are some of that product in storage out here in some of these bunkers."</p>\n<p>YOU WON'T BE ABLE TO BID ON BOMBS OR BULLETS...</p>\n<p>NATS: "Yep. Mine detector."</p>\n<p>...BUT THERE'S A MINEFIELD OF MILITARY MEMORABILIA WAITING TO SEE THE LIGHT OF DAY.</p>\n<p>Zac Taylor, Owner, Taylor Auction & Realty: "I'm interested in it and I don't even know what's all in it."</p>\n<p><b>--TAG</b>--</p>\n<p>YOU CAN FIND MORE INFORMATION ABOUT THE AUCTION ONLINE AT TAYLOR-AUCTION-DOT-NET. </p>\n<p><b>-----END-----CNN.SCRIPT-----</b></p>\n<p></p>\n<p><b>--KEYWORD TAGS--</b></p>\n<p>ILLINOIS WWII MEMORABILIA AUCTION CONSUMER MILITARY KICKER </p>\n<p></p>
1951
b&w - newsreel - Korean War - wounded soldier taken out of ambulance and placed on outside carrier of helicopter - helicopter takes-off - Mobile Army Surgical Hospital - MASH
4K: Scrub nurse taking medical instruments,surgery and emergency concept
Woman, Nurse, Equipment, Human Hand, Medicine, Surgery, China - East Asia
34234 1980s NATIONAL GUARD AMEDD ARMY MEDICAL DEPT. PROMO MASH UNIT MOBILE ARMY SURGEONS HOSPITAL
This fast-paced 1980s promo for the United States National Guard profiles the AMEDD, or Army Medical Department. The promo shows a Mobile Army Surgeon's Hospital operating in simulated combat conditions during an annual training exercise, while cross-cutting to show that these doctors and nurses normally work in a civilian hospital. Dr. Henry Sanchez is featured. At 1:32, a nurse named Sandy Robertson is shown working in a surgical center, and then at the portable hospital. At 2:05, another doctor is shown working for the National Guard. At 2:27, a Huey helicopter moves wounded as a flying ambulance. At 3:00, surgeons work in the portable hospital's operating room. At 3:37, triage is shown outside the hospital tents. At 4:00, the EMT or operating room is shown. <p><p>We encourage viewers to add comments and, especially, to provide additional information about our videos by adding a comment! See something interesting? Tell people what it is and what they can see by writing something for example: "01:00:12:00 -- President Roosevelt is seen meeting with Winston Churchill at the Quebec Conference."<p><p>This film is part of the Periscope Film LLC archive, one of the largest historic military, transportation, and aviation stock footage collections in the USA. Entirely film backed, this material is available for licensing in 24p HD, 2k and 4k. For more information visit http://www.PeriscopeFilm.com
Interior Of Hospital Operating Room With Operating Table, Medical Equipments And Surgical Lights
Interior Of Hospital Operating Room With Operating Table, Medical Equipments And Surgical Lights
Pakistan MASH - US military field hospital set up to help quake victims
NAME: PAK MASH 251005N TAPE: EF05/0951 IN_TIME: 11:11:29:15 DURATION: 00:01:34:14 SOURCES: APTN DATELINE: Muzaffarabad, 24/25 Oct 2005 RESTRICTIONS: SHOTLIST: Muzaffarabad - 24 Oct 2005 1. Wide shot US military placing barbed wire around perimeter of the field hospital 2. Various closer shots of barbed wire being placed around hospital 3. Various shots of of field hospital being set up Muzaffarabad - 25 Oct 2005 4. Interior field hospital 5. Close shot American doctor feeding young boy with a spoon 6. Mother with injured boy (leg in plaster) on her lap 7. Close up of young boy face 8. Medics talking 9. Two shots of field hospital 10. SOUNDBITE (English) Lieutenant Kevin Stephens, US Navy: "What we are doing here in Muzaffarabad is establishing a US army field hospital, the 212th MASH Mobile Army Surgical Hospital out of Germany. It's going to be able to provide emergency and surgical care as well as intensive care to people who need it in this region affected by the earthquake." 11. Various exteriors of US soldiers setting up facility STORYLINE: The US Army's only remaining MASH unit is setting up in the quake-devastated Pakistani city of Muzaffarabad. The Germany-based 212th Mobile Army Surgical Hospital arrived in the region on Monday having been delayed for a week because of a shortage of aircraft. The unit's 40-vehicle convoy left Islamabad for the hills early on Sunday. After an arduous 27-hour drive along 240 kilometres (150 miles) of narrow, winding roads - and three breakdowns - the convoy arrived in this city of crumbled walls and rubble, savaged by the October 8 quake and jolted by hundreds of aftershocks since then. Three dozen MASH personnel accompanied the cargo. The MASH set up its base on a helicopter landing site on Muzaffarabad's outskirts, near the parliament building of Pakistan-controlled Kashmir, tightly guarded by Pakistani forces. Once fully operational, the American military will be offering an array of medical services to quake survivors and surgeons will be able to carry out 20 major operations a day. In recent years, the Army has largely phased out the once ubiquitous MASH units, replacing them with something known as a Combat Army Surgical Hospital, which are designed to be more flexible and closer to the front lines. But US officials say they are eager to show Pakistan - a major ally in the war on terrorism - that the United States is here in its hour of need. The official quake toll is more than 53,000 dead and 75,000 injured, though central government figures have lagged behind regional ones. Figures from officials in the North West Frontier Province and Pakistan's part of Kashmir add up to about 78,000. India reported 1,360 deaths in its part of Kashmir.
28112 THE CIVIL DEFENSE EMERGENCY HOSPITAL DURING NUCLEAR WAR
Created in the 1950s, this animated film describes the Civil Defense Emergency Hospitals, later renamed Civil Defense Packaged Disaster Hospitals. These were 200 bed mobile hospitals based on the military's Mobile Army Surgeons Hospitals or MASH units. The CD hospitals were equipped with supplies for 30 days of operations. <p><p>In June 1956, the Federal Civil Defense Authority announced a new program for distribution of civil defense emergency hospitals. The objective was to store these 200-bed hospitals at strategic points throughout the country in or near facilities which could be converted to hospital use in an emergency.<p><p>The plan was designed for the safe permanent storage of a hospital in unopened orginal containers at or near the place of eventual usage where it could be unpacked and put into operation with a minimum of delay in event of an emergency. Storage sites were to be not closer than 15 miles to a Critical Target Area nor farther than 50 miles from the area to be supported. At least 15,000 square feet of acceptable space would have to be available for hospital operations. Actual storage space required for the packaged hospital was slightly over 1,800 cubic feet. <p><p>The plan was to be implemented through formal agreements with the States. Each State could obtain one or several of these hospitals for storage within its borders by signing an agreement with FCDA under which the State accepted responsibility for adequate custodial, maintenance, and protective care according to established criteria. All aquisition and delivery costs were borne by the Federal Government. Subsequent costs for storage, care, and protection were borne by the State. <p><p>Packaged Disaster Hospitals supported Civil Defense and provided medical facilities capable of surviving the destruction of hospitals during a nuclear exchange. In 1953 the Federal Civil Defense Agency began development of a field hospital that could be deployed nationwide. Modeled on the Army's Mobile Surgical Hospital, a 200-bed prototype known as the Civil Defense Emergency Hospital was constructed. Because the Army hospitals were equipped with equipment not necessary for civilian purposes, the Civil Defense Emergency Hospital design was refined further into a facility with durable equipment as a Packaged Disaster Hospital. Originally designed to operate for a few days, the package was expanded to operate independently for 30 days to compensate for limited mobility of the survivors and reduced transportation capabilities. From 1953 to 1957, the Federal Civil Defense Agency acquired 1800 hospitals. Although transferred to the U.S. Public Health Service in 1961, there was no loss in the program's tempo, as 750 additional facilities were purchased and deployed.<p> <p>Each Packaged Disaster Hospital set weighed approximately 45,000 pounds and required 7,500 cubic feet of storage space. Assembly required 120 person-hours. The hospital included 12 functioning units: pharmacy, hospital supplies/equipment, surgical supplies/equipment, IV solutions/supplies, dental supplies, X-ray, hospital records/office supplies, water supplies, electrical supplies/equipment, maintenance/housekeeping supplies. Supplies ranged from antibiotics, gurneys, and centrifuges to blankets, sheets, and surgical gloves. Narcotics and surgical scrubs were omitted from the package. The Packaged Disaster Hospital also had an ax, hammers, screwdrivers, picks, and shovels. An extensive set of reference materials published by the U.S. Public Health Service was also available, ranging from manuals describing the facility set-up to assembling and installing specialized equipment. The equipment was supported by a comprehensive training program with texts, lesson plans, lecture formats, and a 27.5 minute film. <p> <p>The last Packaged Disaster Hospital set was assembled in 1962. At the program's zenith, over 2500 hospitals were deployed throughout the United States. The facilities were well dispersed; even rural states such as Alabama had 53 facilities and Arkansas had 18. The concept was also adopted in Canada, where at least 24 similarly equipped packages were assembled.<p><p>We encourage viewers to add comments and, especially, to provide additional information about our videos by adding a comment! See something interesting? Tell people what it is and what they can see by writing something for example like: "01:00:12:00 -- President Roosevelt is seen meeting with Winston Churchill at the Quebec Conference."<p><p>This film is part of the Periscope Film LLC archive, one of the largest historic military, transportation, and aviation stock footage collections in the USA. Entirely film backed, this material is available for licensing in 24p HD and 2k. For more information visit http://www.PeriscopeFilm.com