BARTON
AMBULANCE SERVICE
Being ill and requiring hospital treatment in Barton has always involved
a long journey time. Even today you can expect up to 20 minutes travelling
time even if you are taken to Hull on blue lights. Travelling to hospital
has improved drastically over the years from the old rough road to
Scunthorpe via Winterton to getting the motorway and then the Humber
Bridge, which gave us access to Hull Royal.
In the mid to late 1800’s Barton was quite a thriving port and
there was a ferry over the river running from a jetty at the end of
Waterside Road. If you were ill and needed to go to hospital at this
time Hull Infirmary was actually the easiest hospital to attend. There
was a kind of basket on wheels kept in the town for emergency transport
to hospital. This would be pulled by a couple of men to your house
where you were loaded in and then pulled through the streets of Barton
down to the point where you were taken over the river on the ferry
and then pulled through the streets of Hull to the Hospital which was
nearer to the town centre than the site of the hospital now.
In the late 1800’s the ferry moved away from Barton down river
to the village of New Holland and the railways came to Barton so you
would then be loaded onto a train in the basket and taken through to
New Holland, down the pier onto the ferry. This continued right up
until after the war. The ambulance now though was a stretcher on wheels
with the luxury of a canvas hood over the top, which saved you getting
too wet if the weather was bad. This stretcher was kept in the yard
behind the Chemists shop on the high street and one of the last people
to be the stretcher-bearer was a man called Wood.
In the war years there were two motorised ambulances which were provided
by local businesses. Thompsons furniture shop and Birkitts made their
vans available for the local medics. These could transport four stretchers
at a time in relative comfort. Relative being the appropriate word
as the suspension left much to be desired. These covered all the villages
around Barton and spent several nights in Barrow when the Germans dropped
land mines on the village. Patients who required hospital treatment
were transported to the War Memorial Hospital at Scunthorpe while less
severe cases were brought back into Barton for treatment.
In early 1948 fire officer ADO Renyalds called a meeting in the Oddfellows
Hall from Scunthorpe. This was to set up the first recognised ambulance
cover in Barton. There were members of the St. John Ambulance and Red
Cross as well as some of the retained firemen at the meeting. It was
decided that they would set up the system working from the fire station
in Holydyke with the firemen acting as drivers and the first aiders
from the organisations acting as the attendants. The people who started
the system were Fred Bromfield, Jim Mumby, Don Fields, Arthur Bacon,
Ron Brammell, George Stockdale, Tom Meacock, Everitt, Murwood Foster,
Jack Petit and Clive Cook. Along with these men there were for the
first few years, two women Beatie Bromfield and Fran Crow who were
called out with the crew to all maternity cases. 
The first shift for the new ambulance service was on the 6th July 1948
with Jim Mumby and a man called Everitt doing the night shift. Jim
remembers this very well, as it was the second night back from his
honeymoon. At this time there were few phones in the town and so these
men who did their normal employment in the day spent the night at the
fire station sleeping on stretchers with a phone between them. Shortly
after this date the station had two full time day workers Albert Crow
and Beely Parish. These two worked the day shifts and were there to
transport patients to the hospital appointments and also attend any
emergency work.
The ambulance was part of the combined ambulance and fire service and
the people were employed by Lindsey County Council. The control room
was in Cole Street Scunthorpe near to where the shop T.J. Hughes is
now. There was no radio system available to the service at this time,
which meant the only contact with the crews was by phone. Once away
from either station or the hospital the ambulance could not be diverted
to a new incident. One system that was employed for a while during
the day is similar to that used by some of the catalogue firms today.
Some of the shops in the villages that had phones would have coloured
card in their windows. If an ambulance was required urgently the shopkeeper
would be contacted by phone and they would put up a red card. When
the passing ambulance saw this they would stop and use the shop phone
to contact their control.
Barton was one of the first towns outside Scunthorpe to have their
own ambulance service and they would cover from Killingholme Haven
out to Wintringham Haven and then out to Melton Ross. As more phones
became available the ambulance drivers had phones in their homes once
called out they would go and collect their attendant. As you can imagine
it would take five to ten minutes for the driver to turn out and then
he would have to get the attendant out of bed before they even set
off for the emergency. For the first few years they were not given
any kind of uniform and so would have to turn out in their own clothes.
In 1953 they were provided with white coats to make them look more
professional and a few years later the obligatory hat. It was about
this time that oxygen was also carried as part of the normal equipment.
Up until then their equipment had comprised of a first aid box with
12 triangular bandages, assorted dressings and four blankets.
It was about 1960 when the ambulance service split from the fire service
and staff had the option with which service they would continue. Frank
Milner and Monty Beaumont transferred to the ambulance service at this
time. It was also about this time that the vehicles were fitted with
two way radios in the cabs. The ambulances continues to work out of
the fire station on Holydyke in Barton and it was in the mid sixties
when a third full time member of staff was employed as more people
required transport for their hospital appointments.
I started with the ambulance service in 1972. This was the Lindsey
area of Lincolnshire and our control was housed in some buildings in
the Fire station yard in Scunthorpe. This control was responsible for
all the ambulance movements in the county of Lincolnshire down to Rutland
except for Lincoln City and the Borough of Grimsby. There were other
controls during the day but Scunthorpe had full control during the
evenings and night.
At Barton we continued to be stationed in the old Fire Station on Holydyke
(where the new station is now built ). The ambulance crews who were
only full time Monday to Friday 8am to 6pm had a small office to the
rear of the buildings. There were three staff and two ambulances at
the station and the ambulances were parked either side of the fire
engine in the garages.
The emergency ambulance which also was employed most of the day transporting
out patients and a sitting car which was manned by a single ambulance
man transported the more able bodied patients to their appointments.
The three full time staff at Barton when I first started were Cyril
King who was the Leading Ambulance Man, Harry Portess and Johnny Vrabel.
Cyril moved into control shortly after I started due to ill health
and the role of Leading Hand was taken over by Keith Green who transferred
from Scunthorpe. Johnny Vrabel was an American who had come over during
the last war with the American air force to operate out of the airfield
at Goxhill. His name can be found on the memorial which now stands
at the gateway to the old airfield on Horsegatefield Road in Goxhill.
Along with these three full time staff were part time staff who were
called auxiliaries. These staff had full time jobs outside the ambulance
service but covered the hours outside the 8am to 6pm times. The people
who were auxiliaries when I started were, Jim Mumby, Colin Bell, Denis
Huteson, Monty Beaumont, Frank Milner, Clive Cook, Eddie Scott, Jack
Petit. All these people had first aid certificates and attended the
ambulance training school, which was at Horncastle. Each night or weekends
the two members of staff who had been allocated the stand by for that
time would attend the station to do their station duties of checking
and cleaning the ambulance and then return home to be on call.
If there was a call during their period of stand by they would receive
a phone call from control and have to rush to the station and drive
to the incident. If the call came in the early hours of the morning
the two men would have to get up, get dressed and then travel the mile
or so to the station which would take anywhere up to 10 minutes. Today
the ambulance service have to meet a target of attending 75% of their
life threatening calls within 8 minutes. In 1972 the Lindsey ambulance
service drew up plans for a new ambulance station to be built on Tofts
Road just past the Millfields turning. The local building firm of Stamp
and Sons carried out the work.
In 1974 we entered the new age of Humberside. The ambulance along
with the other emergency services started a new county service and
the Ambulance head quarters was in Anlaby just outside Hull. Shortly
after the inception of Humberside the new station was completed which
caused some debate as the new county service stated that they had not
ordered the new station but were being forced to pick up the cost.
This was soon sorted out and the ambulance staff and vehicles moved
to the new station. Very shortly after the inception of Humberside
the Ambulance Service was involved in one of its greatest response
which was the explosion at Flixborough. The staff from Barton where
involved in this disaster for several days. Initially most of the staff
turned out and were involved in the evacuation of people in the area.
For the following days the ambulance stood by at the site in case of
further problems.
This system of three full time staff and 10 auxiliaries continued
up until 1977. It was in the summer of 1976 that the chief ambulance
officer Mr. Malcom Fozzard who had been in that position since the
start of Humberside decided that the auxiliary system was outdated
and a full time station was required. Four new full time staff were
recruited two from the auxiliary staff and two new members. Even with
the introduction of full time staff it was not the end of the standby
system.
The new full time station was in fact a 16-hour station
as it was actually manned from 0700 to 2300 with the late crew going
home to
cover the 8 hours of the night shift on the call out system. The
staff on the station at this time were Johnny Vrabel, Harry Portess,
Keith
Green, Steve Horsfall, Dave Rushby, Denis Huteson & John Pullen
later to be joined by Mally Ross. This call out system meant that
all the staff employed to work at Barton Station had to live within
2 miles
of the building. Most of the staff were Bartonians or had previously
lived in the villages around Barton. At this time there were very
few call outs within the night time and three or four calls between
11pm
and 7am a week was the norm. Today we would expect at least that
number each night.
This again continued for quite a few years until the mid nineties
when it was decided that there should be more full time cover. Initially
Barton was given a night shift for four nights a week but it was later
realised that Barton was a busier station than Brigg and so Barton
was made up to a full 24-hour station. It was only in the mid 90s that
the emergency ambulances ceased to be used for the normal day to day
transportation of out patients and were kept solely for emergency cases.
The first paramedics started in Barton in 1994 with Steve Horsfall
and John Pullen qualifying.
Then in 1996 the government decided that parts of the health service
would be put up for competitive tendering as trusts to compete for
the contracts to run different services. The south bank of the Humber
was the first and only part of an ambulance service to be contracted
in this way. In the summer of 1996 it was learned that all the area
of the old county of Humberside south of the river would be transferred
over to Lincolnshire Ambulance service in October 1997
The trus
t board of Lincolnshire Ambulance service decided
that they would run the new area with just two ambulance stations, one
at Grimsby
and one at Scunthorpe and so do away with the stations at Barton, Brigg
and Immingham. Initially they decided that they would keep the ambulances
based in the towns and in Barton they arranged with Barton Medical
Services for the crew to work out of the Willows Rest Home. So at midnight
on the 30th September 1997 the crews left the ambulance station on
Tofts Road for the last time and the “for sale” notices
were put up. The building and land was later sold and now the station
has been converted into a bungalow, which is aptly named The Station.
The ambulance trust realised after a short while that there was a
need to keep an ambulance in the Barton area and so the ambulance continued
to run out of the Willows Rest home for about a year until Humberside
Fire Brigade offered the use of their newly built station on Holydyke
where it has continued until today. Quite a few of the staff today
are from the Barton area though since stand by was eliminated more
staff from away have moved to the station.