Bushnell Days: Celebrity Visitors at Bushnell Hospital
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Celebrity Visitors at Bushnell Hospital
Actor and comedian Bob Hope was one of many entertainers who enjoyed lifting the spirits of the men and women in the Armed Forces. He helped raise money for a golf course at Bushnell Hospital, though the hospital closed before it was completed.
Senator Harry S. Truman (who would become President Truman after the death of Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1945) visited Bushnell Hospital. Here he inspects the orthopedics shop with Colonel Hardaway.
Bushnell Hospital was a stopping point for numerous United Service Organizations (USO) tours and celebrity visits to raise the spirits of the veterans. Some of the visitors were surprised by the good cheer of the amputee patients who, for the most part, exhibited gratitude to have survived and to have visitors come and entertain them.
Helen Keller visited many military hospitals during World War II to encourage disabled veterans. Her visit to Bushnell took place in December 1944. Sgt. Walter Richardson said of her visit, “Of all the people that have visited here no one has left the hospital so thoroughly impressed, or shall I say inspired.”
Helen Keller was an inspirational guest who showed the men what they could accomplish even with a disability, and many other people with disabilities taught the men how to adapt to civilian life. Comedian Bob Hope, singer and actor Bing Crosby, entertainer Shirley Temple, actor Clark Gable, musician Tommy Dorsey, singer Nat King Cole, and other national celebrities came to Bushnell as well as local figures. Joe McQueen, the Utah jazz musician who was a part of Ogden’s 25th Street scene, said that the amputees at Bushnell were the only people he would perform for without charge.
Sources for this Page
Andrea Kaye Carter, “Bushnell General Military Hospital And The Community of Brigham City, Utah During World War II” (2008). All Graduate Theses and Dissertations. 162. https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/etd/162.