SS Hope was a hospital ship operated by Project HOPE. This vessel was originally a US Navy hospital ship, USS Consolation (AH-15). Consolation was donated to Project Hope in 1958, and under its new name served from 1960 until 1974, when she was retired. Hope was not replaced, and the emphasis of Project HOPE switched entirely to land-based operations.
List of voyages
While in charitable service from 1958 to 1974, this ship voyaged around the world:
- Voyage 1, to Indonesia and South Vietnam, September 1960â"September 1961
- Voyage 2, to Peru, May 1962â"March 1963
- Voyage 3, to Ecuador, November 1963â"September 1964
- Voyage 4, to Guinea, September 1964â"September 1965
- Voyage 5, to Nicaragua, January 1966â"November 1966
- Voyage 6, to Colombia, February 1967â"December 1967
- Voyage 7, to Ceylon (Sri Lanka), February 1968â"March 1969
- Voyage 8, to Tunisia, August 1969â"August 1970
- Voyage 9, to the West Indies, January 1971â"November 1971
- Voyages 10 and 11, to Brazil, February 1972â"March 1974
Features
One special piece of equipment was a machine called the Iron Cow. Using distilled seawater, combined with milk solids and butterfat, it was capable of turning out 2500 gallons of milk daily.
This 15,000-ton ship had a pharmacy, three operating rooms, a radiology department, an isolation ward, and closed-circuit television for viewing operations. The medical crew typically consisted of 150 nurses and 100 doctors, who taught American practices in various medical specialties, to colleagues around the world.
Works about Hope
- Walsh, William B. (1964). A Ship called Hope. Dutton. OCLCÂ 1374141.Â
- â"â" (1966). Yanqui, come back! The story of Hope in Peru. Dutton. OCLCÂ 881451.Â
- â"â" (1970). Hope in the East: the mission to Ceylon. Dutton.Â
- â"â"; Meltzer, Richard S; Lucey, Dennis (1974). Medicine and the satellite: a description of the 1973 satellite experiments aboard the S.S. Hope. Project Hope.Â
- Rheinstein, Fred (director); Bellamy, Ralph. Title unknown (Documentary film). NBC.Â