On The War Memorial Trail….. The WWII Diary Of Dr. Ross Part 2: Two Years And 20 Trips Aboard HMHS Lady Nelson

Dr. Alton Ross. (Photo courtesy of Judy Parks.  Photo colourization by Pieter Valkenburg)

March 23, 2025. During WWII, Dr. James ‘Alton’ ROSS, father of Judy Parks, was a doctor aboard the hospital ship HMHS Lady Nelson, Canada’s first hospital ship, which had 515 special hospital beds, special wards for shock cases, contagious diseases and fractures, private cabins, an operating room, a sterilizing room, an inspection room for minor dressings, a dispensary, and a portable x-ray outfit.

HMHS Lady Nelson.  Note the crosses on the side of the ship!  (Photo source: Wikipedia)

In Part 1, the first two of Alton’s twenty voyages aboard the ship were summarized, providing a window into life aboard a military hospital ship, as he found himself treating patients who’d been wounded in Sicily and mainland Italy. (See https://onthewarmemorialtrail.com/2025/03/16/on-the-war-memorial-trail-the-wwii-diary-of-dr-ross-part-1-assigned-to-hmhs-lady-nelson/)

Now, in Part 2, Alton’s story concludes with a return to Italy to pick up wounded servicemen and some of the devastation of war that he saw, and finally, after his 20th voyage he was able to return to the life of a civilian and a rural medical practice….

….Alton recorded Trip No. 3 aboard the HMHS Lady Nelson….

Alton’s third trip aboard the HMHS Lady Nelson began on March 4, 1944, with a round trip of 9,400 miles (15,128 km). 

Trip No. 3 went from Halifax to Bizerte to Naples to Algiers.  (Map source: DuckDuckGo)

The route took him from the port of Halifax, Nova Scotia, across the Atlantic Ocean to Gibraltar, to Bizerte, Tunisia, and then on to Naples, Italy, from there to Algiers, Algeria, before sailing to Avonmouth, United Kingdom, and then returning to Halifax.

Alton’s diary recorded that the orchestra aboard ship, in which he played the saxophone, was larger than on his previous voyage. “…Orchestra increased by two trumpets, clarinet, and ….bass… and cymbal.  Put on three concerts across…

After leaving Halifax on March 4, 1944, the ship arrived in Gibraltar at 1:00 pm on March 13, 1944, with a stay of 7 hours before sailing on to Bizerte, Tunisia.  Alton noted that they “…had a dance that night…very successful….enjoyed by everyone.  Orchestra right on good rhythm…

In the morning of March 16, 1944, they …anchored off Bizerte in Tunisia just in bay north of Cape Bon where last of Germans gave up…..Tanker brought water to us….Remained there until 1:00 am 17 March then left for Naples…

On March 18, 1944, the ship …docked at Naples at 9:00 am…..Began loading shortly afterwards…..Left at 4:00 pm for Algiers…

When the ship had been anchored in Bizerte, no one left the ship and Alton finally found out why. “…Heard reason for not going into Bizerte was 27 enemy ships sunk in harbour…

On March 20, 1944, the ship “…docked at Algiers at 3:00 pm and loaded 50 patients…” before leaving port at 7:00 pm for England.

The ship arrived in Avonmouth on March 29, 1944, and after the patients were unloaded, Alton was free until April 1, 1944, when “…502 patients….” were brought onboard. The ship left for Halifax the following day, on a course which went “….far south this time.  Southwest to Azores, directly west on level with New York, then northwest into Halifax.  Trip seemed very long…” The journey ended when the ship arrived in Halifax on April 12, 1944.

Music remained a big part of Alton’s off-duty hours. While in England, the Auxiliary Service provided “…a trumpet and a trombone, which gave us 4 brass.  As all the boys were on day duty, we practiced about 6 to 7 nights coming from England….” 

Judy reflected on the morale boost that was provided by the orchestra.  “…The older I get I realize those crossings on the Lady Nelson were therapy sessions.  Dances and lots of music with a live orchestra…” were instrumental in “…keeping spirits up to the young volunteers anxious for some excitement on the way over, and also to the wounded returning….

Alton’s wife Betty with their daughter Judy in New Glasgow, Nova Scotia, in a photo taken while Alton was on leave.  (Photo courtesy of Judy Parks)

At the end of Trip No. 3 Alton received 2 weeks leave, which he spent with his wife and daughter.

….Alton’s next few trips aboard the HMHS Lady Nelson were between Halifax and the United Kingdom….

Trip No. 4 went from Halifax to Avonmouth.  (Map source: https://www.viamichelin.com)

There are 2,762 nautical miles between the Port of Halifax in Nova Scotia, and the Port of Avonmouth in the United Kingdom.  Alton’s next trip was between these two ports.

Trip No. 5 was to be the same route, but D-Day on June 6, 1944 resulted in an unexpected route change! “…Embarked 30 May carrying about 50 patients and half of 20 and 22 Canadian General Hospital staffs.  Trip over was started 31 May 44 and was fairly smooth but very foggy.

So far, nothing unusual, but then “…. on June 6th we heard the news of the Allied landings in Normandy. We were all greatly excited. On 7th June received word at 4:00 pm to change our course to the north of Ireland and again had heavy fog. At 2:00 am, 9th June went into Belfast for orders, then continued on past the Isle of Man to Liverpool….

On June 13, 1944, Alton wrote that the return journey to Canada began.  “…Loaded 505 patients…and sailed at 4:30 pm. Went around the north of Ireland…”  He noted that there were “….several cases of Malaria on board…”  Hospital records in Italy had reported since autumn 1943 that there was a severe malaria epidemic.

The next few trips found the ship returning to Liverpool rather than Avonmouth on its round trip journeys.  It wasn’t until Alton’s 14th trip in March 1945 that the Lady Nelson docked again in Avonmouth.

….Alton recorded two burials at sea on Trip No. 7….

On the return voyage back to Canada for Alton’s 7th trip, he recorded that the ship “…left Liverpool midnight 8 August….There were two burials at sea.  11th August MacGuire (sic) and 16th Captain Miller…

Private George Alfred MAGUIRE, born in Windsor, Ontario, had died aboard the Lady Nelson on August 11, 1944 from wounds received in action in France while serving with the Essex Scottish Regiment, at the age of 23, leaving behind his parents, Charles S. and Minnie Maguire, of London, Ontario. His name is inscribed on the Halifax Memorial in Point Pleasant Park in Halifax, Nova Scotia. 

Captain Theodore Albert MILLER, who was born in Halifax, Nova Scotia, had died of cancer on August 15, 1944 aboard the Lady Nelson, at the age of 47, while serving with the Royal Canadian Ordnance Corps, leaving behind his wife, Kathleen Miller of Regina, Saskatchewan, and their son David Graeme Miller. His name is inscribed on the Halifax Memorial in Point Pleasant Park in Halifax, Nova Scotia. 

….Alton looked forward to civilian life….

By June 1945, following his 16th trip aboard the Lady Nelson, Alton “…signed to go back to civilian life…

Alton with his daughter Judy in New Glasgow, Nova Scotia.  (Photo courtesy of Judy Parks)

After the conclusion of his 20th trip on October 9, 1945, “….Colonel Stone said I would be taken off the ship this trip. I went home to New Glasgow…

Following his discharge from the Royal Canadian Army Medical Corps (RCAMC), Alton returned to Salisbury, New Brunswick.  Judy explained that “…he started his practice up again, but when I was 4 he was diagnosed with cancer of the bowel and that is the only memory I have of him …in bed …very ill….” 

Sadly, Alton passed away on July 27, 1947, aged 32.  He’s buried at Christ Church Cemetery in Stellarton, Pictou County, Nova Scotia.

Alton recorded 20 trips in his diary, always being fortunate to return home for a few days with his wife and daughter between each voyage.  As he died when Judy was a child, the war diary was a way to get to know him, but she explained that she was “….50 years old” when her mother “…gave me the war diary…

Judy followed her father’s footsteps into a medical career, becoming a nurse. Going over his war diary made her reflect that “….people sometimes ask me if I was upset when my father died and I know I wasn’t.  I was only four.  No one told me he died…children were told nothing about death in those days. I suppose I thought he returned to war…

Judy Parks (left) with Daria, discussing the war service of Judy’s father. (Photo credit: Pieter Valkenburg)

Thank you to Judy Parks for sharing photos and her father’s war diary, and to Etienne Gaudet for finding newspaper articles.

© Daria Valkenburg

….Want to follow our research?….

If you are reading this posting, but aren’t following our research, you are welcome to do so.  Our blog address: https://onthewarmemorialtrail.com/

4 countries, 6 weeks, 7,000 km – an unforgettable war memorial journey in Europe…. Daria’s book ‘No Soldier Buried Overseas Should Ever Be Forgotten‘ is available in print and e-book formats.  Net proceeds of book sales help support research costs and the cost of maintaining this blog. For more information see https://nosoldierforgotten.com/

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On The War Memorial Trail….. The WWII Diary Of Dr. Ross Part 1: Assigned To HMHS Lady Nelson

Judy Parks (left) with Daria, discussing the war service of Judy’s father. (Photo credit: Pieter Valkenburg)

March 16, 2025. It’s a funny coincidence as, a few years ago, Judy Parks, a friend living in Nova Scotia, sent me her father’s WWII war diary.  Her father, Dr. James ‘Alton’ Ross, was a doctor aboard the hospital ship HMHS Lady Nelson.  I kept planning to write his story, but something else always kept coming up. 

Then, a few months ago, Etienne Gaudet sent us an article about 101 year old veteran Romeo LEBLANC of Memramcook, New Brunwick.  In this article it stated that Romeo had travelled on the same hospital ship as Judy’s father!  Talk about a nudge from up above!

Born March 26, 1915 in Stellarton, Pictou County, Nova Scotia, James ‘Alton’ ROSS was the son of James and Lida (nee Cook) Ross, their only child.

….Alton had a medical practice in New Brunswick….

Dr. Alton Ross initially practiced in Albert, New Brunswick (red marker) before opening a practice in Salisbury, New Brunswick, just north of Albert.  (Map source: DuckDuckGo)

After graduating from Dalhousie University’s School of Medicine in Halifax, Nova Scotia in June 1941, Alton married Betty Bauld the same year.  Their daughter Judith ‘Judy’ Ann was born the following year in Moncton, New Brunswick. 

Alton initially practiced in Albert, New Brunswick (now part of the village of Fundy Albert) for a short period before opening a practice in Salisbury, New Brunswick. 

….Alton enlisted in the RCAMC in 1943…

Dr. Alton Ross. (Photo courtesy of Judy Parks.  Photo colourization by Pieter Valkenburg)

Not long after settling into his practice in Salisbury, Alton enlisted with the Royal Canadian Army Medical Corps (RCAMC).  Judy explained that she was “….only 6 months old when my father enlisted… It seems like four years of the war had already taken place but my father only graduated from medical school in June 1941 so he was just starting his practice in Salisbury, New Brunswick when he decided he was needed in the medical corps…

According to his war diary, Alton “…enlisted on 29 December 1942 and was sent to Halifax Military Hospital and put on Ward I Medicine…” A few days later, he was transferred to “…No. 6 District Depot Standing Medical Board…” at Chebucto Barracks in Halifax, Nova Scotia.

With Alton in military service, Judy and her mother …moved back to her parents in New Glasgow, Nova Scotia…

On March 6, 1943, Alton was sent to A22 Canadian Army Medical Corps Training Centre in Camp Borden, Ontario for a “…six weeks qualification course…” 

After returning to Nova Scotia, Alton was “….posted to Halifax Military Hospital again to Ward 2, Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat….” until June 20, 1943, when he left for “…Aldershot Military Hospital…” in Nova Scotia, where he was “….placed on Infectious and Military Wards…

On November 5, 1943, Alton “…received word to go to Suffield, Alberta, on a Chemical Warfare Course…” for 5 days.  After returning to Aldershot, he was informed on November 20, 1943 that he would be posted to a hospital ship.  His orders came through 6 days later, and meant he had to travel to Halifax.

….Alton was assigned to the HMHS Lady Nelson….

Judy confirmed that her father served as a doctor aboard the hospital ship HMHS Lady Nelson, which had first arrived in Halifax on April 22, 1943. “…It was the Lady Nelson my father was on…. There were five lady boats in the war and two were torpedoed by the Germans in spite of the big Red Cross on the sides. The Lady Nelson had been a cruise ship that went between Halifax, New York, and Bermuda…

HMHS Lady Nelson.  Note the crosses on the side of the ship!  (Photo source: Wikipedia)

The Lady Nelson was Canada’s first hospital ship, outfitted with 515 special hospital beds, special wards for shock cases, contagious diseases and fractures, private cabins, a fully equipped operating room, a modern sterilizing room, an inspection room for minor dressings, a dispensary, and a portable x-ray outfit.

The ship’s white hull was painted with 11 large red crosses on the funnel, deck and hull. It was brightly lit up at night for greater visibility so that the enemy would recognize that she was a ‘mercy ship’ and not fire on her in accordance with the Geneva Convention.

….Alton’s first voyage aboard the HMHS Lady Nelson….

Alton’s first trip aboard the HMHS Lady Nelson began on November 30, 1943, and he noted that it was a round trip of 8,093 miles (13,024 km). 

Trip No. 1 went from Halifax to Phillipville and Algiers in Algeria.  (Map source: DuckDuckGo)

The route took him from the port of Halifax, Nova Scotia, across the Atlantic Ocean to Gibraltar, sailing past Tangier, to Phillipville (now Skikda), Algeria, and then on to Algiers before sailing to Avonmouth, United Kingdom, before returning to Halifax.

Alton wrote in his diary that the ship reached Gibraltar at 10:00 am on December 9, 1943 and left an hour later.  He noted that he had a “….grand journey down Mediterranean and landed off coast of Phillipville, where we anchored all day and night.  Docked Sunday am 12 December 1943 and loaded patients….Left at 5 pm…

Why was a Canadian hospital ship in Algeria?  While no formed Canadian units took part in fighting in North Africa, which began in November 1942, a number of Canadian officers and non-commissioned officers had been offered three-month tours of duty attached to forces in Algeria, designated as the 1st British Army.

The objective was to allow them a chance to see combat and take that battle experience back to the Canadian Army in the United Kingdom before Canadians saw active service during the invasion of Sicily in July 1943, followed by the invasion of the Italian mainland in September 1943.

By October 1943, the Canadian Section, including No. 14 Canadian General Hospital, was still near Philippeville. 

From Phillipville, the ship began its long journey to the United Kingdom, picking up more patients along the way.  “…Arrived Algiers 8 am, 13 December. Loaded more patients then waited in stream two days for Nursing Sisters coming by air from Sicily.  Left 6:30 pm, 15 December…

The ship arrived in Avonmouth, United Kingdom on December 22, 1943, unloaded the patients and reloaded patients who were returning back to Canada.  They left for Canada on December 28, and arrived in Halifax on January 5, 1944.

….Alton’s second voyage aboard the HMHS Lady Nelson….

Alton’s second trip aboard the HMHS Lady Nelson began on January 14, 1944, and he noted that it was a round trip of 9,196 miles (14,800 km). 

Trip No. 2 went from Halifax to Algiers, Algeria and then to Naples, Italy.  (Map source: https://www.viamichelin.com)

The route took him from the port of Halifax, Nova Scotia, across the Atlantic Ocean to Gibraltar, to Naples, Italy, and then on to Algiers before sailing to Avonmouth, United Kingdom, before returning to Halifax.

Alton wrote in his diary that the ship reached Gibraltar on January 23, 1944 and left the following day at 7:00 pm.  He noted that this time when they reached Algiers on January 26, they didn’t dock but were there for “….orders only… and  left one hour later for Italy…Anchored in Naples harbour just off Mount Vesuvius which was puffing away intermittently….Docked in Naples 29 January and loaded British and Canadian patients…Left at 4 pm…” for Algiers.

Nursing sisters aboard the HMHS Lady Nelson in Naples, Italy, January 29, 1944. Nursing Sisters R. MacLennan, J. Goodston, Reta Moffat, E. Covey, D.E. MacTier, E. Bateman, Y. Carr, J. Jackson, Captain C.I. Nixon (Matron), M. McLeod, R. Hughes, H.J. Battram, E.K. Sutherland and M.B. Meisner. (Photo Credit: Lt. Frederick G. Whitcombe / Canada. Dept. of National Defence / Library and Archives Canada / PA-163661)

This time the ship docked when it reached Algiers on January 31, 1944, at 3:00 pm, where the “…British disembarked, Canadians embarked. Left February 1, 4:30 pm….Passed Gibraltar 6 am, 3 February…

The ship was again enroute to Avonmouth, but Alton recorded that he “…did an appendectomy off Bay of Biscay….” The patient survived.

Bay of Biscay is off of the coast of France.  (Map source: DuckDuckGo)

The ship anchored off Avonmouth on February 7, 1944 and unloaded the patients the following day.  It wasn’t until February 15 that the ship left for Halifax, arriving in port on the afternoon of February 23 in “….a blinding snowstorm – visibility nil….

Alton’s second trip was notable as they “….began an orchestra with three violins, saxophone, piano, accordion, and drums…Put on two concerts…” 

Judy reflected that “…one thing that strikes me from my father’s diary is how much fun they had …music…dances…and orchestra …..” and explained that her father “…. played the saxophone…” The purpose was “…to entertain the troops they were taking to war and those wounded returning….”  She marvelled at this “…ability to switch off the war around them and enjoy the moment…for themselves and for others …

Alton recorded 20 trips in his diary, always being fortunate to return home for a few days with his wife and daughter between each voyage. In Part 2, his story concludes with a return to Italy to pick up wounded servicemen and some of the devastation of war that he saw, and finally, after his 20th voyage he was able to return to the life of a civilian and a rural medical practice.

Thank you to Judy Parks for sharing photos and her father’s war diary, and to Etienne Gaudet for sending newspaper articles about Romeo LeBlanc and Dr. Ross.

© Daria Valkenburg

….Want to follow our research?….

If you are reading this posting, but aren’t following our research, you are welcome to do so.  Our blog address: https://onthewarmemorialtrail.com/

4 countries, 6 weeks, 7,000 km – an unforgettable war memorial journey in Europe…. Daria’s book ‘No Soldier Buried Overseas Should Ever Be Forgotten‘ is available in print and e-book formats.  Net proceeds of book sales help support research costs and the cost of maintaining this blog. For more information see https://nosoldierforgotten.com/

You are also invited to subscribe to our YouTube Channel: On The War Memorial Trail With Pieter Valkenburg: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCJ591TyjSheOR-Cb_Gs_5Kw

Never miss a posting!  Subscribe below to have each new story from the war memorial trail delivered to your inbox.