{"id":17036,"date":"2019-11-07T11:30:21","date_gmt":"2019-11-07T16:30:21","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/?p=17036"},"modified":"2024-01-26T15:06:29","modified_gmt":"2024-01-26T20:06:29","slug":"seeking-leek-island-a-place-of-healing","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/2019\/11\/07\/seeking-leek-island-a-place-of-healing\/","title":{"rendered":"Seeking Leek Island: A Place of Healing"},"content":{"rendered":"

By Aliya Rahman ~ <\/em><\/p>\n

Across the globe, World War I\u2014known by contemporaries as the \u201cThe War to End All Wars\u201d \u2014took millions of lives and left hundreds of thousands more with a variety of physical and psychological disabilities. However, despite all the chaos, violence, and death brought forth during wartime, there were a few areas of peace that could be found thanks to generous individuals of the day, and one of these places was the Leek Island Military Hospital.<\/p>\n

\"Two<\/a>North of the US-Canadian border lies a piece of land in Thousand Islands National Park<\/a>, not too far from where the St. Lawrence river opens into Lake Ontario, by the name of Thwartway Island. Though, long ago, it went by a different name: Leek Island. It was meant to be a vacation home, a retreat for the wealthy, and for a while it was. In 1904, Ira A. Kip Jr. and Katherine Kip, an affluent couple from the United States, purchased the island to serve as their summer getaway. However, it didn\u2019t last long as one. A bulletin<\/a> published in 1918 reported that almost immediately after the United States entered the war in 1917, Mrs. Kip offered \u201cto entertain from forty to sixty [Canadian] soldiers at a time at Leek Island… [and]…to bear the entire expense herself and to conform to the highest requirements of the Military Hospitals Commission in regard to the treatment of the patients.\u201d<\/p>\n

The Kips were not the only ones who had decided to transform their summer home into a convalescent hospital. According to the bulletin from 1918, other wealthy families residing in the Thousand Islands, as well as families in Chaffee’s Locks, Cap-aL’Aigle and Winnipeg Beach, offered their properties to the Canadian government as well. Despite this, Leek Island and the Kips were specifically remembered fondly long after their service. One may ask, why them?<\/p>\n

It\u2019s worth noting that the Leek Island Military Hospital was the largest of these Canadian convalescent hospitals\u2014about 100 acres\u2014and therefore could care for the most soldiers, but that does not fully account for what made Leek Island so unique. The 1918 bulletin discusses briefly the aesthetics of the Kips\u2019 island, illustrating how the \u201cspacious lawns [were] well supplied with shade trees\u201d and how \u201cthe rocky shore\u201d had a few \u201csheltered spots where a sloping sandy beach allows good bathing.\u201d They mention the buildings in which the soldiers and staff lived, which were described to be \u201cuniform rustic style, a series of substantial log palaces of varying sizes.\u201d They even mention the boat-house, \u201cwhich was remodelled in the spring into quarters as attractive as the imagination could conceive.\u201d Luckily, we don\u2019t need <\/em>to use our imagination to picture what life was like on this lavish island over 100 years ago. We can see for ourselves.<\/p>\n

\"Leek<\/a><\/p>\n

The National Library of Medicine recently acquired a rare scrapbook<\/a> kept by someone during the summer of 1918, while they were living in Leek Island. Within this scrapbook is an abundance of beautiful, surprisingly pristine, black and white photos of the soldiers, of the nurses, and of the land. The images themselves are enough to draw anyone\u2019s attention. However, it is the captions beneath these photos, handwritten in white ink, that give us a unique, unfiltered glimpse into the day to day life of the people in Leek.<\/p>\n

What is particularly special about these captions is the commentary provided by the creator of the book. Under a photo of five men sitting on a bench, the scrapbooker wrote, \u201cA familiar sight everyday. Waiting outside the Doctor\u2019s office to have their dressings done.\u201d Since we now know this is a \u201cfamiliar sight,\u201d we suddenly have a better understanding of what day to day life might have been like on this island a hundred years ago. Under another photo, the caption reads, \u201cMrs. Bodley teaching basket work. Jolly and Green were apt pupils, especially Green, who made nearly all the baskets in the picture.\u201d<\/p>\n