A gift of time: The history of the St. Tammany Hospital Guild

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Thursday, February 4, 2021

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A gift of time: The history of the St. Tammany Hospital Guild

Mike Scott, mscott@stph.org

The St. Tammany Hospital Guild has been providing comfort and companionship to the patients at the Covington hospital, and assistance to the medical staff, since March 25, 1955, which is when the group was formed in a meeting at the Southern Hotel. (Image via STHS archive)

Note: This story is part of an occasional series highlighting key moments in St. Tammany Health System history. Read the health system's full history at www.sttammany.health/STHShistory.

Fall had only just descended on Covington in 1955 as Doris G. Alexander returned home from having a procedure done at the then-new St. Tammany Parish Hospital, and she felt an urge to say something.

“Do the people of the parish know how lucky we are to have the St. Tammany Parish Hospital?” she began a letter to the editor published in October of that year in the St. Tammany Farmer newspaper.

The hospital facilities, she wrote, were clean and beautiful. The doctors, she added, were “fine and congenial.” The nurses and their aides were, in her words, “pleasant at all times.”

But she saved arguably her most effusive praise for the members of the St. Tammany Hospital Guild, the all-volunteer organization founded just six months earlier as the St. Tammany Hospital Women’s Auxiliary to provide non-professional, non-administrative services to the hospital.

“These ladies are doing a fine job,” Alexander wrote. “Almost all day there is a lady on duty from this organization. At mid-morning they serve juices and coffee to the patients, which makes a pleasant break in the day. They also bring around toilet articles and incidentals that patients might have forgotten to bring from home. Books and magazines from the library are also offered to the patients, as another fine service.”

Fast forward more than six decades, and the approximately 135 men and women making up the guild’s ranks are still providing comfort, care and companionship to the hospital’s patients, as well as highly valued support for its staff.

“Oh, they do everything,” STHS Volunteer Coordinator Shirley Primes said. “They’re up in endoscopy, where they greet patients. They prepare files for nurses upstairs. I have one in ambulatory care, where they give patients gowns and tell them, ‘They’ll be with you shortly.’ They’re in the surgery waiting area, they’re at the front desk. They’re at the Parenting Center and St. Tammany Hospice. They’re everywhere – and we’re lucky to have them.”

Oh, they do everything. They're up in endoscopy, where they greet patients. They prepare files for nurses upstairs. ... They’re everywhere – and we’re lucky to have them."

-- Shirley Primes, St. Tammany Health System volunteer coordinator

The guild was formed in a meeting held at the Southern Hotel in Covington on March 25, 1955, less than four months after the hospital opened its doors.

At that time, the hospital was a small, one-story country concern, but it represented a long, hard-fought victory for the community, the members of which previously had to make the drive around Lake Pontchartrain to receive hospital care in New Orleans.

After years of fits and starts, the hospital finally opened its doors to patients on Dec. 1, 1954. It didn’t take long, however, for hospital leadership to realize that it takes more than doctors and nurses to run a hospital.

Enter the guild, which, under the leadership of its first president, Mrs. M.T. Benedict, stepped in to fill all manner of voids. They made surgical dressings. They raised money for hospital equipment. They maintained the hospital grounds. They sewed anything and everything that needed sewing in a room at the hospital dedicated solely to that purpose. And they poured that refreshing juice and coffee that made Doris Alexander so grateful.

While the daily tasks have changed, that generous spirit still fuels today’s guild members, said longtime STHS volunteer Dottie Frederick, who joined the guild in 2000 following the death of her husband.

“I can tell you, most of us were older people, and most of them wanted something to do, something to keep them active,” said Frederick, who is still a guild member. “It serves two purposes: We help the hospital, but it also gives us something enjoyable to do.”

On March 25, 1955, Mrs. M.T. Benedict was elected the first president of the St. Tammany Hospital Guild, which was formed as the St. Tammany Hospital Women’s Auxiliary. (Photo via STHS archive)

As the hospital has grown over the years, the guild has kept pace, raising money to purchase needed equipment for the hospital and – since 1972 – awarding scholarships to hospital employees who are continuing their medical education.

In October 1995, the group took things to the next level with the opening of the St. Tammany Hospital Gift Shoppe, the result of some 20 years’ worth of fundraising and planning. As with the profits from its annual jewelry sale and linen sale, among other fundraisers, the guild plows the money it makes from the Gift Shoppe right back into the hospital through the nonprofit St. Tammany Hospital Foundation.

In 2019, the guild’s annual donation to the foundation was more than $65,000 and funded everything from an opioid intervention program to iPads for the hospital’s pediatric unit to rocking chairs for its New Family Center.

That same year, it also awarded $19,500 in nursing scholarships.

The real contribution, however, has been the time donated by the guild’s members, which just from 2010 to 2018 has been estimated to be 200,556 people hours and valued at $3,218,924, according to guild calculations.

“Our guild members are true champions. The services they provide to the hospital aren’t done for compensation. They volunteer out of the goodness of their hearts,” said Nicole Suhre, executive director of St. Tammany Hospital Foundation. “Their gift of time is a most precious one, and we are forever grateful for their time and the funds they raise for the hospital through the foundation.”

Doris Alexander, for one, agreed.

“I must say that aside from the discomforts of an operation, I enjoyed my stay in the hospital,” she wrote in closing her 1955 letter. “And in the evening after watching the sunset, through the gorgeous pines, I would … thank God for the wonderful people who worked so diligently to secure for us our wonderful St. Tammany Parish Hospital.”

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