Club members please log in for more information.
Mercy Ships is an international charity with a mission to provide better health care regardless of race, gender or religion in developing nations world-wide.
It was founded in 1978 by a USA businessman called Don Stephens. From one retired ocean liner bought for £600,000 there is now a fleet of Mercy ships, one being the largest non-governmental hospital ship in the world, and they have visited more than 591 ports and performed more than 84,000 life changing operations.
Speaking to Club members on 5th March was Lynne Melly (in the picture with President Mike and Richard Huck) who is a paediatric nurse and crew nurse on “Africa Mercy”. In her former life “Africa Mercy” was a Danish rail ferry capable of taking 2 complete trains on board. “Africa Mercy” has 1300 volunteers of 40 different nationalities on an annual basis. Typically it will have a crew of 450, who perform 200 different jobs, half being medical. There are whole families on board with about 50 children attending the on-board school.
Mercy Ships only go to a country if invited and will spend 10 months there. In the 10 months up to June 2017 “Africa Mercy” was in Benin. She is currently in the Cameroon and in the last 5 months has performed 1,500 operations and 9,000 dental procedures. All for no charge whatsoever. Patients are found by local advertising and word of mouth. Thousands come for treatment: for example 7½ thousand turned up when in the Republic of Congo. Those chosen for treatment are given appointments. About 240 day worker volunteers will be recruited for such jobs as translating, cleaning, laundry and cooking. 1,800 meals a day will be required.
“Africa Mercy” has 5 operating theatres, a radiology laboratory and a pharmacy. Almost any type of surgical procedure can be performed, including dentistry and ophthalmic. There are also physiotherapists and occupational therapists on board. There is very little space between the hospital beds and parents staying with child patients happily sleep on a mattress underneath the bed. On departure the Mercy ship will have left a lasting impact by means of the training and mentoring of local professionals that’s been done, and by leaving better medical tools, resources and infrastructure.
Mercy Ships’ HQ is in Texas and it has 16 national resource offices around the world including Britain, Spain, Canada, Germany, Switzerland, the Netherlands, South Africa, Australia, France, Korea, Denmark, Belgium, New Zealand, Sweden and Norway. Every pound that Mercy Ships receives is complimented by more than 2 pounds in contributed gifts-in-kind and services. Most significantly, those serving on the ships contribute monthly crew fees and raise their own finances to serve with Mercy Ships.
Lynne said we can help in 3 ways: by giving, by volunteering and simply by spreading the word.
Following Lynne's talk, the Rotary Club of Swindon North donated £100 to Mercy Ships.
'What We Do' Main Pages:
Corporate Membership enables small, medium and large businesses to join Rotary. Corporate Membership gives a company a unique platform for service, networking and professional and personal growth, rooted within the local community
moreWill you join our 250-Club lottery? We have run it for more than 25 years and in that time it has raised tens of thousands of Pounds for charity
moreRotary is one of the largest and most successful global membership and humanitarian service organisations in the world. It has 1.4 million members in over 200 countries.
moreWe make another donation to the charity which provides emergency shelter and assistance when disasters strike
moreA Partner Club is a Rotary club that supports ShelterBox's work in disaster relief by donating over £2,000 in a Rotary year
moreRotary’s second major donation, of £208,000, was handed over on 7th July 2021 when local Rotarians visited the Great Western Hospital to view the build progress of the nearly completed radiotherapy unit.
moreBrighter Futures launched their Radiotherapy Appeal in 2015. Today, 7 years later, a ribbon cutting ceremony has taken place at the Great Western Hospital
moreRotarian Terry Williams' remarkable and unique fund raising effort, living in a ShelterBox emergency tent for a week in the Market Place, Highworth
moreSadly, Michael Bran, the last surviving Founder Member of the Rotary Club of North Wiltshire, the origin of the Club now called the Rotary Club of Swindon North and Thamesdown, passed away on 27 April 2025.
more