Douglas County Poor Farm
The Douglas County Poor Farm was located in the present-day boundaries of
History
Early years
Early in 1859 the Douglas County Board of Commissioners decided to establish a poor farm. On March 1, 1859, Douglas County purchased land as the poor farm. It was apparently located along St. Mary's Avenue originally.
According to an original history of Nebraska from the 1900s, inmates at the poor farm were "limited in their accommodations to ill furnished rooms in an old and dilapidated shanty, where they were huddled together in a manner devoid of comfort."[2]
Second building
Jonas Gise, senior Douglas County Commissioner, led a campaign to build substantial structure starting in June 1869. By December the new building was opened, and was called the Hascall House. It was a brick building, two stories high, forty by thirty-six feet, with a capacity sufficient to accommodate forty regular inmates, and fifty in case of emergency. It was built for $8,474. The institution housed thirty-six inmates, a portion of whom are insane patients under the care of I. N. Pierce,
Third building
The Hascall House was deemed too small by county commissioners in the 1880s, and in 1886 they began a preliminary process to build the
In another trial that went to the Supreme Court of Nebraska, the City of Omaha and Douglas County were forced to issue bonds to pay claims against the sale of the land. The county did not process the sales of lots in what was called the "Douglas Addition" correctly, and the landowners were awarded fees and legal costs.[4]
Fourth building
In early 1926, a public health campaign led by the Omaha-Douglas County Medical Society focused on creating a poor farm separate from the Douglas County Hospital. By this time the poor farm was the located next to the Field Club, and golfers were using its grounds for games. A bill was sent to the state legislature, but was defeated by a Representative Miskovsky of Omaha, told critics of the institution, "conditions there... were not so bad, in fact, the Douglas County poor farm... was just as good as any in the middle west, if not better. I know the conditions better than anyone else in this house, too." The physicians' association succeeded in getting a city bond passed that paid for a new facility.[5]
During this period the farm was located next to the Omaha Belt Line, a railway that circulated through the city. There were also brick yards located on the grounds.
Current times
A sign on the wall on the first floor of the present-day Douglas County Health Center reads, in part, "Original site of the first Douglas County Tuberculosis Hospital, Poor Farm, and Pest House." There are no other acknowledgments of its existence in Omaha, including historical tours, markers, articles or otherwise.
See also
- Potter's Field (Omaha, Nebraska)
- History of Omaha, Nebraska
References
- Nebraska State Historical Society. Retrieved January 28, 2012.
- ^ "Douglas County", Andreas' History of the State of Nebraska. Retrieved January 28, 2012.
- ^ Wakely, A.C. Omaha: The Gate City, and Douglas County, Nebraska. General Books. p 350.
- ^ Reports of cases in the Supreme Court of Nebraska, Volume 61 (Google eBook). p 840.
- ^ Seely, M. "Our History" Archived 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine. Metropolitan Omaha Medical Society. Retrieved January 28, 2012.