Difference between revisions of "Floyd County Infirmary"
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Title Image Courtesy of Kayla Hassett. <ref>Hassett, Kayla. "The County Home in Indiana : A Forgotten Response to Poverty and Disability." Diss. Ed. Vera A. Adams. Ball State U, 2013. Cardinal Scholar, 05 Apr. 2013. Web. 12 Nov. 2014.</ref> | Title Image Courtesy of Kayla Hassett. <ref>Hassett, Kayla. "The County Home in Indiana : A Forgotten Response to Poverty and Disability." Diss. Ed. Vera A. Adams. Ball State U, 2013. Cardinal Scholar, 05 Apr. 2013. Web. 12 Nov. 2014.</ref> | ||
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+ | The building is currently used as a solid waste collection location for the Floyd County government on Grantline Road. | ||
==Images== | ==Images== | ||
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File:floyd.png | File:floyd.png | ||
File:065.jpg | File:065.jpg | ||
+ | File:INfloydcnty1948.jpg | ||
</gallery> | </gallery> | ||
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+ | ==References== | ||
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[[Category:Indiana]] | [[Category:Indiana]] |
Latest revision as of 20:19, 3 August 2020
Floyd County Infirmary | |
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Established | 1838 |
Opened | 1875/1916 |
Closed | 1978 |
Current Status | Closed |
Building Style | Single Building |
Architect(s) | Arthur R. Smith and W. Earle Otis |
Location | New Albany, IN |
Architecture Style | Mission |
Alternate Names |
|
History[edit]
Few early records can be found that detail the beginnings of the community “poor house.” But almost since its inception, the county, through its residents, had set aside money to be used to help the indigent. According to Rich Green, a researcher that studied the building for a local company and released his findings in the “Review of Literature and Historical Documentation of the Floyd County Infirmary, New Albany, Indiana,” the farm began in 1838 as a lone log cabin. In 1875, a bigger structure was constructed with additions added in 1878. Fire caused by an ignited flue during a storm destroyed a significant portion of the complex in 1916, with the current standing building being built shortly thereafter.
Called many names through the ages, including the County Poor Asylum and the Floyd County Home for Aged, the building has housed some interesting New Albany citizens. Former slave turned Union Army nurse Lucy Higgs Nichols died there in 1915. While Nichols would be interred in West Haven Cemetery, the grounds around the home have served as a burial ground for many of these poor inhabitants. Green found evidence based on ground contour that at least two separate graveyards may have existed specifically for the institution, including that of the marked Potter’s Field.
Despite a 2008 vote by the county to tear it down and construct a new youth shelter in its place, no definitive plans have been made on the Poor Farm’s fate. In 2012, the shelter was moved to a different facility and, ironically, a poor economy has delayed the razing of the decrepit historic building.
Title Image Courtesy of Kayla Hassett. [1]
The building is currently used as a solid waste collection location for the Floyd County government on Grantline Road.
Images[edit]
References[edit]
- ↑ Hassett, Kayla. "The County Home in Indiana : A Forgotten Response to Poverty and Disability." Diss. Ed. Vera A. Adams. Ball State U, 2013. Cardinal Scholar, 05 Apr. 2013. Web. 12 Nov. 2014.