Difference between revisions of "Tazewell County Poor Farm"
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{{infobox institution | {{infobox institution | ||
| name = Tazewell County Poor Farm | | name = Tazewell County Poor Farm | ||
− | | image = | + | | image = ILtazewellaerial.png |
| image_size = 250px | | image_size = 250px | ||
| alt = | | alt = | ||
− | | established = | + | | established = 1866 |
| construction_began = | | construction_began = | ||
− | | opened = | + | | opened = 1871/1900 |
| closed = | | closed = | ||
| demolished = | | demolished = | ||
− | | current_status = | + | | current_status = [[Demolished Institution|Demolished]] |
− | | building_style = | + | | building_style = [[Single Building Institutions|Single Building]] |
| architect(s) = | | architect(s) = | ||
| location = Tazewell, IL | | location = Tazewell, IL | ||
Line 19: | Line 19: | ||
}} | }} | ||
− | + | ==History== | |
+ | An initial proposal in August 1866 to purchase Lemuel Allen’s farm for $7,000 for use as a Poor Farm was rejected by the Tazewell County Board. After further investigation and deliberation, by May 1871 the county had agreed to the purchase of the 211 ½-acre farm of James Smith in Elm Grove Township and to prepare it for occupancy for a total price of $4,550.10. Allensworth writes, “There were at that time nineteen paupers in the home in the care of Mrs. E. Hall, who had been engaged as matron, with Dr. Bumstead as physician. . . . Not all the paupers in the County were lodged at the Poor Farm. In 1872, at a May meeting of the Board, it was shown that since the building of the Poor House, the sum of $1,624.07 had been paid out by the county on account of the poor. For the same time — that is, from the August term, 1871, to the February term, 1872 — the county had paid the current expenses of the Poor Farm $5,997.31, and had sold property from the farm to the amount of $1,097.85. The net expense of the Poor Farm was, therefore, $4,899.46, from which cost must be deducted the improvements made, making a net cost of the paupers at the Poor Farm $2,344.56.” | ||
+ | |||
+ | By the 1890s, the facilities at the Poor Farm were no longer adequate, and the County Board moved to finance the construction of new buildings. To find out how to improve the Poor Farm, a county committee toured poor farms in other Illinois counties that had more modern facilities. The county opted for a plan modeled closely on Ford County’s Poor Farm, and the new buildings were completed on May 18, 1900, at a total cost of $18,377.74. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Eventually changes in how society provides for the underprivileged led to the closing of the Poor Farm, which was turned into a children’s home and a later a nursing home before the old structures were replaced with the current county facilities. The Poor Farm cemetery still exists, however, in a grove about a half-mile behind the TCEMA and TCHD facilities, where one may find a monument erected in 1910 “In Memory of the Unfortunate of Tazewell County.” | ||
[[Category:Illinois]] | [[Category:Illinois]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Demolished Institution]] | ||
[[Category:County Almshouse]] | [[Category:County Almshouse]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Single Building Institutions]] |
Latest revision as of 06:44, 18 May 2021
Tazewell County Poor Farm | |
---|---|
Established | 1866 |
Opened | 1871/1900 |
Current Status | Demolished |
Building Style | Single Building |
Location | Tazewell, IL |
Alternate Names |
History[edit]
An initial proposal in August 1866 to purchase Lemuel Allen’s farm for $7,000 for use as a Poor Farm was rejected by the Tazewell County Board. After further investigation and deliberation, by May 1871 the county had agreed to the purchase of the 211 ½-acre farm of James Smith in Elm Grove Township and to prepare it for occupancy for a total price of $4,550.10. Allensworth writes, “There were at that time nineteen paupers in the home in the care of Mrs. E. Hall, who had been engaged as matron, with Dr. Bumstead as physician. . . . Not all the paupers in the County were lodged at the Poor Farm. In 1872, at a May meeting of the Board, it was shown that since the building of the Poor House, the sum of $1,624.07 had been paid out by the county on account of the poor. For the same time — that is, from the August term, 1871, to the February term, 1872 — the county had paid the current expenses of the Poor Farm $5,997.31, and had sold property from the farm to the amount of $1,097.85. The net expense of the Poor Farm was, therefore, $4,899.46, from which cost must be deducted the improvements made, making a net cost of the paupers at the Poor Farm $2,344.56.”
By the 1890s, the facilities at the Poor Farm were no longer adequate, and the County Board moved to finance the construction of new buildings. To find out how to improve the Poor Farm, a county committee toured poor farms in other Illinois counties that had more modern facilities. The county opted for a plan modeled closely on Ford County’s Poor Farm, and the new buildings were completed on May 18, 1900, at a total cost of $18,377.74.
Eventually changes in how society provides for the underprivileged led to the closing of the Poor Farm, which was turned into a children’s home and a later a nursing home before the old structures were replaced with the current county facilities. The Poor Farm cemetery still exists, however, in a grove about a half-mile behind the TCEMA and TCHD facilities, where one may find a monument erected in 1910 “In Memory of the Unfortunate of Tazewell County.”