From Poor Farm to Public Health at 42nd & Center

Long before the VA Medical Center and the Field Club of Omaha, the area around 42nd & Center Street was home to the Douglas County Poor Farm. On its grounds stood the Douglas County Hospital, a unique medical facility designed to care for patients suffering from tuberculosis.

The city acquired 160 acres in 1859 to establish the poor farm, which had previously been located farther east along St. Mary’s Avenue. Government-subsidized poor farms were common across the country, providing the poor with a place to live and work, along with food, clothing and medical care. The farm stretched from Pacific Street on the north to Center Street on the south, and from 36th Street on the east to approximately 46th Street on the west.

Tracks for the Omaha Belt Line ran through the center of the property. On the eastern end was the poor farm cemetery, often called a potter’s field. Constructed in 1888, the original hospital focused on treating tuberculosis, plagues and psychiatric patients. Over time, overcrowding and structural problems made a new facility necessary.

Completed in 1932, the new hospital was designed by John Latenser & Sons Architects. Its southern façade facing Woolworth Avenue featured open-air sun porches and a staggered, stepped plan along the elevations. By this time, the poor farm had ceased operations, and the property had shrunk from 160 acres to just 40.

Although the new hospital was larger than the original, only two of the planned three wings were built due to the Great Depression. With 250 beds, one wing treated tuberculosis patients, while the other focused on psychiatric care. The hospital also included space for obstetrics and sick children. Upper floors served as sleeping quarters for physicians and medical residents, while operating rooms, a laboratory and an X-ray center intended for the third wing were accommodated elsewhere in the building.

By the time the original hospital was demolished in 1947, the role of the newer facility was already changing. Advancements in medical care had eliminated the need for a tuberculosis ward, and the open-air porches were enclosed to provide additional beds…

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