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3016 Portage Avenue <br />Historical Context <br />This property is located on the east side of Portage Avenue just south of the Indiana Toll <br />Road, in South Bend, Indiana. It is described as being 113.8 acres northeast 1/4 of <br />Portage Avenue, section 27-38-2E of St. Joseph County. . <br />The St. Joseph County Infirmary, now called Portage Manor, at 3016 Portage Avenue <br />stands on property that was originally owned by Rezeau and Nancy Brown. In 1905, the <br />Board of County Commissioners purchased the Brown Fane, beyond the Riverview <br />Cemetery, for $20,962.50, as the site of the new County Fane and Infirmary. A large <br />Classical revival structure was erected for the infirmary by the Keogan Construction <br />Company, who submitted the winning bid of $72,549.69. The plans for the building <br />were drawn by local architects George W. Freyermuth and R. Vernon Maurer. <br />When the building was not completed by the Keogan Construction Company within the <br />contract period, the Federal Union Surety Company assigned the building responsibility to <br />the Miller and Donahue Lumber Company of South Bend. The actual cost of the <br />infirmary, including the cost of the farm, and the sewer was $126,370.80. The building <br />was designed to be 50 by 450 feet, made of red brick with stone trimmings, consisting of <br />two stories and a basement. The plans for the building included the administration <br />department of the asylum located in the center. The residence of the superintendent <br />occupied the front portion of the building. Immediately behind this residence was the <br />women's quarters and to the left were located the men's quarters. Each ward included <br />hospital rooms, nurse rooms and toilets and baths. An operating room was also located <br />on the main floor of the building. The new facility was built to accommodate about 90 <br />women and 195 men. <br />On April 4, 1907 the patients were transferred to the brand new building described as, <br />"one of the most beautiful and salubrious." This new building brought the County into <br />what was then considered the modern era of health care. Although the institution was <br />historically defined as being an infirmary, it was, and is, a public facility existing for the <br />purpose of providing shelter and care for those dependent upon the public for subsistence. <br />The original occupant of this land, Rezeau Brown, was born in New Jersey in 1824 and <br />came to St. Joseph County, Indiana in 1834, and is thus regarded as one of the areas <br />earliest pioneers. Rezeau Brown was a mason by trade and was responsible for erecting <br />many of the city's first buildings, including the first Odd Fellows Hall and the first college <br />building in Notre Dame University. In 1852 Mr. Brown took up farming in German <br />Township, he later traded his contracting business for land speculation and bartering which <br />is how he acquired the land at 3016 Portage Avenue. <br />