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HISTORICAL CONTEXT <br />The remnants of the Brown farm such as the smoke house and a couple of barns were <br />demolished in February of 1999. <br />Thomas E. Clancy was appointed superintendent of the county infirmary in 1932, for a <br />term of four years at an annual salary of $1,800.00. Mrs. Clancy was named matron <br />of the institution for a salary of $1,200.00. Under Mr. Clancy the infirmary farm was <br />worked to capacity to aid in reducing the cost of feeding the residents. Clancy set out <br />a hundred fruit trees and went into poultry raising on an extensive scale to help bring <br />down the per capita cost of the operation. The existence of the county farm helped <br />make the infirmary as self-supporting as possible and gave some residents opportunity <br />to gainfully occupy themselves. Although most of the work of tilling 600 acres was too <br />heavy for the elderly men of the institution, there were other tasks that they performed, <br />such as, caring for the poultry and gathering eggs. Other inmates were involved in <br />sorting potatoes, wrapping paper around the Keifer pears and helping in the canning <br />process. <br />In 1943, the St. Joseph County Council appropriated $7,000.00 for the construction of <br />a livestock barn at the infirmary. Operation of the farm netted the county $6,034.50 in <br />profits in 1942. Thus, farming continued to be an integral part of the history of the St. <br />Joseph County Infirmary. <br />In 1989, after 18 months of renovations the manor was a place that its residents could <br />once more appreciate. Although patients range in age from 29 to 90, it is essentially a <br />home for the aged who have no families or whose families cannot or will not provide <br />them care. The renovation preserved the building's turn -of -the -century character. The <br />institution has been known by a variety of names, such as poor house, the infirmary, <br />the poor farm and the old age asylum, but by 1962 a legislative decree designated it <br />as the County Home. <br />ARCHITECTURAL DESCRIPTION <br />This is a two story structure with attic and basement designed in the Classical Revival <br />Style by Feyermuth and Maurer. The building is "Y" in shape with projections and has <br />a concrete foundation with cut stone at ground level and brick above ground level. <br />The walls are made of red brick with quoins and string courses of Chicago common <br />brick. It also has a molded wooden frieze below the roofline. The roof is a pitched <br />gable with pedimented gable ends and dormers and is covered in asphalt roofing. It <br />also has circular windows in the gable ends with molded cornice. The structure boasts <br />a full height projecting front gabled entrance portico with cut -stone Ionic columns <br />supporting an entablature and an enclosed gable end with an ornate oval window. <br />The porch also has a second level balcony, tile flooring, wide first story stairs and <br />wrought iron balustrades. <br />