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March 2004
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March 2004
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South Bend HPC
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Minutes
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NPS Form 10-900-a OMB Approval Mo. 1=4-0018 <br />P -M <br />United States Department of the Interior <br />National Park Service <br />National Register of Historic Places <br />Continuation Sheet <br />Section number h Page 4 <br />Children's Dispensary St. Joseph County IN <br />classes were also offered. In 1921 dental care became available. <br />followed by an eye. ear. nose. and throat clinic. An operating room <br />provided a place for tonsillectomies and circumcisions. In 1922 the <br />dispensary added a weekly cardiac clinic. <br />By this time it was clear the Children's Dispensary needed considerably <br />more space. That year the organization purchased property in the 1100 <br />block of West Washington with the help of a large donation. Already <br />surrounded by a brick wall on three sides and fronted with an iron <br />fence. the land contained a garage with living space above and an <br />excavated basement for a house that was never completed. A fund drive <br />was begun, and early in 1925 construction began on the new Children's <br />Dispensary facility. designed by local architect Willard M. Ellwood. <br />(His remaining extant works include several residences and some <br />downtown hotel buildings.) It opened in December of the same year. <br />Unfortunately. Dr. Hansel. who had remained the dispensary's medical <br />director until 1916. had not lived to see this fulfillment of his <br />dream. A tireless proponent of public health. he was president of the <br />City Board of Health as well as a member of the South Bend Clinic at <br />the time of his premature death from a heart attack in 1919. <br />the new building rontained thirty rooms. including a gymnasium. a <br />spacious lobby. a kitchen. offices. classrooms. hospital wards. and <br />operating rooms. The gym was not so much intended for recreation as <br />for a place to conduct various: therapeutic exercises. The Children s <br />stlen_.ary was tuily equipped to give tree comprehensive health care <br />needy children through age sixteen. as well as innumerabie support <br />rrvice� to improve their lives at home. There were. pernaps. Uiterior <br />motives beyond pure altruism. South Bend Mayor Eli Seebirt had noted <br />at the cornerstone ceremonieo that "bad 'health leads to idleness and <br />idimess leads to immorality and crime." <br />After World War Ii needs and the neirhiorhood chanced. i'he oriainai <br />mainstay of the Children's Dispensary. the long—lived milk fund. was <br />discontinued in 1951. and in 1956 the South Bend Barks and Recreation <br />Board took over administration of the avmnasium for use as a senior <br />citizen center. At the end of 1966 the entire medical operation of the <br />Children's Dispensary was absorbed by Memorial and St. Joseph <br />hospitals. although the organization continues as the administrator of <br />Camp Miilhouse. (An outgrowth of the earlier fresh air camps at <br />Pottowatami Park. Camp Millhouse began in 1940 on an eleven—acre tract <br />donated for a "sunshine camp.") United Community Services rented the <br />dispensary building. which was renamed the Hansel Center-. Today it is <br />a neighborhood center offering various counseling services and 'housing <br />a davcare,. favi 1 i ty . <br />
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