Our HistoryErie County Care Facility3916 Perkins AvenueHuron, OH 44839Phone (419) 627-8733 |
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In 1816 the Ohio General Assembly authorized boards of county
commissioners to construct county poor houses to care for paupers. From 1838, when the State Legislature, established Erie
County, until around 1850, indigent citizens were cared for in
individual homes with the respective township funding their care.
However, Portland Township did have a poor house, a residence where
a number of citizens lived in one household.
In March 1850, the Erie County Poor House farm consisted of about
63 acres of land with Milan Road on the east and Bloomingville Road
(later renamed South Columbus Avenue) on the west.
In 1850 the
legislature voted to change the name from Poor House to the County
Infirmary. An Erie County Infirmary was established in Erie County in
1855 to serve as a home for the aged and indigent.
The original building was destroyed by fire in 1885 and the current
structure, the historic limestone building at 2900 Columbus Avenue, (the
Erie County Services Center), was built in 1886. In 1919 the name
changed from the Erie County Infirmary to the Erie County Home.
In 1976 the Erie County Home residents were transferred to the new
facility at 3916 East Perkins Avenue, Huron, Ohio, which was dedicated
on July 4, 1976, and renamed the Erie County Care Facility. Our facility
is proud to have provided health care services to the residents of Erie
County for more than 145 years.
At the present time the Erie County Care Facility is a Medicaid and
Medicare certified facility and accepts unlimited private pay residents. |