Jackson County (Mo.)
Historical Society
Historical
Perspective
by David W.
Jackson
Medical center has long history
Jackson Countians should recognize their
155+ year commitment to caring for underprivileged citizens. In the early
days, the Jackson County Court (forerunner to today’s County Legislature)
“boarded-out” by allotting funds for private parties within the community to
provide room and board for those who could no longer care for themselves.
Figuring that it would be more efficient to
administer one institution rather than doling resources to individual
caretakers, the County Court purchased for $1,000 a 160-acre parcel of land
from Henry Washington Younger (father of the infamous Cole Younger) in rural
Jackson County. This became Jackson County’s “Poor Farm” (which technically
was an almshouse, or poorhouse, with a large working farm connected to its
operations). The site was on high ground in the Blue Hills countryside
overlooking the scenic valley of the Little Blue River. Eventually, the
property expanded to more than 300-acres with several institutional
buildings. The first appointments for a superintendent and physician were
filled by March 1852.
100 years ago this month, in July
1908, the cornerstone of a new building changed the name of the institution
to “The Jackson County Home.” This building became—and is still operated
today—as a long-term care facility for indigent elderly. By the 1930s, the
institution was referred to the institution as “The Jackson County Home for
the Aged” and sometimes “The Jackson County Home for the Aged and Infirm.” A
separate “nursing home” was located across the street for African Americans.
In 1928, Harry S Truman, as
presiding judge of the Jackson County Court, campaigned for and saw passage
of a bond issue leading to the construction of the three north-facing wings
that were added beside the Jackson County Home. The east and west wings were
three stories high and the center was four stories (the fourth floor
constructed for hospital purposes; a mid-1970s addition connected the two
buildings). A few years later as 33rd President of the United
States, Truman’s interest in a national health insurance program anchored him
as one of the first national leaders to make healthcare funding a priority.
In the midst of the Great
Depression, the Rural Jackson County Emergency Hospital in 1937 provided
24-hour emergency services. Like the “County Home” for elderly residents, the
hospital’s 21 medical and surgical beds and 4 maternity beds were occupied by
county residents who were without funds, and by emergency cases from
automobile accidents on rural highways.
In the years that followed
conditions deteriorated, however, and operational control of the hospital was
eventually relinquished to the Kansas City General Hospital and Medical
Center Corporation, a nonprofit corporation. In 1976, the Jackson County
Legislature officially changed the name of the Jackson County Hospital and
County Home to Truman Medical Center. Today, the expansively beautiful,
forested property at Lee’s Summit Road and Gregory Boulevard is still owned
by Jackson Countians; but, Truman Medical Center, Inc.,
manages the medical operations under contract.
In 1982, the Bess Truman Family
Practice Clinic was adjoined on the east side of the hospital her husband had
lobbied for in the roaring 20s. Between 1995 and 1997, an 11-phase, $24
million construction and remodeling project saw the addition of a
multipurpose education center added on the west side of the complex, and a
three-story expansion of the long-term care center attached to the east of
the 1908 building.
As part of Truman Medical Center’s
2001 strategic vision and image, its two hospitals adopted new names: TMC
Hospital Hill (located near Crown Center in Kansas City), and TMC Lakewood
(the site of the former Poor Farm). Work began in 2003 at Lakewood to
completely redesign, enlarge, and reconstruct the 1982 family clinic to
better accommodate a host of vital services (ambulatory, emergency,
in-patient surgical units, and medical offices). The $38 million dollar,
175,000-square-foot hospital expansion includes and newly re-designed
distinctive entryway.
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