02/20/2026
The old hospital on Weber Road is being partly demolished right now and if you want to learn a bit about how it got there, we’ll have to go back to the late 1800’s and talk about how we cared for the people in the community that could not care for themselves.
In 1879 a Missouri law gave each county the responsibility to “support the poor” which led to the creation of county infirmaries or “poor farms” which would give people shelter and food in exchange for work on the farm. Our first county poor farm opened in 1881 about 6 miles southeast of town in the area of Possum Hollow Road. In 1899 a report stated that there were 29 inmates, as they called them, half men and half women, including 4 children.
By 1902, reports on the terrible conditions of the farm were making their way into the local papers and a cry for change began. Many of the witnesses to the state of things were women who visited with church groups, including the Young Ladies Society of the Presbyterian Church. The Farmington Times reported that “there has been a good deal of suffering among the inmates of the county poor farm since the recent cold spell set in, resulting in much sickness and 3 deaths last week from pneumonia.”
A grand jury was sent to visit the farm and report back their findings. The 1903 grand jury report stated that the buildings were dilapidated and the furniture and bedding was insufficient and infected with vermin and should be “consigned to the flames”. They recommended the farm be sold at once and a new place found closer to town, and that the practice of letting the lowest bidder run the farm be abolished. After this, the caretaker would be paid a salary which did help improve conditions.
In 1904 the county purchased a 21 acre tract and built the new county infirmary. This brings us to the site of the old hospital on Weber today. It started as a long brick building with a two-story section in the center, flanked by two wings used as sleeping quarters, one for men and one for women. Each wing ended with porches and large rooms that were used for a worship area and a social center for the men. The second story was used by the superintendent and his family. The farm had 100 chickens, 3 cows and a grape arbor that could yield 800 pounds a season. Just north of the building was a small cemetery with 19 graves, though only a few were from the infirmary. The cemetery is still there, though you’d never know it. It’s unmarked and there are no grave markers or stones. I have not been able to find any records of who is buried there.
By the 1950’s, national welfare services took over and lessened the need for a place like the infirmary. It was put up for auction and purchased by several local osteopathic physicians who had no hospital for their patients within 70 miles. The doctors financed this project by mortgaging their own personal property as security. After a huge remodel, Mineral Area Osteopathic Hospital opened its doors in 1952 as a 30 bed facility. The brick building was painted white and that was the entirety of the hospital until 1968 when it had a major expansion which added 55 beds. Another addition in 1972 brought a new OB department, and the old white building became the administration wing. 60 more beds were gained in 1978 by building up a second story, bringing the total beds to 177.
The name changed to Mineral Area Regional Medical Center in 1987 and it grew more over the years into the large campus that we are familiar with today. The original brick building of the infirmary was torn down in 1992 to make way for the ancillary services building that still stands, facing Weber Road. MARMC closed in 2016 and has remained empty for the last 10 years. The property was donated to The Harvest Christian Centre in 2022 and this month photos started popping up on Facebook of bulldozers and piles of rubble as much of the old hospital has been demolished. Pastor Dwight Jones has said that plans to turn the building into a behavioral health facility fell through, and it would be easier to keep the property secure and market it for future use by leveling the older parts of it.
This place was a major part of the community for such a long time. Some people worked their whole lives in those buildings. It saw life begin and end. I found many old newspaper clippings of the town celebrating the hospital as it grew and grew, photos of bricklayers and people putting up steel beams, hospital workers showing off newly built areas. I thought of all the local companies that provided labor and materials over the years and all the money spent, starting with that first small group of doctors in 1952. With that in mind, it did give me some feels when I drove by and saw it all on the ground, sorted into neat piles of scrap and debris, gone in a flash.
There is still one little blip of history left though. Out front of the main building left standing is a small section of iron fencing that used to surround the old infirmary. Originally it was a part of the county’s 3rd courthouse, built in 1886, but it was removed in 1910 during some improvements were made on the town square grounds. The infirmary was in need of fencing, so it was relocated there. It was made by the Rogers Fence Company of Springfield, Ohio and there used to be 581 feet of it. Sections of it seem to have disappeared over the years, leaving just this tiny bit of history behind. Maybe there are some more parts to it out there somewhere, if a person knew where to look 👀