| History
The Omaha Home for Boys is a non profit 501(c)(3) charitable organization whose mission is to support and strengthen youth and families. The primary support provided by the Home is residential care and behavior modification programs for needy and at-risk boys. The Home serves youth from every part of the Country aged five to 18 regardless of race.

The Omaha Home for Boys was founded in Omaha,
Nebraska on October 12, 1920.
After Father Flanagan’s Boys Town began
preparations to move from downtown Omaha to a
new location west of the city, the Chamber of
Commerce recognized a need for a safe place to
send orphaned, neglected and wayward boys within
Omaha’s city limits. Tinley L. Combs, a
prominent jeweler and President of the Chamber
of Commerce at the time, thought the project
would be more appropriate for another
organization he was affiliated with – the
Masons. In addition to Combs, 11 other
businessmen belonging to various Masonic Lodges
in the Omaha area founded a non-denominational
safe haven for boys of all socioeconomic and
religious backgrounds called the Nebraska
Children’s Homefinding Association, later to be
known as The Omaha Home for Boys.
The Omaha Home for Boys has had three locations over our 85+ year history; 304 North 22nd Street from January, 1921 to April, 1923; 2137 South 33rd Street from April, 1923 to July, 1945 (The Megeath House); and the current Inspiration Hill Campus at 4343 North 52nd Street since July 1945.
The 59 acre campus supports eight cottages housing up to eight boys and two house parents per cottage. The campus also has a dining
room, education center, recreation center, woodworking shop, administration building and Youth and Family Services building. The Director of Youth Services (and his family) also lives at the campus.
The Boys' Home also operates an extensive 4-H program at our
112 acre Cooper Farm facility located three miles north of the Inspiration Hill Campus. Cooper Farm is also the location of Cooper Village
-- a subsidiary of the Home -- providing psychiatric residential care for boys.
The Home's residential care is supplemented by other counseling and training programs. These include Wellness for Life, Tobacco Free Teens, behavioral counseling, academic tutoring, youth mentoring and intramural athletics.
The Boys' Home also offers services directly to parents and families in the community. Parenting Classes trains parents in the latest techniques of conflict resolution, effective communication and youth management.
Projects include the Transitional Living program, which gives young adults a chance to learn practical living skills in a moderately structured environment. The facility, called Jacobs' Place, is an apartment complex owned by the Boys' Home and supervised by trained
staff. The staff serves as role models for the young men and women residing at Jacobs' Place, and offers guidance in handling the daily problems associated with living independently.
Since 1920 The Omaha Home for Boys has cared for more than
9,000 needy boys.
The Boys' Home is governed by a 30 member Board of Directors and staffed with over 80 employees. The President is the chief staff officer.

Click here to read our
75th Anniversary history book
(complete with all the wonderful pictures) in
.pdf format.
Or
Click here to read our 75th Anniversary history book
(without all the wonderful pictures.)
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