Hanscom Park Methodist Episcopal Church was organized in 1886 by H. H. Millard. Built in what was considered to be an upscale community, the church sat in the middle of a field. By 1904 the congregation boasted a membership of 352. Early pastors that succeeded H. H. Millard were George M. Brown, J. P. Murray, F. M. Sisson, and Clyde C. Cissel. Around the turn of the century the Hanscom Park congregation became concerned with the "lawlessness and destitute behavior" of workers from the nearby
Union Stockyards in
South Omaha. They organized dances to compete with the "loose establishments" in
Sheelytown, a tenement located to the east. These gatherings routinely caused a stir among local residents, but were continuously held for many years. In 1899 the North Nebraska Conference annual meeting was held at Hanscom Park. In 1953, Hanscom Park pastor Reverend Ben Wallace helped found the Ministers' Clinic of Nebraska, a discussion group for mostly Methodist ministers to talk about their anxieties and understandings in relationship to those of professional
psychiatrists. The group received national news coverage, including an article in
Time magazine. ==Currently==