When my friends were going through the adoption process I
found it fascinating and heartbreaking and ended up doing lots of research
about it. Because I love history, I wanted to learn about the history of
adoption. This led me to Mr. Charles Brace and the Orphan Trains. And
inspiration for a series of books was born J
The Orphan Train Movement was a supervised
welfare program that transported orphaned and homeless children from crowded
Eastern cities of the United States to foster homes located largely in rural
areas of the Midwest. The orphan trains operated between 1854 and 1929,
relocating about 200,000 orphaned, abandoned, abused, or homeless children.
Three charitable institutions, Children's Village (founded
1851 by 24 philanthropists), the Children's Aid Society (established
1853 by Charles Loring Brace) and later, the New York Foundling
Hospital, endeavored to help these children. The institutions were supported by
wealthy donors and operated by professional staff. The three institutions
developed a program that placed homeless, orphaned, and abandoned city
children, who numbered an estimated 30,000 in New York City alone in the 1850s,
in foster homes throughout the country. The children were transported to their
new homes on trains that were labeled "orphan trains" or
"baby trains". This relocation of children ended in the 1920s with
the beginning of organized foster care in America.
Around 1830, the number of homeless children in large
Eastern cities such as New York City exploded. In 1850, there were an estimated
10,000 to 30,000 homeless children in New York City. At the time, New York
City's population was only 500,000. Some children were orphaned when their
parents died in epidemics of typhoid, yellow fever or the flu. Others were
abandoned due to poverty, illness or addiction. Many children sold
matches, rags, or newspapers to survive. For protection against street
violence, they banded together and formed gangs.
In 1853, a young minister named Charles Loring Brace became
concerned with the plight of street children. He founded the Children's Aid
Society. During its first year the Children's Aid Society
primarily
offered boys religious guidance and vocational and academic instruction.
Eventually, the society established the nation's first runaway shelter, the
Newsboys' Lodging House, where vagrant boys received inexpensive room and board
and basic education. Brace and his colleagues attempted to find jobs and homes
for individual children, but they soon became overwhelmed by the numbers
needing placement. Brace hit on the idea of sending groups of children to rural
areas for adoption.
Brace believed that street children would have better lives
if they left the poverty and debauchery of their lives in New York City and
were instead raised by morally upright farm families. Recognizing the need
for labor in the expanding farm country, Brace believed that farmers would
welcome homeless children, take them into their homes and treat them as their
own. His program would turn out to be a forerunner of modern foster care.
After a year of dispatching children individually to farms
in nearby Connecticut, Pennsylvania and rural New York, the Children's Aid
Society mounted its first large-scale expedition to the Midwest in September
1854. The scope of this movement was amazing! The Children's Aid Society's sent
an average of 3,000 children via train each year from 1855 to 1875. Between
1854 and 1929, an estimated 200,000 American children traveled west by rail in
search of new homes. Brace's notion that children are better cared for by
families than in institutions is the most basic tenet of present-day foster
care.
Of course, there were all sorts of tragedies involved in
this. The need for it was tragic and sadly, there were many opportunities for less
than reputable individuals to exploit these tragedies. But there were also many
success stories.
I was inspired by this background to write my Orphan Trainseries which was just recently released in a boxed set.
She'd happily give him her heart … if only it wouldn’t cost her the only home she’s known
Sophie Brooks thought she had everything she could want in life. Friends, loved ones at the orphanage where she was raised, a job that gives her purpose, and a chance to help children every day … what more could she need? But a chance encounter with a handsome stranger has her wondering if a life—and love—outside the orphanage might be exactly what she never knew she needed.
Renton Robert Rexford III has never wanted for anything. Until he meets Sophie. The charming, intelligent beauty draws him like no other. But, thanks to a disapproving benefactor who threatens to pull the orphanage’s funding, his pursuit of her could cost Sophie everything she holds dear. She’s all he wants in the world, but how can he ask her to give up so much when all she’d get in return is his heart?
It’s not long before Sophie is forced to weigh her loyalty to the only home she’s ever known against the needs of her heart. Can love prevail—or is the cost simply too high?
I enjoyed the Orphan Train series. This subject fascinates me also.
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