Arthur Johnson Memorial Library

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We rode the orphan trains

by Warren, Andrea
Published by : Houghton Mifflin Co. (Boston, MA) Physical details: 132 p. 24 cm. ISBN:0618117121. Year: 2001
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j 300 - 399 Book Cart j362.7340973 War (Browse shelf) Available 79185
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j362.410924 Wep Helen Keller j362.42092 Bel El deafo / j362.7044 Gir My body is private j362.7340973 War We rode the orphan trains j363.1081 Oll Search & rescue j363.1799094777 Bur Chernobyl explosion : j363.2 Sch All About Police Officers

They were “throw away” kids, living in the streets or in orphanages and foster homes. Then Charles Loring Brace, a young minister working with the poor in New York City, started the Children’s Aid Society and devised a plan to give homeless children a chance to find families to call their own.

Thus began an extraordinary migration of American children. Between 1854 and 1929, an estimated 200,000 children, mostly from New York and other cities of the eastern United States, ventured forth to other states on a journey of hope.

Andrea Warren has shared the stories of some of these orphan train riders here, including those of Betty, who found a fairy tale life in a grand hotel; Nettie Evans and her twin, Nellie, who were rescued from their first abusive placement and taken in by a new, kindhearted family who gave them the love they had hoped for; brothers Howard and Fred, who remained close even though they were adopted into different families; and Edith, who longed to know the secrets of her past.

Listen to these and other child orphans as they share their memories of transition and adventure, disappointment and loneliness, but ultimately of the joy of belonging to their own new families.

10 - 12 years