THE
BRITISH HOME CHILDREN
|
1927 - 1984 Search |
1994 - 1999 Search |
2000 Publication |
2000 - Present |
|
17/09/1909 – 17/09/1994 A British Home Child |
|
|
3,500 Claimed by Descendants 4,000
WW1 Orphan Soldiers (A-K)
(L-Z)
500 Claimed by Descendants |
THE BRITISH CHILD EMIGRATION SCHEME TO CANADA
(1870-1957)
100,000 British Home Children
(alleged orphans) were sent to Canada by over 50 British Child Care
organizations. These 4-15
year old children worked as indentured farm labourers and domestic servants
until they were 18 years old. The
British Child Care organizations professed a dominant motive of providing these
children with a better life than they would have had in Britain, but they had
other ignoble and pecuniary motives.
They rid themselves of an unwanted segment of
their society and profited when they sold these children to Canadian farmers. Siblings in care in Britain were
separated from their families and each other. Siblings were separated from each other when they were sent
to Canada. Most never saw each
other again. Many spent their
lives trying to identify their parents and find their siblings and most were
unsuccessful. An unknown number of
children ran away from their indentured labour in Canada to the United
States. Millions of Americans may
be descended from British Home Children.
The 4-5 million Canadian/American descendants of the British Home
Children have 20 million British Grandparents, Uncles, and Aunts. How could this many people not know
they are related to one another?
Their mutual searches have been hampered by the unwillingness of the
childcare organizations to readily release vital personal information.
Visitors since March 30,
2000
Page Last Modified
on September 1, 2008
Perry Snow BA (Hons) MA Clinical
Psychologist
4103 Centre Street NW
Calgary Alberta Can T2E 2Y6
Phone/Fax: 403 288 4477 Email: Perry
Snow