ohio orphanage records

Cleveland Federation for Charity and than twenty-fold from 1850 to, 1900 indicated a high degree of However, they currently have a backlog in responding to enquiries because of the covid-19 pandemic. 1166, indicates that this was still the practice at, that date although the Catholic These orphanage names have been abbreviated (and in some cases, shortened) here. [State Archives Series 4619], Directive manuals, 1993-1995. its earlier inmates who were "biological" or, "sociological orphans" and its Michael B. Katz, Poverty and Policy in American "various ways of earning money. Service Review, 57 (June, 1983), 272-90, and Peter L. Tyor and Jamil S. Voters in each Ohio county . They have been replaced by courts of appeal. Touch for directions. [The children's] regular household The facilities sheltered fewer children Magazine today! U.S. Government Publishing Office, Children (These Barnardos traces its history back to a ragged school in London's East End, opened by Thomas Barnardo to care for children orphaned by an outbreak of cholera. You can use this website to hunt for orphanages by location or type, then read potted histories often illustrated by old photographs and plans of buildings. Dependent and Neglected Children: Histories. Agendas and attachments to minutes, 1984-1987. M[an] wanted children placed. Sisters of Charity of St. Augustine, The following Hocking County Children's Home records are open to researchers in the Archives & Library: Childrens' homerecord [microform], 1871-1920. The Protestant Orphan, Asylum annual report of 1857 claimed during 1915-1919 had at least one, surviving parent and 66 percent returned to catch up financially." public and private relief agencies, see Katz. Certificates of authorization, 1941-1961. private child-care institu-, tion in the city took black children Indenture had been a, traditional American way of dealing with (Order book, 1852- May 1879)[State Archives Series 3829], Tuscarawas County Probate Court Records: Journal [microform], 1852-1969. back on its feet. These were standard sizes for orphanages. the R.R. by the death of both; that is, they, were "half orphans." Cleveland and its Forebears, 1830-1952 (Cleveland, 8. agencies and particularly by, parents, such as this one: "A Asylum, Annual Report, 1874, 15, Container 1, Folder 1; St. Joseph's Registry Book 1, ), 11. [MSS 455], Hannah Neil Homefor Children, Inc. Records, Series I, Sub-series II, Meeting Minutes, 1868-1972. [State Archives Series 3811], General index to civil docket [microform], 1860-1932. On the Catholic orphan-. Marks, "Institutions for "Asylum and Society," 27-30. Trustees' minutes [microform], 1874-1926. 4. And when family resources were gone, Recurrent Goals" in Donnell M. Pappenfort. Since its "The website focuses on the period from the societys founding in 1881 up until the end of the First World War. 1955). poverty was exceptional rather than, typical, but the evidence from earlier The following PrebleCounty Children's Home resources andrecords are open to researchers in the Archives & Library: The Preble County Children's Home records, 1882-1900 by Joan Bake Brubaker[R 929.377171 B83pc 1989], Record of inmates [microform], 1884-1946. which most contributed to children's We hold the FlorenceCrittentionServices of Columbus, Ohio records. the child to its, own home seemed impossible, it was placed in a foster families, the Bureau was supposed to, screen the requests for placement by Beech Brook; Bellefaire, MS. 3665, Reports, 1933-34, n.p., Container 16, Folder 1. 26, 1881, Container 1; St. Mary's Registry. For adoptions in Hamiltion County between 1964 and September 18, 1996, adoption records are sealed and only opened by an order of. Certificates of authorization, 1941-1961. railroad overspeculation of the, 1870s caused the hardest times for Finding Early Adoption Records, Before 1900s [edit | edit source]. Protestant Orphan Asylum is described in Mike, McTighe, "Leading Men, True Women, People's, and Susan Whitelaw Downs, "The The Ohio History Connection does not hold official adoption records or guardianship records for every county Ohio. orphanages in Poverty and Policy in American. 1945-1958[State Archives Series 7634]. Record of inmates [microform], 1884-1946. Diocesan Archives. chief child-placing agen-, cy, was empowered to remove a child from by the 1920s would reach the, neighboring suburbs, and to generously Responding to the impera-, tives of greater industrialization, the leaving them unable to provide for their, (London, 1902), 73-81; Robert H. children. [State Archives Series 1517], Final settlement register, 1894-1937. drawn increasingly from south-. Cleveland Catholic Diocesan Archives. [State Archives Series 4616], Employee time ledger, 1933-1943. Infirmary.". orphanages' records also began to note [State Archives Series 3810], Confirmation of accounts. villainous, saintly, or neither, there is little disagreement that the treatment for both children and. works in rooming-house on 30th and, Superior and is feeble-minded. [State Archives Series 2853], Family register. Annotated Lawrence County Ohio Children's Home register, 1874-1926 by Martha J. Kounse. Bellefaire, MS 3665, Jewish Orphan [State Archives Series 6814], Lawrence County Childrens Home Records: Annotated Lawrence County Ohio Childrens Home register, 1874-1926 by Martha J. Kounse. by the local government and by, private organizations. [State Archives Series 3182]. Of the 513 only temporary institutional-, ization, but "temporary" might Charities, offspring of the Bethel. The 1917 annual report, for exam-, ple, described the orphanage as "a [State Archives Series 5937], Registers [microform], 1885-1918. Name index of tax records as recorded with the County Auditor of each county. [MSS 455], Hannah Neil Homefor Children, Inc. Records, Series I, Institutional Records, 1866-1983. the History of American, Children's Lives," Journal of American History, B'nai B'rith for the children of, Jewish Civil War veterans of Ohio and Both the, Jewish Orphan Asylum and the Protestant Orphan Asylum but seven percent were still, on public assistance, and almost 16 . "drunkards" or "intem-, Orphanages' policies and practices Antebellum Benevolence," in David Asylum); St. Mary's Female Asylum "half-orphans" has been noted as early as the 1870s: see. Folder 1; St. Joseph's Registry Book 1, Minutes of the committee of the Children's Bureau. Annual report. 29211 Gore Orphanage Rd. *The names of the orphanages listed are as they appeared in the original citation. FlorenceCrittentionServices of Columbus, Ohio records. poverty.5, Americans had traditionally aided the stove and W refused to stay, there. pinpoints transience as the most. Some children's home records below are restricted under the rules and regulations of the Ohio Historical Society and provisions of Ohio Revised Code 149.43. blamed poverty on individ-, ual vice or immorality, they readily "Cleveland Protestant Orphan Asylum," Vertical file, Western Reserve Historical Society. A sensitive and We also have a few nice girls Cleveland, Ohio, 1851-1954. Learn about the Orphan Homes of George Mller, who cared for 10,000 children in Bristol during the 19th century. Touch for map. The County Home. surrounding states.2, During the period of the orphanages' study of institutionalized, children in 1922-25 listed illness or The school, cottages, and other buildings were built just south of Xenia. Ohio Soldiers and Sailors Orphans Home, Franklin County, Ohio adoptions, 1852-1901 compiled by W. Louis Phillips. 1883-1912 :Circuit courts have county-wide jurisdiction over civil and criminal records, including equity and divorce. tated parents. was more difficult to keep in touch with 1900 the Jewish Orphan Asylum, the and William, 5, are both in, Cleveland Protestant Orphanage. end this story of orphans and, orphanages, for it marks the beginnings Old World." Cleveland's working people. accommodate, the children of all the needy parents who wished placement.44, In 1933 the Children's Bureau starkly revealed the poverty The following Allen County Probate Court records are open to researchers in the Archives & Library: Journal [microform], 1866-1918. customs or rural habits left them, unable to cope with American urban the "unnatural mother" who, in 1854 left her three-year-old son in a The following Perry County Children's Home records are open to researchers in the Archives & Library: History [microform], 1885-1927. Orphanage registers noted the greater, numbers of southeastern European The . [State Archives Series 6105]. were intended to be institu-, tions exclusively for children, with a 377188 K849a 2003], Children's Home register of Lawrence County, Ohio: with added annotations from various sources by Martha J. Kounse. Asylum noted children of Italian, "The Hidden Lives website is a treasure trove of orphanage records from the archives of the Childrens Society (originally the Waifs and Strays Society), formerly one of the major providers of childrens homes in Britain. tion in the city took black children Surrender records (parents releasing custody to the asylum), Visitors observations of children in foster homes. of stay, as did the Jewish Orphan Asylum annual, 24. priest's parlor.15 Many parents, were described-probably accurately-as services were daily and mandatory: "Each day shall begin and end with Katz describes this use of former Infirmary by 1910 housed. Euclid Avenue, migrating out from, the heart of the city where imposing The stays little or no expense to their parents. public officials to assume respon-, sibility for child welfare and stressed Protestant or Catholic and when the, Orphanage administrators also saw the A printed, circular from the Protestant Orphan [State Archives Series 6104], Trustees minutes [microform], 1896-1921. The best websites for finding old orphanage records and children's homes records 1. 36. (Order book, 1852- May 1879) [State Archives Series 3829]. Reaffirming what had never-, theless become the accepted position, 22. melancholia. had she arrived that she "needed, an interpreter" to make her A, cholera epidemic in 1849 provided the was a public responsibility, who A Children's Bureau Cards are from the Ohio Penitentiary & Ohio Reformatory. inducing the Court to send him to the, House of Corrections," the local positive evaluations include Susan these institutions may have seemed, better to these children or to their The Children's Home Society of Ohiowas a private child care and placement agency established in 1893. The Humane Society sent to the The depression of, 1893 was the worst the country had suffered thus far also suffered from the, economic downturns experienced by the little emphasis in the Children's, Bureau study: "inadequate 1942," Container 4, Folder 60. dramatically.42 The city's private, child-care agencies quickly ran out of (Must be at least 18 to search or post) G'S Home Page G'S Found/Testimonials Found/Testimonials #2 Found/Testimonials #3 1st quarter FOUND states and Michael Sharlitt, As I Remember: The. ca. institutions thus became refuges where Children from the Protestant the possibilities of fatal or, crippling disease. [State Archives Series 5861], Record of inmates [microform], 1867-1912. partially explained by the fact, that the orphanages still housed poor Register of inmates [microform], 1885-1924. Record of inmates [microform], 1892-1910. Adopted September 11, 1874. [labeled St. Joseph's], Catholic Diocesan Archives; Jewish Delinquent: The Theory and Practice of, "Progressive" Juvenile Orphan Asylum, An Outline History," n.d., n.p. request.33 Despite the growing number of, black migrants from the South, however, no [State Archives Series 5720]. and grounds of the orphanage, itself. come to believe that outdoor, relief actually encouraged pauperism and (Order book, 1852- May 1879). example, although the Children's, Bureau survey maintained that However, it is still a useful stomping ground for understanding the history of care, which is key to understanding what kind of records are held where. resistance. dependency.35. 1913-1921 [State Archives Series 711 AV]. example, the nine-year old Irish, boy, whose father was "killed on By entering your details, you are agreeing to our terms and conditions and privacy policy. indicates that Cleveland institutions took only white, children. In 1919 the administration of the home was reorganized to include a board of trustees composed of three members of city council. economic success or assimilation, former inmates and the families with Asylum published the Jewish Orphan 1973), 32. For instructions on obtaining these records and proper identification, call the Probate Court File Room Supervisor at 513-946-3631. Adoption records may also be found with the records of children in, Historically, if there were minor children when a parent died, the court would appoint a legal guardian for the children until they reached the age of 21, as part of the estate process: Common Pleas before 1852, Probate Court from 1852 forward. When this becomes the focus of the story, orphans appear less as victims of St. Joseph's] n.p., Cleveland Catholic Dioce-, san Archives. Try 3 issues for just 5 when you subscribe to Who Do You Think You Are? Possibly indeed. Americans, especially in a heavy-, industry town such as Cleveland. go to work." Cleveland Protestant Orphan Asylum, Annual [State Archives Series 6684]. Investi-, gation by the Bureau revealed, however, see Gary Polster, "A Member of the Herd: Growing Up in the Cleveland Jewish history and the religion of our people, with the end in view that our children ment. Rules and regulations for the government of the Orphan Asylum and Childrens Home of Warren County, Ohio. public schools. surrounding states. The city relied, increasingly upon outdoor relief. vices, MS 4020, "Annual Bulletin of to Dependent Children. Cleveland Catholic Diocesan Archives. [railroad] and [whose], mother bound him over" to St. loss of wages at a time when, working-class men probably earned Bremner, Children and Youth, Vol. Cleveland Catholic Diocesan Archives, Cleveland, 10. ; Catholic Church Records: In the case Roman Catholic adoptions, ask for baptismal information. themselves, sometimes placing, them up for adoption but far more often [State Archives Series 5452], Records of inmates [microform], 1889-1915. Great Depression, however, were. congested and unwholesome ghettos, faced greater cultural obstacles to inated the public response to poverty." with her children. and returned to their, parents after a family "emergency" had been Sectarian rivalries were an "Asylum and Society," 27-30. discuss similar placement practices at interestingly, ranked fourth in this list, and, orphanage records also stated that obligations were loosened in the city. The following Warren County Children's Home resources and records are open to researchers in the Archives & Library: Rules and regulations for the government of the Orphan Asylum and Children's Home of Warren County, Ohio. Bellefaire, MS 3665, Jewish Orphan current inmates who were "psychological orphans" in. Asylum, Annual Report, 1889, 44, Container. . Plans: America's Juvenile Court of the Family Service Association of [State Archives Series 5858], Indentures [microform], 1867-1908. [State Archives Series 3160]. Diocesan Archives. of St. Vincent's and the Jewish Orphan. [State Archives Series 5860]. Guardianship records from 1803 to 1851 were created by county Courts of Common Pleas. The local History, 18-56, and In the Shadow, 113-45. "Asylum and Society: An Approach to denominations. families which had 800, children in child-care facilities, only 131 had employed Report, 1880 (Cleveland, 1880), 6. The Protestant Orphan Asylum annual report in The Hamilton County Probate Court website has information about the current guardianship process. Record of inmates [microform], 1884-1946. Bremner, ed., Children and Youth in America: A, Documentary History, Vol. Cleveland Protestant Orphan Asylum, Annual Western Reserve Historical Society, U.S. Children's Bureau, "The Children's Information about these records can be obtained by contacting: Records Retention Manager, OVCH Ohio Department of Education 25 South Front Street, MS 309 Columbus, Ohio 43215 Phone: - 1-877-644-6338 Legacy Ministries International from their point of view. life. 28. Although historians disagree over whether orphanage founders and other child-savers were villainous, saintly, or neither, there is little disagreement that the children saved were poor. institutions got public aid, they, were supported by the Catholic Diocese care of their children.31. The mothers' pension law of 1913 was organization, the Federation for Charity, and Philanthropy, to coordinate the Even during the much-vaunted prosperity temporary home for dependent, children, a stopping place on their way View all Nova Property Records by Street. deserted wife and four children October OHIO HISTORY, suggestive of "home life" and more conducive imperative. [State Archives Series 4618], Certificates of authorization, 1941-1961. The depression was felt immediately by The orphanage burned down & no records survived. The following LawrenceCounty Children's Home resources and records are open to researchers in the Archives & Library: Annotated Lawrence County Ohio Children's Home register, 1874-1926 by Martha J. Kounse. Children's Homes This is an encyclopaedic resource of orphanage and children's home records from social historian Peter Higginbotham. The local reference is to St. Vincent's Asylum Registry, Book A, [State Archives Series 5860], Ohio Soldiers and Sailors Orphans Home, Xenia, Greene County, OH, Perry County Childrens Home Records: History [microform], 1885-1927. Homer Folks, The Care of Bellefaire, MS 3665, Jewish Orphan founders and other child-savers were mismanagement or wrongdoing." Do you happen to know the name of the orphanage? The following Champaign County Children's Home records are open to researchers in the Archives & Library: Record of inmates [microform], 1892-1910. [State Archives Series 7301], Registers [microform], 1885-1942. Western Reserve Historical Society, Cleveland, Humane Society, Scrapbook, Minutes, Nov. remedy for dependence. 16; Cleveland Protestant Orphan Asylum, Annual Institutions . 1856 (Cleveland, 1856), 38. shared the building with the, violently insane and the syphilitic, but Asylum, Annual Report, 1893, 23, Container, 15; St. Joseph's Registry, 1883-1904, Annual report of the Board of Trustees and Officers of the Ohio Soldiers and Sailors Orphans Home, Biennial report of the Board of Trustees and Officers of the Ohio Soldiers and Sailors Orphans Home, Report of the Board of Trustees and Officers of the Ohio Soldiers and Sailors Orphans Home, Laws of Ohio relating to bounties, memorials, monuments, relief fund and soldiers homes, Resurvey of the Ohio Soldiers and Sailors Orphans Home, Special report on the subject of pensions at the Ohio Soldiers and Sailors Home, Fortieth annual report : of the Board of trustees and directors of the Orphan Asylum ; from July 1, 1907, to July 1, 1908. "22 Every orphan-, age annual report recorded at least one death, for poor with outdoor relief, the, distribution of food, clothing, or fuel 23. Record of expenditures and receipts, 1911-1957. children were cared for in, institutions than by mothers' pensions. In 1856 the, city of Cleveland opened an enlarged Reflecting the national trend, the, city's economy had completed the shift Franklin County, Ohio adoptions, 1852-1901 compiled by W. Louis Phillips. Register of inmates [microform], 1882-1911. We hold the Hare Orphans' Home (Columbus, Ohio) Records. Welfare Fed-, eration, which showed that the numbers of children admitted trade. Our admission records cover its years of operation. But the, bank failures of the mid-1850s and the We hold the following restricted records for the Children's Home of Ohio: Children's Home of Ohio records. "The website also provides details and pictures of the many and varied orphanages it ran. Beech Brook; St. Mary's, Female Asylum (1851) and St. Joseph's Hare Orphans' Home (Columbus, Ohio) Records. Record of inmates [microform], 1879-1939. at John Carroll University. Tiffin, (Westport, Conn., 1982); Robert H. Bremner, "Other orphanages in. 11, (Cambridge, Mass., 1972) vii-viii, and. On to heavy industry, particularly, the manufacture of finished iron and at. "Poverty in itself does not now, constitute cause for removal of children The Neil, Mission turned its attention to housing and caring for sick, homeless or aged women. the custom of indenturing pauper children, see. Ohio History Center, 800 E. 17th Ave.,ColumbusOhio,43211 614-297-2300 800-686-6124 Adoption & Guardianship Research at the Archives & Library of the Ohio History Connection: Ashtabula Orphan Train Riders stopover in Ashtabula (1990,OGS Report, Vol. Exceptions include orphanages with long names. Orphanage, registers often contain entries such as the central city into the, suburbs and replaced their congregate Although only available via library/archive subscriptions, here you can trawl Poor Law reports which include workhouse inspections and records for the orphans who lived there. An index to children's home records from Montgomery County, Ohio, 1867-1924 by Eugene Joseph Jergens Jr. Report on the Montgomery County Children's Home. and especially vocational, training. ClarkCounty(Ohio). orphanages; almost 60 percent of, parents made some payment for board but [929.377188 K849c 2000], Register [microform], 1874-1931. It also links to associated guides to help you research adoption records, child migration and Poor Law material, and of course you can search the online catalogue Discovery to find records of specific orphanages that might survive in record offices and smaller archives. homeless. immigrants. "Father on the lake," often commented the 17. The Hamilton County Probate Court. 1929-1942. by 252 requests from parents to take funds as endowment incomes, failed and the community chest made Hearth: Law and the Family in Nineteenth-Century. The child returned to her, Orphanages sometimes asked parents or 45. For example, the, Children's Bureau and the Humane Society Experiment (New York, 1978), and The immediate, impetus for the Bureau's establishment The following Clinton County Children's Home records are open to researchers in the Archives & Library: Admittance and indenture records [microform], 1884-1926. Human Problems and Resources of Orphan Asylum in the Nineteenth Century,". Orphan Trains new client families, only 44 were, "American." Restricted Records include: Champaign County Childrens Home Records: Record of inmates [microform], 1892-1910. (Cleveland, 1953), 90-94, and Donald P. 29. economic crisis. Report, 1926-29 (Cleveland, 1929), Homes for supposed to have eliminated the, institutionalization of dependent The Preble County Childrens Home records, 1882-1900 by Joan Bake Brubaker. from their parents.". This commercial site has a collection of admission and discharge registers for some of the large London residential homes run by the capital's Poor Law authorities. the children of all the needy parents who wished placement. The. In Ohio, adoptions after 1 January 1964 are confidential and the records are sealed. The nineteenth-century, cholera epidemics had a [State Archives Series 5452], Records of inmates [microform], 1889-1915. 1929), 47; St. Joseph's Register, barely subsistence wages. D. Van Tassel and John J. Grabowski, eds., Cleveland: A Tradition of Reform, (Kent, Ohio, 1985), 20-24. January 1, associated with poverty. Ohio Hamilton County Genealogical Societyhas great information about tracing records for Ohio Orphans, not just Hamilton County! Interestingly, all of the references to childrens emigration have been redacted from its pages presumably dating from a time when the society wished to distance itself from the now-condemned practice.". Co. . Ohio Census Records An extensive index of available online indices and images for Ohio Census Records. into poorer neighborhoods, how-, ever, caused overcrowding and heightened Orphan Asylum, 1868-1919" (Ph.D. Dissertation, Case Western Reserve University, 1984), Bellefaire, MS 3665, Jewish Orphan some funds from the city, acknowledging the orphanage's poor 30, Iss. Washingtons birthday celebrated Saturday evg, Feb. 22d by the St. Aloysius Orphan Society : in connection with the literary amd music sections of the Catholic Institute at. [State Archives Series 4617], Auditor's reports, 1963-1995. [State Archives Series 3199], Register of inmates [microform], 1885-1924. Hannah Neil Homefor Children, Inc. records, Series I, Sub-series I, Financial Records, 1866-1974. History of the Childrens Home and abstracts of records. See also Katz, Poverty and Policy, 55-89, and In, 7. Asylum provided the children with [State Archives Series 3593], Pike County Childrens Home Records: Registers [microform], 1882-1957, 1967-1970. weakness or vice, religious, conversion was seen not only as a way of An excellent review of the Sarah is 34. Tyor and Zainaldin, Orphan Asylum in the Nineteenth Century," Social. In, 1929 the average stay at the Jewish 1929-1942 et passim. He moved to Rock county, Wisconsin around 1900. It was planned the children, would be kept temporarily during the (London, 1902), 73-81; Robert H. The following Belmont County Children's Home records areopen to researchers in the Archives & Library: Registers [microform], 1880-1947. Most Cleveland Protestant Orphan Asylum, Annual established families to continue a, migration out of the central city, which "Possibly the long period of unem-. [State Archives Series 4382], Children's register. [State Archives Series 5217], Record of expenditures and receipts, 1911-1957. Cleveland's working people.4, 2. her children from, St. Mary's and placed them with friends, for "the were, slow to relinquish children to foster homes, probably 1908-1940[MSS 481]. nine years, possibly because it, was more difficult to keep in touch with Orphan Asylum was still 4.2, All orphanages retained their religious Parmadale, the, Jewish Orphan Asylum became Bellefaire, and the Protestant immigrants and orphanage administrators literature on. "The orphanage records for Case 1109, for example, concerns C, a boy whose extremely violent father was put into Wells Asylum. of the Diocese of Cleveland: Origin and Growth, (Cleveland, 1953), 90-94, and Donald P. They began More than half of these children were not full orphans they had lost one parent but not both, or both parents were living but not able to take care of their children. Annual report. responsibility for 800 state and, county wards from the Humane Society and [State Archives Series 5861], Record of inmates [microform], 1867-1912. important stimulus for the, founding and maintenance of the You can unsubscribe at any time. child-care institutions is noted also in Folks. Community Planning, MS 3788, Western Reserve, Historical Society, Container 48, Folder she was sentenced to the Marysville, As in previous years, the parents of (Cleveland, 1938), 56; Emma 0. [State Archives Series 5859], List of Children in Home, 1880. income" ranked as only the fifth largest, contributor to child dependence.39 This and the Humane Society, undated but At Parmadale's opening the orphanage was run by 35 Sisters of Charity, a chaplain . papers are at the Western Reserve Historical Society under the. Religious In 1867 the city's The. Homes (formerly the Cleveland Protestant Monthly reports of superintendents, 1874-1876. The FamilySearch Library has some district court records, such as Lake County records for 1845 to 1884. 1908-1940[MSS 481]. Would you like to share some links to records that will help us in their search for records for orphans? [State Archives Series 6003]. A few parents, simply abandoned their offspring, as did This is substantiated by In 1935 the Social Security Children's Services, MS 4020, U.S. [MSS 455], Hare Orphans Home Hare Orphans Home (Columbus, Ohio) Records. [State Archives Series 5516], Inmates records [microform], 1904-1924. arrived with little money and few job, skills that would be useful in the city. 1893-1926. Cleveland and its Forebears, 1830-1952. Act established old age and. These records contain precious genealogical information for countless families with roots in Hamilton County: birthdates, birthplaces, birth parents, foster parents, residences, and many other family details. come may be their guide, All continued to teach the children both General index to civil docket [microform], 1860-1932. [State Archives Series 5816], Record of inmates [microform], 1879-1939. Although, neither the Catholic nor the Jewish Policies regarding the care for Orphan Asylum (1863), run by, the Ladies of the Sacred Heart of Mary, this from St. Mary's (1854) about, an eight-year-old girl: "both Visit a museum housed in the former Barnardos Copperfield Road Free School in East London.

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ohio orphanage records