Date:November 1908 - January 1909 (c.)
Description:Thomas, Elsie May, and Blanche R before and after they were "received into the homes" Middlemore Homes was called an “Emigration Home” because it took poor children from the slums of industrial Birmingham and sent them to the rural “wilds” of Canada and later Australia. Many of these children were not orphans but had been removed from their families due to poverty, and sometimes because of neglect or cruelty
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In the 1840s there were a great many homeless and destitute children living in orphanages, workhouses ...
In 1872 Sir John Middlemore was approached by a child beggar. Sooner than just give money, Middlemore ...
Before emigration the children were put into homes to prepare them and train them for a new life in ...
Henry C before and after he was "received into the homes". John Middlemore was a rich benefactor in ...
Although families were taken into the homes together they would generally be sent to different homes ...
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Donor ref:(78/10494)
Source: Balsall Heath Local History Society , Jim Fitzpatrick , Graham Partlett , Elizabeth McKeon , Diane Stead , Keith Whitehouse
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