Ships from:
CA, United States
Seller notes: Connecting readers with great books since 1972! Used books may not include companion materials, and may have some shelf wear or limited writing. We ship orders daily and Customer Service is our top priority!
Ships from:
CA, United States
Seller notes: Size: 6x1x9; Some ink lines, mostly in margins. In 1853 a man by the name of Charles Loring Brace, along with other well-to-do men in New York City, founded the Children's Aid Society. The society planned to give food, lodging, and clothing to homeless children and provide educational and trade opportunities for them. But the number of children needing help was so large that the Children's Aid Society was unable to care for them, and Brace developed a plan to send many of the children to the rural Midwest by train. He was convinced that the children of the streets would find many benefits in rural America. In 1854 he persuaded the board of the society to send the first trainload of orphans west. With this, the orphan trains were born. Cheap fares, the central location of the state, and numerous small farming towns along the railroad tracks made Missouri the perfect hub for the orphan trains, even though many areas of the state were still largely unsettled. Researchers have estimated that from 150, 000 to 400, 000 children were sent out on orphan trains, with perhaps as many as 100, 000 being placed in Missouri. Orphan Trains to Missouri documents the history of the children on those Orphan Trains--their struggles, their successes, and their failures. Touching stories of volunteers who oversaw the placement of the orphans as well as stories of the orphans themselves make this a rich record of American and midwestern history.
Ships from:
CA, United States
Seller notes: Trade paperback (US). Glued binding. 128 p. Missouri Heritage Readers, 1.
Seller:
TextbookRush
Ships from:
OH, United States
Ships from:
CA, United States
Seller notes: Trade paperback (US). Glued binding. 128 p. Missouri Heritage Readers, 1.
Ships from:
CA, United States
Seller notes: Trade paperback (US). Glued binding. 128 p. Missouri Heritage Readers, 1.
Seller:
TextbookRush
Ships from:
OH, United States
Ships from:
CA, United States
Seller notes: Connecting readers with great books since 1972! Used books may not include companion materials, and may have some shelf wear or limited writing. We ship orders daily and Customer Service is our top priority!
Ships from:
CA, United States
Seller notes: Size: 6x1x9; Some ink lines, mostly in margins. In 1853 a man by the name of Charles Loring Brace, along with other well-to-do men in New York City, founded the Children's Aid Society. The society planned to give food, lodging, and clothing to homeless children and provide educational and trade opportunities for them. But the number of children needing help was so large that the Children's Aid Society was unable to care for them, and Brace developed a plan to send many of the children to the rural Midwest by train. He was convinced that the children of the streets would find many benefits in rural America. In 1854 he persuaded the board of the society to send the first trainload of orphans west. With this, the orphan trains were born. Cheap fares, the central location of the state, and numerous small farming towns along the railroad tracks made Missouri the perfect hub for the orphan trains, even though many areas of the state were still largely unsettled. Researchers have estimated that from 150, 000 to 400, 000 children were sent out on orphan trains, with perhaps as many as 100, 000 being placed in Missouri. Orphan Trains to Missouri documents the history of the children on those Orphan Trains--their struggles, their successes, and their failures. Touching stories of volunteers who oversaw the placement of the orphans as well as stories of the orphans themselves make this a rich record of American and midwestern history.
Ships from:
CA, United States
Seller notes: Trade paperback (US). Glued binding. 128 p. Missouri Heritage Readers, 1.