After the Orphanage

After the Orphanage

Author: Suellen Murray

Publisher: UNSW Press

Published: 2009

Total Pages: 224

ISBN-13: 1921410906

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While there is much literature on the experience of growing up in an orphanage, very few books examine life after institutional care. After the Orphanage is the first book to address how care-leavers adjust to life in the outside world.


Children of Bethany

Children of Bethany

Author: Saïd K. Aburish

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing

Published: 1998-08-27

Total Pages: 243

ISBN-13: 9780747540588

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In 1948, with Palestine in flames, the Aburish family scattered. Whilst some of them began a new life across the world, others stayed in Bethany and watched as their life was destroyed by events in the outside world. This is the history of the family written by the grandson of the headman.


The Adoption Machine

The Adoption Machine

Author: Paul Jude Redmond

Publisher: Merrion Press

Published: 2018-03-20

Total Pages: 332

ISBN-13: 1785371797

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MAY 2014. The Irish public woke to the horrific discovery of a mass grave containing the remains of most 800 babies in the ‘Angels’ Plot’ of Tuam’s Mother and Baby Home. What followed would rock the last vestiges of Catholic Ireland, enrage an increasingly secularised nation, and lead to a Commission of Inquiry. In The Adoption Machine, Paul Jude Redmond, Chairperson of the Coalition of Mother and Baby Homes Survivors, who himself was born in the Castlepollard Home, candidly reveals the shocking history of one of the worst abuses of Church power since the foundation of the Irish State. From Bessboro, Castlepollard, and Sean Ross Abbey to St. Patrick’s and Tuam, a dark shadow was cast by the collusion between Church and State in the systematic repression of women and the wilful neglect of illegitimate babies, resulting in the deaths of thousands. It was Paul’s exhaustive research that widened the global media’s attention to all the homes and revealed Tuam as just the tip of the iceberg of the horrors that lay beneath. He further reveals the vast profits generated by selling babies to wealthy adoptive parents, and details how infants were volunteered to a pharmaceutical company for drug trials without the consent of their natural mothers. Interwoven throughout is Paul’s poignant and deeply personal journey of discovery as he attempts to find his own natural mother. The Adoption Machine exposes this dark history of Ireland’s shameful and secret past, and the efforts to bring it into the light. It is a history from which there is no turning away.


The Children's Civil War

The Children's Civil War

Author: James Alan Marten

Publisher: Univ of North Carolina Press

Published: 2000-10-01

Total Pages: 388

ISBN-13: 9780807849040

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The Children's Civil War is an exploration of childhood during our nation's greatest crisis. James Marten describes how the war changed the literature and schoolbooks published for children, how it affected children's relationships with absent fathers and brothers, how the responsibilities forced on northern and especially southern youngsters shortened their childhoods, and how the death and destruction that tore the country apart often cut down children as well as adults.


A History of the Stone Family who Settled in the South and the Cherry Family of Tennessee

A History of the Stone Family who Settled in the South and the Cherry Family of Tennessee

Author: Martha Jane Stone

Publisher: Martha Jane Stone

Published: 1993

Total Pages: 496

ISBN-13:

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The Stone family originally of England and later in Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee and Kentucky. The earliest known progenitor of the Stone family is William Stone de Twiste, born ca. 1490 in Parish of Twiston, Lancashire, England. He married Elizabeth, daughter of John Bradley. Their son, Richard (1540-1606), and his wife, Isabel Girdier (b. 1553), daughter of John Girdier of Carr House had nine children. Their third son, Thomas born 1580, was baptized in Parish of Croston. He and his wife Elizabeth Lufkyn had four sons and two daughters. Son, George, born 1597 in London, England came to Jamestown in 1620 with his three brothers all young men. He is the founder of the Stone name in Virginia. The other brothers migrated west. Robert Burns Stone (1889-1958) was born in Big Rock, Stewart Co., Tenn., a son of Joseph Franklin Stone and Martha Malinda Cherry. He married 1913 in Paducah, Ky., Ada Belle Stewart (1887-1982). Both died in Lexington, Kentucky. The Cherry family is also of English origin. The family discussed in this book stems from William Cherry, who came to America with his brother John in the 1630's. He settled in Martin Co., N.C. After 172 years in North Carolina, several families migrated to Tennessee.


Rathgar: A History

Rathgar: A History

Author: Maurice Curtis

Publisher: The History Press

Published: 2015-12-07

Total Pages: 206

ISBN-13: 0750967722

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Originally dating from the 1860s, Rathgar is one of the most well-known areas of Dublin, a salubrious suburb, filled with history.In this book, author Maurice Curtis explores the area that was once home to DeValera, JM Synge and the many other people who have shaped the nation.


Welcoming The Children

Welcoming The Children

Author: C. Truett Baker

Publisher: Xlibris Corporation

Published: 2010-09-23

Total Pages: 424

ISBN-13: 1453562923

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The Christian Church has been "welcoming the children" in everygeneration since Jesus' earthly life. The early church, and generations of Christians since, would find expressions of care, appropriate for their times, to help needy families and dependent children.This story is about how the Christian church, with the major focus upon Arizona Baptist Children's Services (ABCS), has responded to the mandate of Jesus to "welcome the children" whose families have been crippled or absent. To tell that story, the writer has chosen to go back in time to create a context of historical examples. What ABCS and other Christians are doing in the Year of Our Lord, 2010, is little different than the experience of how the church responded to the needs of children in the first, fifth or eighteenth centuries. Only the methods have changed.The methods have evolved from foster family care to specialized services for children and families. These state-of-the art modern methods of care are described in detail. This should be helpful and informative to social workers and others who work with troubled families and children in out-of-home care in a faith-based context.