The Leader
Malvern, Iowa
01 May 1980
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Not A Popular Idea
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This was not a popular idea. Iowa Citizens thought this would bring
incipient criminals to their town, although many farmers were interested
in adopting orphans to assist them in their work.
New Yorkers, of course, were quite agreeable to have their huge surplus
of homeless children sent anywhere. So until Townsend's death in the
Spring of 1869, he did receive and care for a number of orphans although
this impoverished him and caused constant trouble.
When the idea of bringing eastern orphans to the mid-west first was
tried it cost only $10.00 per child to send them here, which included
transportation and food en-route. Since costs hadn't advanced much by
1901, that was probably the amount needed then. In New York City most of
them had lived in abject and depressing poverty.
There it was not unusual to find children no more than six years old
entirely on their own. Boys were found sleeping in boxed or any kind of
shelter, or even above the grills where warm air would come up from the
heated basements. They might acquire skill at scrounging
for food, or stealing from the carts of vendors along the streets. They
would be subject to the criminal element in the streets and many
mid-westerners were fearful that some sent here might already be
hardened criminals.
When they arrived in Malvern that Spring morning almost 80 years ago,
(1901), the orphans were taken to the Methodist church and lined up on
the rostrum at the front. Prospective parents were in the church pews
and those in charge had them express their choices. The children were
introduced to their new 'parents' and the matter was handled quickly and
finally.
Mrs. Robinson recalled that almost all of the adoptions worked out, not
always without some friction, for the older children had already formed
some habits that would have to be modified and their new 'parents'
weren't always skilled at child-rearing.
Yet the average results for this strange plan was beneficial. Certainly
the orphans from urban New York were far better off here in rural Iowa
than they were, or would have been, in their native environment.
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