Orphan Trains: The Story of Charles Loring Brace and the Children He Saved and Failed

Orphan Trains: The Story of Charles Loring Brace and the Children He Saved and Failed

by Stephen O'Connor (Author)

Synopsis

In mid-nineteenth-century New York, vagrant children, both orphans and runaways, filled the streets. For years the city had been sweeping these youngsters into prisons or almshouses, but in 1853 the young minister Charles Loring Brace proposed a radical solution to the problem by creating the Children's Aid Society, an organization that fought to provide homeless children with shelter, education, and, for many, a new family in the country. Combining a biography of Brace with first-hand accounts of orphans, Stephen O'Connor here tells of the orphan trams that, between 1854 and 1929, spirited away some 250,000 destitute children to rural homes in every one of the forty-eight contiguous states. A powerful blend of history, biography, and adventure, Orphan Trains remains the definitive work on this little-known episode in American history.

$21.50

Quantity

20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Illustrated
Pages: 384
Edition: Illustrated
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Published: 01 Mar 2004

ISBN 10: 0226616673
ISBN 13: 9780226616674

Media Reviews
O'Connor tells these stories lucidly and gracefully. He is particularly evocative in his descriptions of the transportation conditions the children endured, the conditions of urban poverty in New York in the 1800s, and of a typical day of a New York newsboy.

--Ruth Wallis Herndon New York Times Book Review


O'Connor's immensely readable book vividly portrays Brace and the world in which he operated. Orphan Trains not only offers us a trip to the past but provides historical context crucial to understanding and evaluating present-day attitudes and policies about poverty, families, and children.

--Merle Rubin Los Angeles Times


With grace and precision, and a novelist's sense of time, place, and character, Stephen O'Connor has thoughtfully retraced the gripping, often harrowing tale, showing us in the process how a great city came both to abandon and to redeem some of its most vulnerable citizens. New York--Ric Burns, director of the PBS series New York
In chronicling one of the first ambitious, privately sponsored social welfare programs in the United States, Mr. O'Connor provides an absorbing portrait of the nation at a moment of wrenching change, a moment that has in many ways not yet passed. . . . Orphan Trains is a moving and instructive story, and as he tells it, Mr. O'Connor never loses sight of the real people and real lives at its center. --Richard Bernstein New York Times
Author Bio
Stephen O'Connor teaches creative writing at Columbia University and Sarah Lawrence College. He is the author of Will My Name Be Shouted Out?, an account of his years teaching creative writing at an inner-city school in New York, and a collection of short fiction, Rescue.