Promises of Home – Stories of Canada’s British Home Children

$5.98

In a 70 year period (1869-1939), more than 100,000 children immigrated to Canada from England, Scotland, Ireland and Wales. As a movement, they changed the landscape of our country – ten percent of the Canadian population is descended from a “Home Child.” As individuals, they gave us stories. Promises of Home tells the stories of 31 young immigrants (British Home Children).

194 pages, Digital (.pdf) Download Only

Sold By: Rose McCormick Brandon
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Promises of Home – Stories of Canada’s British Home Children

Rose McCormick Brandon, 2014, Publisher: Magnolia Press
194 pages, Digital (.pdf) Download Only

A band of child pilgrims in mass exodus, numbering 100,000, spanning seven decades (1869-1939), arrived in Canada. Like seed, they were scattered from Atlantic to Pacific, not in handfuls as would have been appropriate for children, but in singles, one here, another there. Hampered by the derogatory label, Home Child, severed from their familial connections, against the odds, they took root and became grounded and sturdy enough to change the landscape of our young Dominion. Promises of Home is a collection of the stories of 31 young immigrants. It’s time to cry over the abuses they suffered, to applaud their successes and to say, as a nation, “thank you.” Rose McCormick Brandon is a descendant of four British Home Children. She writes books and publishes articles on faith, personal experience and the Child Immigration Scheme. She lives in Caledonia, Ontario.

In a 70 year period (1869-1939), more than 100,000 children immigrated to Canada from England, Scotland, Ireland and Wales. As a movement, they changed the landscape of our country – ten percent of the Canadian population is descended from a “Home Child.” As individuals, they gave us stories. Promises of Home tells the stories of 31 young immigrants (British Home Children).