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Sarge Bampton*
Co-Chair, Home Children Canada, Quebec Branch
"From
1869 to 1948 more than 100,000 children were immigrated from Great
Britain to work on farms in the rapidly growing rural communities
across Canada. While this program, administered by groups with the
approval of the British Government, was created with good intentions
and the promise of a better life, its results were often tragic
In
times of economic crisis [in Britain], many parents placed their
children in the care of 'charitable' society homes as a temporary
expedient until times improved. Unfortunately, these societies viewed
child emigration as a solution to poverty and overcrowding in Britain's
cities. Parental consent to a child's emigration was often overlooked,
and many parents were never informed of their children's emigration.
Others would receive written notification only after the ship carrying
their children had left port.
During
these years, there existed a shortage of agricultural labour in
Canada... Within days or weeks of the children's arrival in Canada,
they would be placed on farms to work for their keep... It is now
clearly evident that many were ill-treated, neglected and overworked.
Today, many of the surviving Home Children still carry the emotional
scars resulting from forced emigration from homeland, and separation
from families at such a young age.
Most
Home Children would never return to their homes or their families
Today more than four million people are directly descended from
the original 100,000 Home Children who landed on Canada's shores."
The
Canadian Centre for Home Children
Charlie
Best, who is a Home Boy himself, once described Home Children as
"children that nobody wanted."
England had
been involved in a number of wars. These had left many widows with
no means of supporting their large families. There were no widows'
pensions, no welfare cheques in those days. And many women died
in childbirth. So, what to do with the children? England exported
the problem by sending them
overseas - mainly to Canada and Australia - where the children were
placed on farms.
Home Children.
(Photo: Courtesy of Home Children Canada)
100,000
of these children came to Canada, an enormous number when you consider
the population of Canada at that time [only 3.6 million in 1870].
Of that number, nearly 7000 came to the Eastern Townships, where
there were two receiving homes. The Gibbs Home in Sherbrooke took
in 2064 children between 1886 and 1939, while the Knowlton Distributing
Home took in 4858 boys and girls between 1872 and 1912. 
Then there
were the Catholic children transferred from Ontario to Catholic
households in the province of Quebec. Imagine yourself eight or
nine years old, removed from your home and family, put on a ship,
taken overseas far from your country, put on a train, placed in
a home, and finally sent to a family that does not speak your language!
The Gibbs Home. (Photo: Courtesy of Sarge & Pauline
Bampton)
My name is Sarge
Bampton and I am the son of two Home Children. My father, Joseph
Albert, was born in 1887. Eighteen months after he was born, his
mother died giving birth to his sister. His father sent him to live
with relatives who died a few years later. So Joseph Albert was
placed in a home and subsequently sent to Canada in 1900 on the
S.S. Parisian. In Canada, he was sent to the Knowlton Distributing
Home and from there to Wilson's Mills to a farm. My mother, Mary
Jane Windle, also lost her mother. Her brother who had been sent
over a few years before wrote to England and suggested that she
too be sent to Canada. Mary Jane arrived on the S.S. Corsican in
1908. The Knowlton Distributing Home found her a place as a domestic.
She was thirteen years old.
In
1912, Joe and Mary married. They had four children, of which I am
the youngest. Dad was happiest when a new baby arrived in the family.
He cherished his children and grandchildren. He even lived long
enough to see a great-grandchild! Mother knit baby clothes and made
a quilt for each child when it was born. She was happiest when we
all gathered for Christmas or at other holidays. Mother and Dad
made sure that we had a good home life -- something they had missed
when they were children.
Home Child pin.
(Photo: Courtesy of Sarge & Pauline Bampton)
*Sarge
Bampton and his wife Pauline are Co-Chairs of Home Children Canada,
Quebec Branch. Home Children Canada's aims are as follows: to help
Home Children and their descendants discover their past; to tell
the Home Children story to as many as possible and in so doing;
to erase the stigma so unfairly attached to Home Children; and to
replace that stigma which caused such a silent shame with justifiable
pride. The Bamptons may
be reached at: ecbpfb-homechild-que@sympatico.ca.
The following
Websites may be of interest to Home Children or their descendants:
http://www.homechildren.ca/
http://www3.telus.net/Home_Children_Canada/
http://charsnow.tripod.com/one.html
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