Riders on the Orphan Train

Riders on the Orphan Train

August 27, 2017

RED CLOUD--The Auld Public Library will present "Riders on the Orphan Train", a multimedia persentation on the Orphan Trains and their young riders with Alison Moore and Phil Lancaster, at the Library on Sunday, Aug. 27th at 2pm. 

This presentation is funded by Humanities Nebraska and the Nebraska Cultural Endowment. 

Few people today know much about the largest child migration in history. Between 1854 and 1929 over 250,000 orphans and unwanted children were taken out of New York City and given away at train stations across America. Children were sent to every state in the continental United States; the last train went to Sulphur Springs, TX in 1929. This "placing out" system was originally organized by Methodist minister Charles Loring Brace and teh Children's Aid Society of New York. His mission was to rid the streets and overcrowded orphanages of homeless children and provide them with an opportunity to find new homes. Many of the children were not orphans but "surrendered" by parents too impoverished to keep them. The New York Foundling Hospital, a Catholic organization, also sent out children to be placed in Catholic homes. This seventy-six year experiment in child relocation is filled with the entire spectrum of human emotion and reveals a great deal about the successes and failures of the American Dream. 

The one hour multimedia program combines live music by Phillp Lancaster and Alison Moore, video montage with archival photographs and interviews of survivors, and a dramatic reading of the 2012 novel "Riders on the Orphan Train" by award-winning author Alison Moore. Although the program is about children, it is designed to engage audiences of all ages and to inform, inspire, and raise awareness about this little-known part of history. 

Local relatives and acquaintances of Orphan Train Riders are especially invited to attend and share their stories with the audience.