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  2. Blackguard Children - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackguard_Children

    The Blackguard Children, sometimes also referred to as the Blackguard Youth, [1] were known as gangs of mostly homeless orphans and runaways who, during the 17th and 18th centuries, dwelled in London's poorest neighbourhoods (such as Glass House Yard, Rosemary Lane, and Salt Petre Bank) and made a living by begging and pilfering. [2]

  3. List of orphans and foundlings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_orphans_and_foundlings

    Notable orphans and foundlings include world leaders, celebrated writers, entertainment greats, figures in science and business, as well as innumerable fictional characters in literature and comics. While the exact definition of orphan and foundlings varies, one legal definition is a child bereft through "death or disappearance of, abandonment ...

  4. Moscow Orphanage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moscow_Orphanage

    On the inauguration day, 19 newborn babies were brought to the unfinished Orphanage. Two of them were publicly baptized Catherine and Paul, after the Empress and her heir, but both died soon afterward. This was an early portent of extremely high infant mortality that would be characteristic of the Orphanage in the 18th century.

  5. Orphanage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orphanage

    Orphanages were also set up in the United States from the early 19th century; for example, in 1806, the first private orphanage in New York (the Orphan Asylum Society, now Graham Windham) was co-founded by Elizabeth Schuyler Hamilton, widow of Alexander Hamilton, one of the Founding Fathers of the United States. [8]

  6. August Hermann Francke - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/August_Hermann_Francke

    In 1698, there were 100 orphans under his charge to be clothed and fed, ... In the 18th century, it became common with so called Töchterschule ...

  7. George Müller - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Müller

    Later during the split, his group was called the Open Brethren. He cared for 10,024 orphans during his lifetime, [1] [2] and provided educational opportunities for the orphans to the point that he was even accused by some of raising the poor above their natural station in British life. He established 117 schools which offered Christian ...

  8. Orphan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orphan

    Orphans by Thomas Kennington, oil on canvas, 1885. An orphan is a child whose parents have died, are unknown or have permanently abandoned them. It can also refer to a child who has lost only one parent, as the Hebrew translation, for example, is "fatherless". [1] [2] In common usage, only a child who has lost both parents due to death is ...

  9. Home Children - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Home_Children

    The Children's Friend Society was founded in London in 1830 as "The Society for the Suppression of Juvenile Vagrancy through the reformation and emigration of children." In 1832, the first group of children was sent to the Cape Colony in South Africa and the Swan River Colony in Australia, and in August 1833, 230 children were shipped to Toronto and New Brunswick in Canada.