The History we are not told about
When you look at history, you will discover that there are some huge events that have happened, one such event is called the Orphan Train Movement, which was a welfare program that transported over 250,000 children with claims the number was actually over 540,000 on locomotive carriages from crowded urban areas in the Eastern United States, to foster homes in the Midwest United States. It was claimed to these infants had been orphaned, abandoned, abused, or were homeless, when actually these were new immigrants, so where did all these infants come from?
The Orphan Train Movement happened between the 15th January 1864 to the 20th December 1889
The various Orphan Trains operated between 15th January 1864 to the 20th December 1889, although some Orphan Trains were still facilitated until the 17th April 1929. During these dates, around 250,000 to 320,000 parentless infants were relocated, although many Americans believed at more than 540,000 children were actually relocated during the Victorian Age. The co-founders of the Orphan Train Movement claimed that these infants were orphaned, abandoned, abused, or homeless, but this was not always true. Were they mostly the children of immigrants and the poor destitute families who had escaped the destruction which the First Mud Flood and Second Mud Flood had caused in Mainland Europe?
The Childrens Village formerly known as the New York Juvenile Asylum was established
A number of charitable institutions were established during this time, and these were the Children’s Village, formerly known as the New York Juvenile Asylum. The original charter for the Children’s Village was drafted on the 14th December 1850, and it was officially founded on the 30th June 1851 by 24 philanthropists led by Robert Bowne Minturn, who were collectively named in the Incorporation Act of 1851.
Incubator Babies were shown at the World’s Fairs
Once again, in this same time frame of the Victorian Period, the bizarre Incubator Babies were exhibited at the World’s Fair called The Exhibition Of The Industry Of All Nations, at Bryant Park in New York City, from the 14th July 1853 to the 14th November 1854. However, vast numbers of the Incubator Babies were also shown at other World’s Fairs across Mainland Europe and elsewhere on Planet Earth. This activity continued right up to when the World’s Fair known as the Fremantle Industrial Exhibition, was organised in the port city of Fremantle, next to the Swan River of Western Australia, on the 4th October 1894. When this specific World’s Fair ended on the 26th April 1895, the Incubator Babies were then concealed from the public.