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St. Joseph's Home is a historic Roman Catholic orphanage on Camp Robinson Road in North Little Rock, Arkansas. It is a large three-story brick building, with a tile hip roof and a stone foundation. The roof is topped by a cupola with a cross as a spire. The building is roughly H-shaped, with projecting wings on either side of central section.
Southland College, originally the Helena Orphan Asylum and eventually Southland Institute, was established in Helena, Arkansas for orphaned African American children [1] April 19, 1864 by Indiana Quakers Alida [2] and Calvin Clark and supported by various Quakers over several decades.
The Interstate Orphanage was a historic orphanage at 339 Charteroak Street (formerly 339 Combs) in Hot Springs, Arkansas. The building in which it was located is a two-story brick building with a hip roof that has broad eaves, and single-story flanking wings. A porch extends across five bays of the front, with a brick balustrade and brick posts.
Maine Children's Home for Little Wanderers; Masonic Widows and Orphans Home; Memorial Foundation for Children; Mercy Home for Boys and Girls; Minnesota State Public School for Dependent and Neglected Children; Mooseheart, Illinois
Dozens of Head Start programs, which provide child care and preschool education to low-income children, have been unable to access previously approved federal funding, putting some programs at ...
Chickasaw Children's Village, on Lake Texoma near Kingston, Oklahoma, opened 2004 [20] Chickasaw National Academy, near Stonewall, Chickasaw Nation, Indian Territory, open about 1865 to 1880 [24] Chickasaw Orphan Home and Manual Labor School (formerly Burney Academy) near Lebanon, Chickasaw Nation, Indian Territory open 1887–1906 [25]
The children range from ages 5 to 16, per the outlet, which stated that the oldest boy is "receiving full-time care in a psychiatric facility." Want to keep up with the latest crime coverage?
He also opened St. Joseph's Orphanage in North Little Rock, which was completed at a cost of $150,000 and placed under the care of the Benedictine Sisters, in 1910. [ 14 ] [ 15 ] He presided over the first diocesan synod in February 1909, and established the first school for Catholic teachers during the following June. [ 14 ]