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The stories of the Orphan Train Riders


by D. Bruce Ayler (Descendant)

Bruce Ayler, Editor

Bruce Ayler, Editor

The following rider information was obtained from reunions talks, magazine articles, and newspaper articles. Occasionally, there is a personal letter from the rider or descendant. More detailed information is available in the six volumes produced by the Orphan Train National Organization. These biographic volumes were written by the riders, themselves, or by a descendant of the riders.

As the various riders tell their stories, several things become clear about their common experience:

1. They all thought that they rode the only orphan train. Very few realized that they were part of a major migration into the western parts of the United States. Nor were they aware that other countries were also moving their children.

2. Most of these riders thought that there was something wrong with them—their parents had given them away. In truth, there were many reasons that the children rode the Orphan Trains—parental deaths, inability to feed them, children born out of wedlock, neglect, abuse, etc. There was no one reason which applied to all of these children.

3. The children were instructed not to try to contact their birth parents. They were to break all ties to their past. To be an orphan carried a heavy stigma among their peers. An Orphan was different. They were not as good as anyone else. Many of the orphans, described in these stories, carried heavy emotional scars through out their lives. Many refused to tell their own families about their past.

There were many stories among the children. Many found good, loving homes. Others found that they were a cheap source of labor for the farmers and merchants. Some were treated with love while others found abusive homes. Some adored their new parents while others ran away never to be heard from again.

Not all of these children were adopted. Some were indentured [not the same thing]. Unless the child was legally adopted, or unless specified otherwise in a will, many of these children were not allowed to inherit.

Without birth certificates, many of these children had legal problems as they grew older. Birth certificates were required for marriage licenses, passports, identification papers, social security, driver’s licenses, etc. Orphans, which had fought for our country had trouble re-entering their own country after the war was over.

Only within the last ten years, with the formation of various reunions, and the national organization, have these riders found out that they were not alone. These six volumes were the first opportunity that many riders had to put their experience into words. As these riders have been able to share their stories with each other they found much in common with each other-- they became a family of common experience. The old emotional scars have started healing.

Many of these riders now spend their time telling their stories to the younger generations. The history books have chosen to ignore this part of American history. These riders are determined to have their voice heard, to have history record their stories for future generations. Many have spoken to today’s child protection system so that past mistakes will not be repeated.

When one hears these stories, one wonders how anyone could be so heartless as to break-up so many families. Please remember, at that time, children were property. They had no rights. Because of the large influx of immigrants from Europe, jobs were scarce. Their extended families were not available. Child protection agencies and welfare did not exist. If relatives did not help these children, very few had anyone to turn to. For many, the Orphan Trains, not only saved their lives, but moved them to an environment where they stood a chance of making something out of their lives.

The Orphan Train movement was the first documented foster care system in America. From this mass movement of children, states soon developed their own child protection laws. Aid for dependent children, School lunches, Child labor laws, and many other programs gave the children rights and protection. These new laws, and public opinion, eventually made the Orphan Trains unnecessary. Officially, the last trains ran in 1929. There are several documented orphan train riders that came out unofficially in 1930.

There is much more to these stories. But for now, let the riders speak for themselves. Space does not allow the printing of a complete collection. Some of these riders are still alive. Many died long before the organization was formed. In some cases, their stories are told by their descendants. In other cases, the stories have been lost.

Rider Poems

Rider Reunion Pictures

(Some are now deceased)

Rider Reunion Pictures

Riders' Stories (incomplete)

Alice Bullis Ayler

Mary Jane Baade

Anna Miller Bassett

John Baugh

Elliot Bobo

Theresa Keppler Bright

Ellen Broderick

Gracie Burtzel

John J. Callahan

Edward, George W., & Samuel (Willie) Chester

Blanche and William Clymer

Gerard "Jerry" Cordes

Stanley & Victor Cornell

Marie Cote

Irma Craig

Alice Lydia Crosby

Elizabeth Wilde Daniels

Larry Davis

Howard Dowell

William Jennings Duckett

W. P. "Willie" Dunnaway

Gilbert H. Eadie

Alice and Pearl Eberhardt

Del Faeh

Helen Louise Forshee

Charles Frederick

Mike Francese

John Gale

Harry Gerguson

August "Hoot" Gibson

George Graf

Lillie Griener

John Gulker

Mamie Gunderson

Ann Harrison (Mabel Rubin)

Remy Heydacker

Howard Hurd

Maggie Dickerson James

Clifton and Myrtle Jennings

Bill Keefe

Gladys Marie King

Annie Alden Lee

Maurice de Leleu

Augusta Baisch La Porte

Robert James Maxwell

Bernard McArdle

George Meason

Eugene Miller

Lee Nailling

Mildred Oaks

Edith Peterson (Sister Justina)

Caroline Petrich

Ben Pippert

Leo P. Rodgers

Jean Sexton

Arthur Smith

Elida Gleason Stout

Fred (Engert) Swedenburg

Blanche Melinda Thomas

Agnes and George Thompson (Dupre)

Mary Brown/Toni Weiler

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