National Orphan Train Complex

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National Orphan Train Complex

Orphan train research helps find foster children between 1853 and 1930 who rode trains from [[New York City, New York|New York Cit], [[Boston, Massachusetts|Bosto], or [[Chicago, Illinois|Chicag] to new homes in other states or Canada. The genealogy of many of these 200,000 orphaned, abandoned, or homeless children can often be traced back to the [[Children's Aid Societ], or the New York Foundling Hospital, among others.
Orphan Train Museum at the Union Pacific Railroad station, grand opening in 2007 at Concordia, Kansas.

Children were place throughout the United States and Canada.

Many children rode the train to the Midwest: Illinois, Indian, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, Texas were they were "placed" with families.

SeeFamilySearch Research wiki articles on State: Adoption,Vital Records, and Emigration and Immigration

Contact Information[edit | edit source]

E-mail:[1]orphantraindepot@gmail.com

Address:[1]

National Orphan Train Complex
300 Washington St.
PO. Box 322
Concordia, KS 66901

Telephone:[1]  785-243-4471

Hours and holidays:[1]  

Tuesday thru Friday: 10:00am-Noon, and 1:00pm-4:00pm
Saturday: 10:00am-4:00pm
Closed:  Sunday, Monday, and all national holidays

Directions:  [https://maps.google.com/maps?q=National+Orphan+Train+Complex,+Washington+Street,+Concordia,+KS&hl=en&sll=39.499761,-111.547028&sspn=7.517668,14.27124&oq=National+Orphan+Train+&hq=National+Orphan+Train+Complex,&hnear=Washington+St,+Concordia,+Cloud,+Kansas+66901&t=m&z=15 Google Ma

Internet sites and databases:

Collection Description[edit | edit source]

The National Orphan Train Museum and Research Center (a.k.a. Complex) collect, preserve, interpret, and disseminate knowledge about the orphan trains, the children and the agents who rode them.[2] This includes the history of the orphan train movement, and the stories of the children, photos, artifacts, and an archival collection. Also, they maintain a rider registry, a speakers' bureau, and the organization's online news.

NOTC has 66 volumes of orphan train rider records of the American Female Guarding Society (AFGS), photos, about 20,000 rider records, 9,700 names in computer databases, and Internet access to Ancestry.com.[3]

Tips[edit | edit source]

  • Please contact Amanda Wahlmeier, curator, before visiting so she can see if NOTC archives have records of your person.
  • NOTC charges $20 for their research resources.
  • General admission: $5.00 Adults;  $3.00 Children under 12;  $4.00 Group rate for 10 or more people.[1]

Alternate Repositories[edit | edit source]

If you cannot visit or find a source at the National Orphan Train Complex, a similar source may be available at one of the following.

Overlapping Collections

  • [[Children's Aid Societ], NYC, archives searches ($) for adoptions, and orphan train riders.
  • New York Foundling Hospital, can do records research for close relatives only of placed-out children.
  • National Archives Central Plains Region (Kansas City), censuses, military, pensions, naturalizations, photos, for IA, KS, MN, MO, NE, ND, SD; Internet access to Ancestry, Heritage Quest, and Footnote.
  • National Archives I, Washington, DC has homestead applications for Kansas and all other states.
  • [[Family History Librar], Salt Lake City, 450 computers, 3,400 databases, 3.1 million microforms, 4,500 periodicals, 310,000 books of worldwide family and local histories, censuses, civil, church, immigration, ethnic, military, and Mormon records.

Neighboring Collections

  • [http://www.cloudgenealogy.com/ Cloud County Genealogical Societ newspapers, church records, censuses, plat maps, vital records, family histories, local histories at the Frank Carlson Library.
  • Cloud County Historical Society Museum has a small research collection.
  • Cloud County Clerk has births, marriages, and deaths 1885-1910.
  • Cloud County Register of Deeds, land records.
  • District Court Clerk has divorce records.
  • [http://www.fcarlsonlib.org/ Frank Carlson Librar, Concordia, houses the Cloud County Genealogical Society collection.
  • Cloud County Probate Judge has probate and court records.
  • [[Kansas Historical Societ], Topeka, has indexes, photos, letters, diaries, newspapers, maps, censuses, vital records, family histories, land records, railroads, and county place information.
  • [[Kansas Department of Health and Environment|Kansas Dept. of Health and Environmen], Topeka, births/deaths since 1911; marriages since 1913.
  • [[Kansas Genealogical Societ], Dodge City, 15,000 books, vital records, cemeteries, censuses, and computer databases focused mostly on Kansas.
  • [[Topeka Genealogical Societ], 10,000 books, 700 periodicals, strongest for NE Kansas and Shawnee County.
  • [[American Historical Society of Germans from Russi], Lincoln, NE, has Russian geography info, church records, civil records, maps, family histories, photos, and surname charts, newspapers, U.S. arrival lists.
  • [[Wichita State University Librar], Wichita, biography, history, law, and JSTOR.
  • University of Kansas Libraries, Lawrence, government records, maps, newspapers, periodicals, Kansas and Douglas County history especially 1854-1861, and overland trails.
  • [[Iola Public Librar], Iola, Kansas, 4000 genealogy books, 12,500 microfilms, help from genealogist volunteers, and access to HeritageQuest Online.

For Further Reading[edit | edit source]

Related Websites[edit | edit source]

Sources[edit | edit source]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 [http://www.orphantraindepot.com/generalinformation.html General Informatio at National Orphan Train Complex, Inc. (accessed 25 September 2012).
  2. [http://www.orphantraindepot.com/index.html NOTC Hom at National Orphan Train Complex, Inc. (accessed 26 September 2012).
  3. Amanda Wahlmeier, Orphan Train Research Center curator, orphantraindepot@gmail.com, 28 September 2012, e-mail to David Dilts, DiltsGD@familysearch.org.

[[Category:Adoptio]