pedlarman
master brummie
Jim
Thanks for your posting. For my own research of an unmarried teenage family member who abandoned her two children in the late 60's I would be interested to know what happened to the children in the Pye hayes home who had reached the age of five years old. Were they allowed to stay there or were they moved to another home.
Also if there were two brothers one a baby and the other aged about three would they have been kept together or adopted seperate once one reached five.
Louisa
Hi, Louisa,
Let's try again...
My wife started her service at Pype Hayes Hall during the late Forties and early Fifties. In those days it was a residential home for abandoned children, and for children whose parents were unable to cope.
The children's ages ranged from tiny babies to five-year-olds, after which age the children were transferred to a residence such as the Erdington Cottage Homes.
The reason for the transfer at the age of five was that the Hall was furnished only with cots as the sleeping arrangement.
In the case of the children of parents who were unable to cope, it appears that the parents were allowed to visit in order to retain their bond with the children.
When the parent was able to provide better circumstances in which to take care of the child - either through (say) marriage to a partner, or the aqcuisition of suitable accomodation - then they would re-claim possession of the child.
But such children - if not reclaimed by the age of five - would still be transferred to another residence for older children.
The same applied to abandoned children. If they had not been fostered or adopted by the age of five, then they, also, could be transferred.
With regard to your specific query regarding (say) an abandoned child of three years of age arriving with a sibling who was a small baby, my wife says that she doesn't remember anything of this nature happening while she was at the Hall.
But, going on her own experience of the social arrangements of those days, she thinks that the two children would have been kept together for fostering or adoption purposes - even to the extent of making special arrangements for the older child to stay at the Hall, should he (or she) have reached the age of five...
As I say, these were the circumstances that prevailed in the late Forties and early Fifties. But I hope I have been able to enlighten you a little with regard to your research. I wish you luck in your efforts, anyway.
All The Best for Christmas and The New Year.
Cheers,
Jim Pedley (pedlarman)
