My years of agonising guilt and blame as one of the lost children; Next week sees the opening of a museum celebrating London's first orphanage. Here, speaking for the first time, one of the Foundling Hospital's very last orphans talks about his life as an unwanted child es review.

From: The Evening Standard (London, England) | Date: June 9, 2004 | Copyright information

Byline: ALISON ROBERTS

JOHN Caldicott can only remember ever receiving one Christmas present throughout his childhood. He was 10-years old and he was given a set of pencils by the staff at the Foundling Hospital in Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire, where he lived with 500 other abandoned children. It was the only "toy" he could ever call his own.

"We didn't expect any more because we didn't know anything else except life in the hospital," he says.

Most L...

Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research

My years of agonising guilt and blame as one of the lost children Next week sees the opening of a museum celebrating London's first orphanage. Here, speaking for the first time, one of the Foundling Hospital's very last orphans talks about his life as an unwanted child es review
Evening Standard - London ; JOHN Caldicott can only remember ever receiving one Christmas present throughout his childhood. He was 10-years old and he was given a set of pencils by the staff at the Foundling Hospital in Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire, where he lived with 500 other abandoned children. It was the only "toy" he
My years of agonising guilt and blame as one of the lost children; Next week sees the opening of a museum celebrating London's first orphanage. Here, speaking for the first time, one of the Foundling Hospital's very last orphans talks about his life as an unwanted child es review.
The Evening Standard (London, England) ; Byline: ALISON ROBERTS JOHN Caldicott can only remember ever receiving one Christmas present throughout his childhood. He was 10-years old and he was given a set of pencils by the staff at the Foundling Hospital in Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire, where he lived with 500 other abandoned children. It was
THE NEW FOUNDLING HOSPITAL FOR WIT: FROM HANBURY WILLIAMS TO JOHN WILKES.(Critical Essay)
Studies in the Literary Imagination ; ... inhuman Custom of exposing them to perish and starve in the common News Papers, or to be bury'd and suffocated in Dunghills of Trash ... institutions was brought home early in the new year of 2000 with the news report of a no-questions-asked policy for the mothers of unwanted ...
The roots of reform: Patrick Dillon identifies the mid-18th century as a watershed in ideas about reforming society. (Today's History).
History Today ; IN 1754 THe REFORMER Jonas Hanway directed his attention towards child poverty in London. He did not just lament the malnourished infants in every doorway; he developed suggestions for how to feed them and give them work. Hanway was not one to pass by on the other side, when 'boys and girls of
Culture corner.
The Daily Mail (London, England) ; Byline: THOMAS KEMP A new play tells the moving story of how London's first children's home is linked to some of our greatest music and art, including works by George Frederick Handel and William Hogarth. By THOMAS KEMP Time travellers will love Coram Boy, a play running at the Royal National
New York Foundling Hospital to Honor Cardinal O'Connor and Richard A.
Italian Voice, The ; Italian Voice, The 11-19-1998 New York Foundling Hospital to Honor Cardinal O'Connor and Richard A. Grasso at Gala: Special Performance by Broadway's Patti Lu Pone The New York Foundling Hospital will honor John Cardinal O'Connor, Archbishop of New York, and Richard A. Grasso, Chairman and CEO of
INVESTIGATING THE ABDUCTION OF ARIZONA ORPHANS
The Boston Globe ; On Oct. 1, 1904, at about 6:30 p.m., an impatiently awaited train pulled into the railroad station in the Arizona mining town of Clifton. On board were the reasons for the large crowd that had gathered: 40 young children, orphans being "placed out" by New York's Foundling Hospital. The arrival of
CORAM BOY ; Theatre ++ National Theatre LONDON
The Independent - London ; Handel's glorious choral music - performed by a splendid group of singers - undergoes various kinds of ironic shading in Coram Boy, Helen Edmundson's stirring stage adaptation of Jamila Gavin's novel. Premiered last year as the National's Christmas show (for ages 12 and upwards), it makes a welcome
`GREAT ARIZONA ORPHAN ABDUCTION' BRILLIANTLY RECOUNTS OBSCURE CLASH.(Lifestyle)(Review)
Seattle Post-Intelligencer (Seattle, WA) ; On Oct. 1, 1904, at about 6:30 p.m., an impatiently awaited train pulled into the railroad station in the Arizona mining town of Clifton. On board were the reasons for the large crowd that had gathered: 40 young children, orphans being ``placed out'' by New York's Foundling Hospital. The arrival of
Plan may save babies
Chicago Sun-Times ; "In the fourteenth-century Italy, parents who wished to abandon a child could take the child anonymously to a foundling hospital. There, in the wall, was a small door called the ruota. The ruota revolved, but only enough for a parent to place the child on the outside of the wall, turn the wheel,