A Guide to the Children's Home Society of Virginia Records, 1902-2008
A Collection in
the Library of Virginia
Accession Number 44227
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Library of Virginia
The Library of Virginia800 East Broad Street
Richmond, Virginia 23219-8000
USA
Phone: (804) 692-3888 (Archives Reference)
Fax: (804) 692-3556 (Archives Reference)
Email: archdesk@lva.virginia.gov(Archives)
URL: http://www.lva.virginia.gov/
© 2010 By The Library of Virginia. All Rights Reserved.
Processed by: Jessica Tyree
Administrative Information
Access Restrictions
Portions of the collection are closed to the public for a set period of time, and can only be accessed with the prior permission of the Children's Home Society of Virginia. See notations in Contents List for details.
Use Restrictions
There are no restrictions.
Preferred Citation
Children's Home Society of Virginia, 1902-2008. Accession 44227. Organization records collection, The Library of Virginia, Richmond, Virginia.
Acquisition Information
Gift of the Children's Home Society of Virginia, 6 March 2009.
Biographical Information
The Children's Home Society of Virginia was organized in 1899, and chartered by the General Assembly on 30 January 1900. Inspired by the work of the National Children's Home Society, it was born of concern on the part of its founders for the plight of abandoned and neglected children. As stated in its charter, the Society's goal was "finding family homes for homeless, indigent, or dependent poor children in the State of Virginia, and other purposes incident thereto."
The Board of Directors selected John Garland Pollard (future governor of Virginia) as the Society's first president and the Reverend William J. Maybee as state superintendent. Maybee, who was to hold that position for nearly 30 years, articulated the ethos of the Society when he wrote in 1903 that "We are not to imagine that children of humble birth are therefore inferior, on the contrary the homeless child of the street is of the same clay as the petted darling of the wealthy...Both Christianity and civilization may be quite correctly measured by their treatment of childhood."
The Society received children in one of two ways, parental placement or court commitment. Representatives of the CHS traveled the state gathering children who were made wards of the Society and brought them back to Richmond. The children then underwent "a thorough system of renovation" that included the provision of "clean and comfortable garments," basic etiquette training, and examinations by medical and psychological doctors.
Initially, wards were placed under the care of Rev. Maybee's wife, Mary McLeod Maybee, and the Belle Bryan Day Nursery. In 1905, the Board purchased a house at 2605 East Franklin Street to serve as a receiving home and central office; another receiving home was opened in Roanoke in 1920. Local advisory boards around Virginia handled much of the recruitment and screening of foster families, and helped monitor foster placements. Those children who were never adopted remained the responsibility of the CHS until they reached adulthood, became self-supporting, or married.
Change came to the Society in 1926 when it joined the Child Welfare League of America and began a process of reorganization based on League observations. Their recommendations touched on a variety of areas including fire safety in the receiving homes, hygiene, nutrition, record-keeping, the manner of disciplining the children, the selection of foster homes, and other topics. One major adjustment resulting from the study came with the shift to a staff of trained social workers.
With its budget coming entirely from donations (and, starting in 1930, from the Richmond Community Fund), the Society struggled financially in its early years. By the early 1930's it was in danger of closing under the weight of $50,000 in debt. Led by then-Governor John Garland Pollard and other prominent supporters, the state-wide "Spring Emergency Campaign" of 1931 yielded enough funds to erase the Society's debt and bring a measure of financial stability. The Society later partnered with the United Way for several years as an additional source of funds.
The receiving home was closed in 1934, signaling the Society's move to an emphasis on temporary boarding home (foster) care in advance of permanent adoption placement. As the state became increasingly responsible for the protection of poor, abused, and neglected children, the Society found its niche in the placement of "children born out of wedlock of the higher middle classes, who...are not accepted by their families." Throughout the middle part of the century, the Society only took in infants under six months of age who were deemed "essentially normal," which included "the child with some physical problem who can nevertheless bring great happiness to his parents-by-adoption."
In the 1970's the Society began defining itself as an agency providing adoption services, pregnancy counseling, and foster care. It also started to accept children over the age of six months, and to place children of minority and mixed-race backgrounds. The 1980's and 1990's saw an increase in the Society's work with "hard to place" children, including babies with medical problems, older children, minority children, and sibling groups. This work led to the formation in 1998 of the Partnership for Adoptions (PFA) program. In a cooperative effort between the Children's Home Society, local departments of social services, and clinical professionals, PFA seeks to "train and prepare adoptive families to parent children with special needs." The success of the program has been honored by the National Association of Counties (2000) and with an Adoption Excellence Award (2003) from the United States Department of Health and Human Services.
While the Roanoke office and branches in other areas of the state have closed, the Children's Home Society of Virginia remains vital and forward-moving in its second century of service, with offices in Richmond and Fredericksburg. (Up-to-date as of 2010).
Scope and Content
Records, 1902-2008, of the Children's Home Society of Virginia include annual reports, board and committee files, clippings, financial and fundraising records, histories of the agency, manuals for CHS services, newsletters, photographs, and posters. This collection does not contain the children's case files.
Arrangement
This collection is arranged into the following series:
I. General Files II. Board and Committee Files III. Financial Records IV. Fundraising V. Photographs and Posters VI. ClippingsContents List
General files include annual reports; issues of the quarterly newsletters Home Finder , 1920-1974 and 2000-2003, and Reaching Out to Virginia's Children , 1987-1999; "Happy Endings, " a promotional video about CHS, ca. 2000; publicity, invitations, photographs, and other items pertaining to events such as the Society's 100th anniversary celebration and various fundraisers; a 1964 radio program script; manuals on adoption and foster care (or "boarding") procedures; various overviews of the history, services, and structure of the Society; and limited correspondence, 1929-2006.
- Box 1
30th anniversary celebration invitation, 30 January 1930 .
- Box 1
90th anniversary celebration, 1989 .
- Box 1
100th anniversary celebration, 2000 .
- Box 2
Folder 1
"A Child is Waiting " (radio program script), 23-27 November 1964 .
- Box 2
Folder 2
Adoption Operating Manual, Placement Division, ca. 1964-1967 .
- Box 2
Folders 3-15
Annual reports, 1902-2007 (some gaps).
- Box 3
Annual reports, 1945-1963 (scrapbook).
- Box 4
Folder 1
Articles on adoption issues, ca. 1997-2005 .
- Box 4
Folder 2
Caseworker's Manual, Preadoptive (Boarding) Division, 1959 .
- Box 4
Folder 3
Charter and by-laws, updated to 1979 .
- Box 4
Folder 4
"CHS: 1984-1985 " (deconstructed binder).
Photocopies of publicity, advertisements, etc., regarding the Children's Home society from 1984-1985.
- Box 4
Folder 5
CHS Christmas Cards, 1977 and undated.
- Box 4
Folder 6
CHS general overview, ca. 1980 .
Deconstructed binder with sections labeled "Charter and History," "Board of Directors Advisory Board and Staff," "Personnel Policies," "Program Services," "Financial," and "By-laws."
- Box 4
Folder 7
CHS general overview, 1990 .
- Box 4
Folders 8-10
CHS general overview, ca. 2008 .
Three copies with varying components of an informational packet including sections on CHS history, mission, board and staff, services, and revenue.
- Box 4
Folder 11
CHS Reports (newsletter), Spring 1980 .
- Box 4
Folder 12
"Come and See the Children's Home Society of Virginia " (undated booklet).
- Box 4
Folder 13
Correspondence, 1929-2006 .
Correspondence numbers only six letters, and includes a Fredericksburg social worker's objection to the contents of two CHS mailings, 1974, and executive director Philip D. Holzman's response to a letter, 1982, questioning the organization's attempts to raise funds "for babies and small children you do not have."
- Box 4
folder: Sealed Envelope
Correspondence, 1926 .Access Restriction
This correspondence contains identifying information about children in the Home's care and is closed to the public until 2026. Permission to view before 2026 must be obtained in advance from the Children's Home Society of Virginia.
- Oversize Box 64
Drawing (signed "Mays '67") of CHS building, Richmond.
- Box 4
Folder 14
Forms for adoption process, Va. Dept. of Social Services, 2000 .
- Box 4
Folder 15
"Happy Endings " ca. 2000
Promotional video about the Children's Home Society of Virginia. Includes testimonials from adoptive parents, adoptees, birth mothers, and CHS staff.
- Box 5
Folder 1
"Historical Material " (deconstructed binder).
Various memos, late 1940's-early 1960's, on aspects of the CHS including the fee system, the Memorial Fund, intake policy, placement statistics, and organizational structure; staff meeting minutes from late 1946; and a short history of the Southwest Branch, 1947.
- Box 5
Folder 2
The History of the Children's Home Society of Virginia by Jacquelin Lee Warner, 1938 .
Thesis for Master of Science in Social Work, College of William and Mary.
- Box 5
Folders 3-14
Home Finder (or The Virginia Children's Home Finder ), 1920-1952 .
This quarterly newsletter typically included updates on the work of the Society, stories about children still in the care of the Society and ones who had already been adopted, fundraising appeals, thoughts on relevant topics in adoption, and essays on the value of adoption. Early issues feature many "before and after" studio portraits of children "as received" and after being taken into the care of the Society, along with notes on their progress.
- Box 6
Folders 1-10
Home Finder (or The Virginia Children's Home Finder ), 1953-1974 and 2000-2003 .
This quarterly newsletter typically included updates on the work of the Society, stories about children still in the care of the Society and ones who had already been adopted, fundraising appeals, reports of events such as the Centennial Gala, thoughts on relevant topics in adoption, and essays on the value of adoption. The publication's name was changed from Home Finder at some point but restored in 2000. See also several issues, 1987-1999, of the re-named newsletter, Reaching Out to Virginia's Children .
- Box 6
Folder 11
Home Finder transcripts, ca. 1921-1967 .
- Box 6
Folder 12
Indian tribes.
- Box 7
Folder 1
Literature for birth parents
- Box 7
Folders 2-3
Literature re: adoption
- Box 7
Folders 4-5
Literature: CHS history, services
- Box 7
Folder 6
Literature re: special needs children
- Box 7
Folder 7
"A Manual for Boarding Parents of the Children's Home Society of Virginia " (Southwest Branch), April 1947
- Box 7
Folder 8
Maybee, Mary McLeod
- Box 7
Folder 9
Miscellaneous
- Box 7
Folder 10
Miscellaneous non-CHS brochures, literature
- Box 7
Folder 11
Outreach and one-year plan, 1983
- Box 7
Folder 12
Outreach packet materials, ca. 2006
- Box 7
Folder 13
Parental Placement Adoption information packet, ca. 1997
- Box 7
Folder 14
"Personnel Practices Manual ", 1964
- Box 8
Folders 1-2
Policy statement, adult adoptee service, 1979
- Box 8
Folder 3
Press releases, 1947 and undated
- Box 8
Folder 4
Proceedings of the Conference on the Care of Dependent Children , 25-26 January 1909
- Box 8
Folders 5-8
Reaching Out to Virginia's Children , 1987-1999
The quarterly newsletter of the Children's Home Society. The publication was originally named the Home Finder , but changed to Reaching Out to Virginia's Children for several years before resuming its former name in 2000. See also issues of the Home Finder , 1920-1974 and 2000-2003.
- Box 8
Folder 9
Response to inquiry re: CHS position on abortion, ca. 1982
- Box 8
Folder 10
Service statistics, 2006-2007
- Box 8
Folder 11
Speakers' kit (ca. 1970 )
- Box 8
Folder 12
State Board of Social Services and other agency information
- Box 8
Folder 13
Stout, Micki
- Box 8
Folder 14
United Way
- Box 8
Folder 15
Volunteer handbook, ca. 2000
- Box 8
Folder 16
While You Wait... newsletter, April 1975
Minutes and records from the governing Boards of the main office (Richmond), 1923-1987, and the Southwest Branch (Roanoke), 1904-1973. Board minutes touch on a range of topics, including property and financial matters, service statistics, personnel changes, fundraising, relevant legislation, community partnerships, and the relationship of the state office and the Roanoke branch. At times (particularly in earlier years), specific cases are discussed; as a result, access to many of these records is restricted. Please note that in some cases committee files were interfiled with the Board files. Therefore, it is best to check the records of each of the entities for a given time period in order to catch all relevant material. Other groups represented in this series include the Friends of the Children's Home Society and the Northern Virginia Advisory Committee.
Arrangement: The series is arranged by office, with the Richmond files coming first (Boxes 9-16), followed by the Southwest Branch (Roanoke) files (Boxes 10-18). The Southwest Branch minutes are arranged in order of loose papers first, followed by volumes. There is some overlap between the two sets. There are occasional references to the work of the Southwest Branch in the Richmond office files and vice versa. Also, the records of a 1978 joint meeting between the two boards are filed towards the end of the Richmond section, in Box 16.
Due to privacy concerns, portions of this Series are closed for a period of years, unless prior permission is obtained from the Children's Home Society of Virginia. See folder listings for more details.
- Box 9
Folders 1-10
Board of Directors minutes, 1923-1939
- Box 10
Folders 1-8
Board of Directors minutes, 1940-1959
- Box 10
Folder 9
Board of Directors minutes, 1961-1967
- Box 10
Folder 10
Board of Directors minutes, 1969-1971
- Box 11
Folder 1
Board of Directors minutes, 1987
- Box 11
Folder 2
Board of Directors miscellaneous documents, 1969-1970, 1975
- Box 11
Folder 3
Board of Directors miscellaneous documents, 1980's
- Box 11
Folder 4
Board of Sponsors, 1967-1973
- Box 11
Folder 5
Board of Sponsors, 1963-1966
- Box 11
Folders 6-9
Casework Committee, 1946-1958Access Restriction
These files contain sensitive information and are closed to the public until 2058. Permission to view before 2058 must be obtained in advance from the Children's Home Society of Virginia.
- Box 11
Folder 10
Casework Committee, 1970
- Box 11
Folders 11-13
Executive Committee, 1944-1946
- Box 12
Folders 1-10
Executive Committee, 1947-1967
- Box 13
Folder 1
Executive Committee, 1968Access Restriction
These files contain sensitive information and are closed to the public until 2068. Permission to view before 2068 must be obtained in advance from the Children's Home Society of Virginia.
- Box 13
Folders 2-6
Executive Committee, 1969-1971
- Box 13
Folders 7-8
Executive and Service Committee Minutes, 1980-May 1981 (deconstructed binder)
- Box 13
Folders 9-10
Executive and Service Committee Minutes, June 1981-1982 (deconstructed binder)
- Box 14
Folders 1-13
Executive Committee, 1985-1995
- Box 15
Folders 1-2
Executive Committee, 1996-1997
- Box 15
Folders 3-4
Finance Committee, 1929-1940
- Box 15
Folders 5-6
Friends of the Children's Home Society, 1967-1974
- Box 15
Folder 7
Friends of the Children's Home Society, 1983-1984
- Box 15
Folder 8-12
Friends of the Children's Home Society minutes, 1967-1976
- Box 15
Folder 13
Northern Virginia Advisory Committee, 1949-1957
- Box 16
Folder 1
Northern Virginia Advisory Committee, 1958-1969 and undated
- Box 16
Folder 2
Public Relations and Funding Committee, 1977-1980
- Box 16
Folder 3-4
Semi-annual Joint Meeting, Board of Directors and Roanoke Advisory Board, 4 November 1978
- Box 16
Folders 5-12
Service Committee Meeting Minutes, 1972-1997
- Box 17
Folder 1
Southwest District Office, Advisory Board of the, by-laws, adopted and ratified, 1978
- Box 17
Folder 2
Southwest Branch Board minutes, 1923-1925 (loose papers)Access Restriction
These files contain sensitive information and are closed to the public until 2025. Permission to view before 2025 must be obtained in advance from the Children's Home Society of Virginia.
- Box 17
Folder 3
Southwest Branch Board minutes, 1928-1934 (loose papers)Access Restriction
These files contain sensitive information and are closed to the public until 2034. Permission to view before 2034 must be obtained in advance from the Children's Home Society of Virginia.
- Box 17
Folder 4
Southwest Branch Board minutes, 1935-1936 (loose papers)Access Restriction
These files contain sensitive information and are closed to the public until 2036. Permission to view before 2036 must be obtained in advance from the Children's Home Society of Virginia.
- Box 17
Folders 5-7
Southwest Branch Board minutes, 1937-1943 (loose papers)
- Box 17
Folders 8-14
Southwest Branch Board minutes, 1945-1973 (loose papers)
- Box 18
Southwest Branch Board minutes, 1904-1914 (volume)Access Restriction
This item contains sensitive information and is closed to the public until 2014. Permission to view before 2014 must be obtained in advance from the Children's Home Society of Virginia.
- Box 18
Southwest Branch Board minutes, 1914-October 1923 (volume)Access Restriction
This item contains sensitive information and is closed to the public until 2023. Permission to view before 2023 must be obtained in advance from the Children's Home Society of Virginia.
- Box 18
Southwest Branch Board minutes, November 1923-July 1926 (volume)Access Restriction
This item contains sensitive information and is closed to the public until 2026. Permission to view before 2026 must be obtained in advance from the Children's Home Society of Virginia.
- Box 18
Southwest Branch Board minutes and financial statements, March 1928-June 1932 (volume)Access Restriction
This item contains sensitive information and is closed to the public until 2032. Permission to view before 2032 must be obtained in advance from the Children's Home Society of Virginia.
See also Series II for financial records that appear in Board and Finance Committee files.
Arrangement: Volumes are filed at the end of the series.
Due to privacy concerns, portions of this Series are closed for a period of years. Permission to view before end of closure period must be obtained in advance from the Children's Home Society of Virginia. See folder listings for more details.
- Box 19
Folders 1-2
Balance sheets, 1932-1942
- Box 19
Folders 3-4
Balance sheets, 1947-1951
- Box 19
Folder 5
Financial statements, years ended 30 June 2000 and 1999
- Box 19
Folder 6
Memorial Fund performance summary, 30 October 2003
- Box 19
Folder 7
Memorial Fund performance summary, 31 March 2008
- Box 20
Building Fund cash book, 1967-1971
- Box 20
Group home journal, 1976-1982 (volume)
- Box 20
Ledger and journal (Southwest Branch), 1932-1941 (volume)
- Box 21
Financial statements (Southwest Branch), 1927-1931 (volume)Access Restriction
This item contains sensitive information and is closed to the public until 2031. Permission to view before 2031 must be obtained in advance from the Children's Home Society of Virginia.
Files pertaining to the fundraising efforts of the Children's Home Society of Virginia, including mailings to donors, and records of gala events and golf tournaments. Please note that some files dealing with funding provided by the Old Dominion Foundation in the late 1950's contain potentially identifying information about children who were helped with the funds. As a result, these files are restricted.
Due to privacy concerns, portions of this Series are closed for a period of years. Permission to view before end of closure period must be obtained in advance from the Children's Home Society of Virginia. See folder listings for more details.
- Box 22
Folder 1
Annual benefit, 2007 , "Motown Get Down"
- Box 22
Folder 2
Annual benefit, 2008 , "Hooray for Hollywood"
- Box 22
Folder 3
Appeal letters and mailings, 1950's-1960's
- Box 22
Folder 4
Appeal letters and mailings, 1973-1975
- Box 22
Folders 5-7
Appeal letters and mailings, 1977-1989
- Box 22
Folder 8
Appeal letters and mailings, 1990-1999 (gaps)
- Box 22
Folder 9
Appeal letters and mailings, 2005-2007
- Box 22
Folder 10
Appeal letters and mailings, undated
- Box 21
Breakfast of Champions posters, 1996-1999 (oversize)
- Box 22
Folders 11-12
Breakfast of Champions, 1996
- Box 23
Folders 1-3
Breakfast of Champions, 1996
- Box 23
Folders 4-8
Breakfast of Champions, 1997
- Box 23
Folders 9-10
Breakfast of Champions, 1998
- Box 24
Folders 1-4
Breakfast of Champions, 1999
- Box 24
Folder 5
Building Fund, 1962-1969
- Box 24
Folder 6
CHS Phase II Report, Development Plan, Awareness Plan, ca. 1994
- Box 24
Folders 7-8
CHSVA Foundation, initial planning, 2004
- Box 24
Folder 9
Foundations: 1973 annual report notices
- Box 24
Folder 10
Foundations: 1973 replies
- Box 24
Folder 11
Foundations: Armstrong Foundation
- Box 25
Folder 1
Foundations, A-D
- Box 25
Folder 2
Foundations, D (continued)-L
- Box 25
Folder 3
Foundations, L (continued)-M
- Box 25
Folder 4
Foundations, miscellaneous
- Box 25
Folder 5
Foundations, N-O
- Box 25
Folders 6-7
Foundations: Old Dominion Foundation, 1956-1959
- Box 25
Folder 8
Foundations: Old Dominion Foundation, 1956-1959Access Restriction
This folder is closed to the public until 2059 due to privacy concerns. Permission to view before 2059 must be obtained in advance from the Children's Home Society of Virginia.
- Box 25
Folder 9
Foundations: Old Dominion Foundation, 1966-1968
- Box 25
Folder 10
Foundations, P-R
- Box 26
Folder 1
Foundations, S-W
- Box 26
Folder 2
Foundations, W (continued)
- Box 26
Folder 3
Manual for Field Representative, ca. 1949
- Box 26
Folder 4
Memorial fund donor book, 1921-1971
- Box 26
Folder 5
Memorial gifts, 1968-1971
- Box 26
Folder 6
Miscellaneous fundraising files, ca. 2003-2008
- Box 26
Folder 7
New building -- fundraising and dedication, 1967-1968
- Box 26
Folder 8
"State-Wide Finance Campaign, Children's Home Society of Virginia, May 1-15, 1933 "
- Box 26
Folder 9
Summary of 1934 campaign
- Box 26
Folders 10-11
Wendy's Golf Classic, 1997
- Box 26
Folder 12
Wendy's Golf Classics, 1998-1999
- Box 27
Folders 1-2
Wendy's Golf Classics, 2000-2002
- Box 27
Folder 3
Wendy's Golf Classics, 2003-2004, 2007
Among the photographs are a large number of professional portraits, mostly of infants, many taken for use in the Home Finder . Also of interest are two posters, both created ca. 1903. One features photographs of the early leaders of the Children's Home Society, including John Garland Pollard and the Reverend William J. Maybee. It also lists the members of the Board of Directors, and gives a general overview of the services performed by the Society. The other features six sets of before-and-after photographs showing children "as received" and later, after spending some time in the care of the Society or being adopted. The photographs are accompanied by captions such as "homeless," "in a county poorhouse," and "beaten and abused by worthless parents" for the before pictures and "anchored," "now a daughter in a good home," and "two years training in family life" for the after shots.
- Box 27
Folder 4
Christmas photo shoots, ca. 1969-1970
- Box 27
Folder 5
CHS picnic, ca. 2003
- Box 27
Folder 6
Early CHS photographs
- Box 27
Folder 7
Foster mothers
- Box 27
Folder 8
Memorial and donor plaques
- Oversize Box 64
Oversize photographs
- Box 27
Folders 9-15
Portraits
- Box 28
Folders 1-3
Portraits by Arthur Clarke, 1950's-1960's
- Box 28
Folder 4
Portraits--staff and board members
- Oversize Cabinet 2
Drawer 12
Posters
- Box 28
Folder 5
Slides
- Box 28
Folders 6-7
Snapshots
- Box 28
folder: Sealed Envelope
Identified photographsAccess Restriction
These photographs are closed to the public until 2090.
Newspaper and magazine clippings, some left loose and others kept in scrapbooks. A large portion of the clippings are brief items on topics including Children's Home Society fundraising campaigns and personnel changes on the staff or Board of Directors; other clippings concern associated organizations including Community Chest and United Way branches. There are also more lengthy feature stories on the Society and some of its clients. Of note is a collection of articles regarding a child named Andrew who was born in 1984, essentially without a brain, and placed by the CHS in an adoptive home. Other clippings focus on general issues in the field of adoption.
- Box 29
Folder 1
Clippings, 1920's-1970's
- Box 29
Folder 2
Clippings, 1980's-2000's and undated
- Box 29
Folder 3
Clippings re: baby "born without a brain, "1984-1989
- Box 29
Folders 4-5
VPA News-Clip Bureau clippings, 1970-1971
- Box 30
Scrapbook, 1946-1953
- Box 31
Scrapbook, 1954-1959
- Box 32
Scrapbook, 1960-1964
- Box 33
Scrapbook, 1965-1966
- Box 33
Scrapbook, 1970-1971