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Record #3911
Name :
: Emily Hilda BLAKE (1878 - 1899)


Father
:
Mother
:
BMD and other details
Date of Birth
: 1878

Marriage (1)
:
Marriage (2)
:

Date of Death
: 27 Dec 1899   Notes : Execution by Hanging
Abode (1) : Place of BirthEngland, Norfolk, Chedgrave
Abode (2) : Place of Death / BurialCanada, Brandon
Sailing Information
Date of Arrival
: 16 May 1888
Country
: Canada

Ship
: Lake Superior

Placement Family
:
Homes / Agencys
Institution (GB)
:

Agency
: Self-Help Emigration Society
NotesA birth registration was found for Name: Emily Hilda Blake; Year of Registration: 1879; Quarter of Registration: Jan-Feb-Mar; District: Loddon; County: Norfolk; Volume: 4b; Page: 227. Hilda had been born to Henry and Sarah Ann Blake in January 1878 at Chedgrave, 10 miles southeast of Norwich on the acres and acres of farmland and low marshes known as the 'Norfolk Broads', a large, rough triangle with the coast as the base and Norwich the apex. Chedgrave and environs belonged to Sir Reginald Proctor-Beauchamp.

In 1881, Emily Hilda Blake, 2 years of age, was residing at Loddon, Chedgrave, Norfolk, England. Other family members included: Augustus Edm. Blake, 7; Henry Blake, 35, police constable; Henry Thomas Blake, 11; Sarah Ann Blake, 32; Theodore Willm. Blake, 9; and Thomas Arthur Blake, 4. (Source: 1881 Census of England; Class: RG11; Piece: 1963; Folio: 51; Page: 3; Line: ; GSU roll: 1341473.)

Cottage tenants on the Beauchamp estate, they were religious and 'most respectable people' -- at least so Beauchamp later claimed -- but poor, near the bottom of a social structure dominated by landowner and parson. Fishing and farming were the region's principal industries, and as a young cottage tenant in the 1860s, Henry Blake worked as an agricultural labourer. At 23, married and supporting two children, Blake graduated from tenant farming to become a police constable in the Norfolk Constabulary. His work may have included bailiff duties for Beauchamp vis-?-vis the other tenant farmers. After the oldest daughter, three sons -- Henry Jr, Theodore, and Augustus -- were born respectively in Grimston, Loddon, and Hickling. Rev. Henry Alfred Barrett, Beauchamp's uncle and the Chedgrave parson ever since Henry Blake and Sir Reginald Beauchamp were children, would speak, after Henry's death, of him as 'a highly respected officer in the Police Force'.

Barrett exaggerated. Although Blake had risen to constable second-class by 1870 and first-class by 1873, he was dismissed from his job the following year for drunkenness. The dismissal took place in August of 1874 -- and only one child, Tommy, was born to the Blakes in the next three years, a time during which they must have struggled financially. Unusually, Henry Blake was reappointed to the police at the end of December 1877, 5 and eventually rose again to constable first-class. Less than a month after the reappointment Hilda was born. It may be that Sir Reginald had a hand in Blake's reappointment and in his almost immediate promotion to constable second-class, because Henry and Sarah chose a Beauchamp name as a middle name for their new daughter: 'Hilda', after Hilda Beauchamp, Sir Reginald's sister. Whether the name was a thank-you, a hope of some future elevation, or simply an imitation of one's superiors cannot be said. In any case, the young girl went by 'Hilda', not by her first name, 'Emily'.

Another boy, Donald, was born in 1881. By 1883 the family had remained in Chedgrave on the banks of the leisurely Chet River for all of the five years of Hilda's life. But the seeming stability of the Chedgrave years proved illusory, as the 37-year-old Henry Blake became deathly ill in 1883 of 'phthisis pulmonalis, diarrhoea, and exhaustion': probably tuberculosis. His wife, Sarah, wasn't well either. When it was clear that Henry was in the final throes of his illness, Rev. Barrett came to pray with the two parents that 'God would graciously fulfil his promise of being the Father of the fatherless.' Hilda's 'dying father and departing, mother' confirmed the parson's wishes with "deep toned, heartfelt Amens'.6 After Henry Blake died, poverty must have descended -- his widow receiving a gratuity of only ?25--and the family remained for a short while in Sarah's sickly hands until she followed her husband to the grave a few years later. Hilda was orphaned at the age of nine.

For a while the eldest sister looked after Tommy, Hilda, and six-year-old Donald, but the sister married, and was then either unwilling, or perhaps unable, to provide for them. As winter closed in at the end of November 1887, Tommy was sent to live among 600 other paupers in the Heckingham Workhouse, where Rev. Barrett and Sir Reginald were Guardians. A month later, just before Christmas, the eldest sister sent Hilda and Donald to join Tommy. The Workhouse was only a few minutes' walk east from their former home, but in all other ways it was far from their earlier lives. The children's diet category was assigned and a number affixed to their clothes.

Although Donald remained in the Workhouse until at least 1891, Hilda's stay was relatively short, since Sir Reginald, like Canada's future Governor-General, the Earl of Aberdeen, happened also to be on the board of the Self-Help Emigration Society, contributing ?20 yearly to the cause . On 16 April 1888 a motion was proposed by Sir Reginald, and confirmed by Rev. Barrett and the other Guardians, that the Workhouse master purchase outfits for Hilda and Tommy at a cost not to exceed ?2 each, outfits suitable for a sea journey to Canada.

The departure of the Blake children came as a result of correspondence initiated by Mrs Letitia Janet Stewart, the wife of a western Canadian farmer, Alfred Perry Stewart, who had emigrated from England in 1884. The marriage seems to have been Letitia's second, since she was 12 years older than her husband and was once known as Mrs Singer. At 43, she was no longer at the safest child-bearing age, and in the spring of 1887 she had written to ask for 'a couple of poor orphan children to be brought up' on the Stewart farm. The Honorary Secretary for the Immigration Department of the London-based YWCA, who replied to the Stewarts a year later, chanced to be Constance Beauchamp, sister of Sir Reginald Beauchamp and twin sister of Hilda Beauchamp. Constance wrote that two orphans brought to her attention by Reginald were willing to go to Canada through the Self-Help Emigration Society.

The Beauchamps may have felt that they were obligated (albeit in the least expensive way possible) to see to their bailiff's family before washing their hands of the matter. Arrangements for sending orphans overseas and out of mind must have seemed providential. Merely for the price of postage the Beauchamps at once discharged their family obligations to a deceased employee, did their Christian duty by two young children who might after all rise materially in the colonies, and (felicitously) shortened the list of paupers dependent on their parish. 'Sailors', Constance Beauchamp called her young wards. Complaining of having to run the Self-Help Emigration Society without a manager, Beauchamp wrote, 'through God's goodness we have not had many sailors in but it is rather a trial yet the Lord is doing it so it is well.' In the din of 'the Lord is doing it,' perhaps the words 'saving of expenditure' and looked well in the accounts' were npt as audible to young Hilda Blake before her sea-journey as they were to Oliver Twist when he left his workhouse, but it would have been odd indeed if such thoughts did not cross the minds of the Beauchamps and the Guardians.

In a letter dated 5 May 1888, Constance Beauchamp, speaking as it were on behalf of the British aristocracy, thanked the Stewarts in the colonies for taking the children, and hoped that they would turn out to be nice children '& be the Lord?s servants & so reward you for taking them.' She would have liked to have seen the children as they passed through London, she insisted, but the night they arrived would unfortunately be her 'night at Mrs. George Hollands[sic]', so Beauchamp promised to send her mother as proxy.

Whoever waved good-bye, Hilda and Tommy left Liverpool for Canada on 10 May 1888 aboard the SS Lake Superior. For six days by sea to Montreal under the supervision of Alfred Broadhurst, and then five more days alone to Elkhorn, Manitoba, depending upon the kindness of successive CPR conductors, Hilda and Tommy travelled toward the unknown. Broadhurst telegraphed the Stewarts as soon as he had placed the children on the train from Montreal. He later said, 'I knew her as a quiet, well behaved and affectionate child, and she seemed greatly to appreciate the little benefits she was enabled to enjoy while under my immediate care during the voyage.'21 The Stewarts would soon find reason to disagree, characterizing her as 'artful' and unco-operative.

Within a few months of the ten-year-old Hilda?s arrival, high-minded advice of this sort was urgently needed, because her relationship with the Stewarts had deteriorated. Responding to complaints from the Stewarts about her 'falsehood and artfulness', Rev. Barrett wrote a letter in his capacity as one of the Guardians of the parishes in the Loddon and Clavering Union and as the Clergyman of the Parish in which the children had been born. Barrett explained that both children had been trained in the Chedgrave school, had demonstrated good abilities, had been obedient and well behaved. He regretted hearing of the complaints, but hesitated to pass them on to his nephew, Sir Reginald: 'I know it would annoy both him and his uncle Lord Dorchester who are both interested in the Society which seeks to give opportunities of emigration to fitting persons.' The project of exporting children, with its economic and feel-good benefits was more important than two wayward children. (When, in the following year, matters grew worse and Beauchamp did discover what was happening on the Stewart farm, he proved even less inclined than Barrett to worry about the Blakes.) Nevertheless, Barrett advised the Stewarts that 'I shall. . . do whatever may be conducive to their interests and can only regret that any conduct on Hilda?s part should have given trouble.' Translated, this meant that Barrett was willing to write the children a letter filled with high-minded advice.

The letter that Barrett sent makes extensive use of the narrative of Christian charity. Referring to letters that Hilda and Tommy had previously written to their sister in Norfolk, Barrett said, 'I am rejoiced to hear that you can write of the great kindness you are receiving from Mrs. Stewart'. In Barrett?s narrative, the Stewarts fulfill the providential intent of divine grace in caring for the fatherless: 'I am amazed at times at the wonderful way in which He has fulfilled His promise and answered the deep toned heartfelt Amens of your dying Father and departing Mother.' Barrett?s distance from the actual situation and his interest in continuing to export workhouse children made it easier for him to idealize the Blakes? positions in the Stewart home and to speak of amazing answers to prayer. He reminded Hilda and Tommy that they had been baptized, that their parents had set them apart for 'God?s service', and that they were little Jesuses:

You are holy children, in the sense of the word holy, set apart for God, just as the Communion Table is called the Holy Table as a Table set apart for God?s service--remember Jesus Christ died for you. He has taken you up, as it were, in His arms to bless you with the promise of the Holy Ghost that you may be like Jesus--now Jesus was truth--if you are not truthful you are unlike Jesus--all happiness is in being like Jesus.

Soon thereafter, Hilda had run away, and it was amid several bouts of litigation she was made to return. Then she finally ran off again. She was hired at the farm of Robert and Mary Lane of Brandon, Manitoba, Canada. From there, her story was reported by the Winnipeg papers:

Wednesday, 5 July 1899, was one of those pleasant afternoons that compensates for the plunging cold of the prairie winter. At 21? Celsius, the weather in Brandon, Manitoba, seemed perfect for an outdoor tea party. Not 30 feet from the back entrance to their home, the four children of Robert and Mary Lane-Thomas, Edith, Mary Jr, and possibly Evelyn -- along with several friends -- Kathleen and Helen Johnson, Georgina Hanley, and a girl whose surname was Henderson -- sat on the lawn of a vacant lot, enjoying the party that Mary Lane, the mother, had promised them if they were good. Mary, 32 years old and pregnant, worked inside, hanging curtains on the parlour windows. Just after four o'clock, she ran screaming out the front door and onto the public sidewalk, took a few steps south on Tenth Street, and collapsed. Blood stained her dress. She had been shot in the back at close range -- her skin and blouse singed by flames from the pistol --and the bullet had passed through the top of her lung, lodging finally just above her heart. In some apocryphal accounts a toddler, presumably Evelyn, was playing on the floor at the time of the shooting, and the dying Mary had snatched the child up in order to protect it before running out to the street.1 Mrs Johnson, the next-door neighbour, was first to answer the screams. Another neighbour, Mr Sampson, ran to call for a doctor and for Mary's husband, Robert, while the Lane servant girl appeared on the scene to bathe Mary's face with water. When Sampson returned, Mary was still alive, but before the doctor or Lane could arrive, blood accumulated in her lungs and she suffocated. She died without saying who had shot her.

Within minutes of the shooting Mary's body was carried into the Lane house and laid on the parlour floor, while a teacher, Miss Bawden, quickly spirited the children away.2 Sampson alerted the police, and reports of the shooting sped through the city. The news of a lethal assault on a respectable middle-class woman in the sanctuary of her home in the middle of a July afternoon seemed unbelievable. 'Terrible news of a cruel murder committed in the heart of the city spread like wild-fire. Too horrible to be true seemed the tale which every tongue was telling . . . one of Brandon's women had been ruthlessly taken by an assassin's bullet'. 3 The Western Sun called the murder 'one of the most atrocious crimes in the annals of Manitoba's history and one of the most villainous that ever occurred in the Dominion of Canada'. 4

There was one eyewitness. Emily Hilda Blake, the 21-year-old servant girl who had been employed by the Lanes since the summer of 1898, had been carrying out bread and butter to the children and ironing curtains for Mary. Despite the horrific events, Blake gave a precise and lucid account of the murder, complete with motive. She had first sensed the existence of an unknown man when she saw his shadow at the back door, but she didn't attend to him because she assumed that he was someone hired by Robert Lane to work on the lawn. When she eventually turned, she saw a tramp, stooping to place his bundle on the ground next to the door. She wasn't startled; the railway spur being just behind the house, such figures often appeared at the kitchen door. He wore a soiled white shirt and a new suit of blue overalls, his bundle a brown parcel or valise or perhaps a sack. Standing 5' 10" tall, he looked about 30 to 35 years old, with a well-tanned face, a light moustache, and a beard of probably two or three days' growth. 'His eyes were set far back in the head', she said. 'They did not appear very sharp, but had a vacant stare'. She was sure that she would know him if she saw him again; later she would be less sure.5

His tone inoffensive, the tramp asked, 'Could you give a fellow something to eat?' Blake did not respond, referring him to Mary, who stood on the parlour sofa hanging the drapes that Blake, a few steps away in the summer kitchen, had been ironing. Without turning, Lane said, 'Make him work for it before you give him anything'. 6 This seemed to anger the tramp. He responded under his breath in a foreign language, and, as Blake walked into the kitchen proper from the summer kitchen, he followed, his gait unusual. In the kitchen he stood behind her, facing towards Mary in the front parlour. Mary at that point sharply instructed Blake not to bother with him. Denied, the tramp advanced a few steps to stand in the passage between the kitchen and the parlour, brandished a revolver from under his coat, and shot Mary in the back. He shot twice. Thrusting her arm straight out at the inquest, Blake demonstrated how the man had levelled his gun to kill her mistress.

'Oh Hilda! . . . I'm on fire!' Mary cried, and ran through the front door onto Tenth Street, the tramp at the same time fleeing in the opposite direction out the back door.7 He made no attempt on Blake's life, but for her part Blake also screamed. She did not know where the murder weapon was; she thought perhaps that the tramp had taken it with him. She assumed, as well, that he must have picked up his bundle, for it, too, had vanished.

Blake initially followed the dying Mary through the parlour, but she only got as far as the front hallway. There she collapsed, for how long she didn't know, but she never lost consciousness. On regaining her self-possession, she stumbled awkwardly out onto Tenth Street. 'Everything seemed black before my eyes and I felt dizzy when I came to the sidewalk.' She found Mary on the sidewalk in a pool of blood, Mrs Johnson crouching over her, others gathering. Blake went back inside for water and then returned to bathe Mary's face.

Within a few hours, the investigating officer, Police Chief James Kircaldy, doubted Blake's story. During the next days of manhunts and the near-lynching of a tramp, Kircaldy accumulated a number of circumstantial details that didn't fit her account, and he ultimately used those details to get a confession from her. After her arrest she admitted that she had killed Lane with a gun purchased in Winnipeg weeks before, and added that, notwithstanding ample evidence of premeditation, she had committed the murder because of a sudden and overwhelming fit of jealousy. She begged Kircaldy to shoot her on the spot. At the preliminary hearing she pled guilty and requested 'the most severe punishment possible', well knowing that she was requesting the gallows. She refused legal counsel, and despite a movement to have her sentence commuted, she was hanged four days before the end of the nineteenth century, the only woman to be executed in Manitoba, one of only two women executed in Canada between 1873 and 1922. (She was imprisoned in Brandon Province Jail in Manitoba. While she was awaiting her execution she seduced one of her female guards, Mrs. Strippe into helping her escape from the jail.) (Citations: 1. Winnipeg Daily Tribune, 6 July 1899. Winnipeg Morning Telegram, 6 July 1899. Neither Brandon papers nor the Manitoba Free Press (which had a Brandon correspondent) mention this rather significant detail; 2. Manitoba Morning Free Press, 6 July 1899; 3. Brandon Times, 6 July 1899; 4. Western Sun, 6 July 1899; 5. Brandon Times,6 July 1899, 13 July 1899; 6. Brandon Times,6 July 1899; 7. Brandon Times, 6 July 1899.)

Her execution on December 27, 1899, was reported:

It was a cold and clear morning. Hilda had dressed herself in a "neat and becoming" brown velvet dress, the dress she had worn to trial. She ate heartily at breakfast.

At 8:30 the four-person procession started. The jailer leading, Hilda next - her elbows were pinned tightly to her sides by two leather straps - then the priest and finally the hangman, John Radclive. The 25 person audience became silent by the sight of this procession appearing in the prison yard.

Hilda arrived to at the foot of the scaffold ashy pale but completely composed. According to one report she "passed through the hall with a firm steady tread, her head erect and her bearing that of a young lady going to an evening party, rather than the gallows". Another report added that her tread was "the tread of a girl in a ballroom".

After asking Radclive to hold her skirt so that it would not catch on the first step, she climbed partway up to the platform. Then she stopped, turned, and looked searchingly into the faces of those below. Radclive urged her forward. "I'm going", she replied, climbing the rest of the 16 steps without the weak knees that Radclive frequently observed during last ascents.

On the platform Hilda prudently stepped around the trapdoor. It seemed like she tried to awoid the inevitable, and it was growing clear that she would make no startling disclosures.

Radclive motioned: "Step over here", and now Hilda stepped onto the trapdoor without hesitation. She asked the priest to kiss her goodbye. Then while Radclive buckled the straps around her body and her feet, Blake cast one look upward, smiling briefly at the noose. He pulled the black cap tightly over her head. She didn't cry out.

Hilda twiched when he noose was tightened around her neck. Many handkerchiefs could be seen as the priest raised his voice in the Lord's Prayer. When he reached "forgive us our sins" a grating noise announced the opening of the trapdoor and her sad life was over. 
ContributorsCreated : 2008-07-23 13:50:11 / From original database


Last Updated : 2009-02-04 20:39:03 /

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IDNameDOBPlace of birthArrivals & ShipsDest.AgencyFamily links
13156 BLACK, Agnes1891SCT,     Jun 1907 : Sicilian CAN Quarriers  
13155 BLACK, Aitken1895SCT, LKS, Glasgow Jun 1907 : Sicilian CAN Quarriers  
6785 BLACK, Alexander1868SCT,     Jul 1875 : Waldensian CAN MacPherson Homes  
11510 BLACK, Alexander Angus1899ENG, LAN, Manchester Jun 1912 : Carthaginian CAN Middlemore  
22224 BLACK, Annie1900SCT, LKS, Glasgow May 1888 : Corean CAN Quarriers  
4449 BLACK, Christopher (Christie)1897IRL,    , Dublin Aug 1909 : Tunisian CAN Smyly Homes of Dublin  
4448 BLACK, David1894IRL,    , Dublin May 1907 : Tunisian CAN Smyly Homes of Dublin  
16090 BLACK, Edward1877ENG,     Jun 1884 : Polynesian CAN Catholic Protection Society  
17215 BLACK, Florence1876ENG,     Jul 1899 : Laurentian CAN Louisa Birt  
25047 BLACK, Florence1898 Mar 1910 : Tunisian CAN Barnardos  
6961 BLACK, Francis1865ENG,     Aug 1871 : Prussian CAN Maria Rye  
19269 BLACK, George1897ENG,     Sep 1912 : Sicilian CAN Barnardos  
23256 BLACK, Hugh1871ENG,     Jun 1876 : Austrian CAN MacPherson Homes  
13157 BLACK, Isabella1898SCT, LKS, Glasgow Jun 1907 : Sicilian CAN Quarriers tlupinski  
13398 BLACK, Isabella1882SCT,     Jun 1893 : Carthaginian CAN Quarriers  
19313 BLACK, James1900ENG,     Sep 1912 : Sicilian CAN Barnardos  
25347 BLACK, Jeanie1886SCT,     Jun 1897 : Sarmatian CAN Quarriers  
25388 BLACK, Lizzie1889SCT,     Jun 1897 : Sarmatian CAN Quarriers  
25406 BLACK, Lizzie1891SCT,     Jun 1897 : Sarmatian CAN Quarriers  
18665 BLACK, Llewellyn J1900ENG,     Sep 1911 : Lake Manitoba CAN Unknown Catholic Group  
5852 BLACK, Margaret1893ENG,     Oct 1904 : Bavarian CAN Barnardos  
13397 BLACK, Martha1883SCT,     Jun 1893 : Carthaginian CAN Quarriers  
16091 BLACK, Mary1875ENG,     Jun 1884 : Polynesian CAN Catholic Protection Society  
6833 BLACK, Peter1868SCT,     Jul 1875 : Waldensian CAN MacPherson Homes  
25471 BLACK, Philip1898ENG,     May 1909 : Corsican CAN Barnardos annabananaphone  
6964 BLACK, Rachel1863ENG,     Aug 1871 : Prussian CAN Maria Rye  
16450 BLACK, William1884SCT,     Jun 1886 : Caspian CAN Emma Stirling  
23053 BLACKALL, Herbert1892ENG,     Apr 1910 : Empress of Ireland  Fegan Homes for Boys KarenM  
18303 BLACKBURN, Alfred Ernest1876ENG, LAN, Liverpool Mar 1888 : Sardinian CAN Louisa Birt  
5949 BLACKBURN, Ernest1900ENG, YKS, Leeds May 1908 : Dominion CAN Barnardos  
13472 BLACKBURN, Ernest1874ENG,     Jul 1887 : Sardinian CAN Board of Guardians (Various)  
22132 BLACKBURN, Ernest1893ENG,     Jul 1903 : Dominion CAN Barnardos  
20647 BLACKBURN, Ethel1898ENG,     Oct 1913 : Corinthian CAN Barnardos  
18304 BLACKBURN, Eveline1878ENG, LAN, Liverpool Mar 1888 : Sardinian CAN Louisa Birt  
18305 BLACKBURN, Florence Beatrice1881ENG, LAN, Liverpool Mar 1888 : Sardinian CAN Louisa Birt  
14092 BLACKBURN, George1889ENG, KEN, Lewisham May 1900 : Tunisian CAN Childrens Aid Society  
26479 BLACKBURN, Harrison1891ENG,     Mar 1906 : Dominion CAN Barnardos  
11386 BLACKBURN, Henry 1899ENG, YKS, Leeds May 1908 : Dominion CAN Barnardos  
4868 BLACKBURN, Lavinia1909ENG,    , Leamington on Tyne Apr 1925 : Montclare CAN Barnardos  
8034 BLACKBURN, Maria1851ENG,     Jun 1869 : Austrian CAN Maria Rye  
11387 BLACKBURN, Reginald1904ENG, YKS, Leeds Mar 1913 : Corinthian CAN Barnardos  
12450 BLACKBURN, Walter 1892ENG,     Jul 1903 : Dominion CAN Barnardos  
14093 BLACKBURN, Walter1885ENG,    , Lewisham Apr 1895 : Vancouver CAN Marchmont Homes (now Barnardos)  
18882 BLACKEBY, Amelia1901ENG,     May 1905 : Bavarian CAN MacPherson Homes  
18931 BLACKEBY, Emily1899ENG,     May 1905 : Bavarian CAN MacPherson Homes  
3570 BLACKETT, John1887ENG,     Jul 1900 : Tunisian CAN Barnardos  
3571 BLACKETT, John1912ENG, NBL, Newcastle Upon Tyne May 1929 : Montroyal CAN British Immigration and Colonisation Association  
19634 BLACKEY, Dorothy1886ENG,     Jun 1897 : Labrador CAN Barnardos  
2878 BLACKFORD, Dorothy Noel1904ENG, SRY, Kingston onThames Oct 1920 : Scandinavian CAN Barnardos  
2879 BLACKFORD, Evelyn Rosa1900ENG, SRY, Kingston onThames Nov 1916 : Northland CAN Sailing Alone  
27190 BLACKFORD, Gwendoline1921ENG, WAR, Birmingham May 1933 : Otranto AUS Fairbridge Homes  
7851 BLACKFORD, Harry1918ENG, WAR, Birmingham Oct 1930 : Newfoundland CAN Middlemore  
8699 BLACKFORD, William1916ENG, LND Mar 1930 : Nova Scotia CAN Salvation Army  
22906 BLACKLEDGE, Doris May1917ENG,     Jul 1923 : Montrose CAN Salvation Army  
22846 BLACKLEY, Charles1877ENG,     Aug 1887 : Sarmatian CAN MacPherson Homes  
5296 BLACKMAN, Arthur1912ENG,    , Plymouth Aug 1930 : Duchess of York CAN British Immigration and Colonisation Association  
14200 BLACKMAN, Charles1887ENG,     Jun 1901 : Corinthian CAN Unknown Catholic Group  
8643 BLACKMAN, George1911ENG, WIL, Cricklade Jul 1925 : Athenia CAN Marchmont Homes (now Barnardos)  
22597 BLACKMAN, John1899ENG,     Mar 1909 : Dominion CAN Barnardos  
23679 BLACKMAN, Mary1902ENG,     Sep 1914 : Corinthian CAN Barnardos  
10070 BLACKMAN, Phillip1882ENG, HAM, Gosport Apr 1892 : Sarnia CAN Marchmont Homes (now Barnardos)  
23569 BLACKMORE, Patrick1906ENG,     May 1924 : Demosthenes AUS Barnardos  
13098 BLACKNEY, Dorothy1886ENG,     Jun 1897 : Labrador CAN Barnardos  
19323 BLACKSTONE, John1903ENG,     Sep 1912 : Sicilian CAN Barnardos  
16159 BLACKWELL, Arthur1885ENG,     Apr 1894 : Sarnia CAN Marchmont Homes (now Barnardos)  
27309 BLACKWELL, Keith Michael1932ENG,     Jun 1939 : Strathaird AUS Fairbridge Homes  
27310 BLACKWELL, Maurice1927ENG,     Jun 1939 : Strathaird AUS Fairbridge Homes  
10688 BLADON, Thomas1897ENG,     Apr 1912 : Empress of Ireland CAN Fegan Homes for Boys  
10380 BLAIKIE, Eliza1868SCT,     Jun 1881 : Buenos Ayrean CAN Quarriers  
10381 BLAIKIE, William1870SCT, LKS, Glasgow 1881 : Manitoban CAN Marchmont Homes  
9664 BLAIR, Elsie1896ENG,     Jun 1911 : Carthaginian CAN Middlemore  
3267 BLAIR, Hugh1913SCT, LKS, Glasgow Apr 1930 : Letitia CAN Quarriers  
11520 BLAIR, John M 1892IRL, ANT, Belfast Jul 1904 : Southwark CAN Barnardos  
21963 BLAIR, Robert ENG,     Apr 1925 : Athenia CAN Quarriers  
16540 BLAKE, Albert1902ENG,     Apr 1912 : Corinthian CAN Barnardos  
26284 BLAKE, Annie1924 Aug 1934 : Oronsay AUS Fairbridge Homes  
27512 BLAKE, Annie1858 Aug 1872 : Sarmatian CAN Macpherson Homes  
11137 BLAKE, Driscoll1893ENG,     May 1907 : Empress of Britain CAN Fegan Homes for Boys  
6772 BLAKE, Edward1892ENG,     Jul 1907 : Kensington CAN Barnardos  
25049 BLAKE, Elizabeth1897 Mar 1910 : Tunisian CAN Barnardos  
3911 BLAKE, Emily Hilda1878ENG, NFK, Chedgrave May 1888 : Lake Superior CAN Self-Help Emigration Society  
25268 BLAKE, James Sidney1919ENG, LND, Wandsworth Oct 1930 : Barrabool AUS Fairbridge Homes  
11965 BLAKE, Joseph James1881ENG,    , Brentford Mar 1896 : Vancouver CAN National Childrens Home  
25050 BLAKE, Lily D.1899 Mar 1910 : Tunisian CAN Barnardos  
9712 BLAKE, Louisa1877ENG,     Aug 1889 : Caspian CAN Barnardos  
20200 BLAKE, M ENG,     May 1911 : Corsican CAN Louisa Birt  
25048 BLAKE, Mabel1899 Mar 1910 : Tunisian CAN Barnardos  
26321 BLAKE, Robert1926 Aug 1932 : Oronsay AUS Fairbridge Homes  
17357 BLAKE, Rose1894ENG,     Jul 1905 : Siberian CAN Middlemore  
19205 BLAKE, Sydney1898ENG,     Sep 1912 : Victorian CAN MacPherson Homes  
25269 BLAKE, William Victor1921ENG, LND, Wandsworth Oct 1930 : Barrabool AUS Fairbridge Homes  
6315 BLAKELEY, John1899ENG,     May 1909 : Corsican CAN Barnardos  
9291 BLAKELEY, Mary1898ENG,     May 1909 : Corsican CAN Barnardos  
25666 BLAKEMORE, John1895ENG,     May 1909 : Corsican CAN Catholic Emigration Society  
17989 BLAKEY, Herbert 1885ENG,     Apr 1900 : Dominion CAN Fegan Homes for Boys  
7975 BLAKLEY, Robert1913IRL, ANT, Belfast Apr 1930 : Letitia CAN British Immigration and Colonisation Association  
14577 BLANCE, Andrew1875SCT, MLN, Edinburgh Jun 1884 : Buenos Ayrean CAN Quarriers  
13346 BLANCE, James William1880SCT, MLN, Edinburgh Jun 1884 : Buenos Ayrean CAN Quarriers  
14576 BLANCE, John Hay1873SCT, MLN, Edinburgh Jun 1884 : Buenos Ayrean CAN Quarriers  
14575 BLANCE, Margaret1871SCT, MLN, Edinburgh Jun 1884 : Buenos Ayrean CAN Quarriers  
14578 BLANCE, Mary1878SCT, MLN, Edinburgh Jun 1884 : Buenos Ayrean CAN Quarriers  
7432 BLAND, Elsie1899ENG,     Oct 1909 : Sicilian CAN Barnardos  
9934 BLAND, Percy1892ENG,     May 1907 : Tunisian CAN Catholic Emigration Association  
9939 BLAND, William1898ENG,     Oct 1909 : Corsican CAN Catholic Emigration Association  
7165 BLANDFORD, Elizabeth1856ENG, HAM, Southampton Aug 1871 : Prussian CAN MacPherson Homes  
7042 BLANDFORD, Frances Amelia1859ENG, HAM, Southampton Aug 1871 : Prussian CAN MacPherson Homes  
11883 BLANDFORD, Frederick J1880ENG,     Apr 1894 : Sarnia CAN Barnardos  
16647 BLANDFORD, Kate Jane1861ENG, HAM, Southampton Aug 1872 : Sarmatian CAN MacPherson Homes  
16646 BLANDFORD, Mria 1865ENG, HAM, Southampton Aug 1872 : Sarmatian CAN MacPherson Homes  
18591 BLANDFORD, William1892ENG,     Apr 1910 : Empress of Ireland CAN Fegan Homes for Boys  
9940 BLANKS, Violet 1876ENG,    , Romford Aug 1889 : Circassian CAN Maria Rye  
3431 BLATCH, Albert1898ENG, ESS, Leytonstone May 1908 : Dominion CAN Barnardos SarahLillian  
3432 BLATCH, William1899ENG,     May 1908 : Dominion CAN Barnardos  
7443 BLAY, Daisy1894ENG,    , St Pancras May 1903 : Kensington CAN Barnardos  
22504 BLAY, Eva1865ENG,     Jun 1874 : Sarmatian CAN Maria Rye  
7856 BLAYDES, Ralph1914ENG, LAN, Liverpool Mar 1930 : Nova Scotia CAN Salvation Army  
25389 BLEMINGS, Maggie1889SCT,     Jun 1897 : Sarmatian CAN Quarriers  
26756 BLENKORN, Harold1902 Oct 1910 : Sicilian CAN Barnardos  
24076 BLEWER, Julia A1901ENG,     Jun 1915 : Carthaginian CAN Middlemore  
24077 BLEWER, Rosa1909ENG,     Jun 1915 : Carthaginian CAN Middlemore  
24078 BLEWER, William1906ENG,     Jun 1915 : Carthaginian CAN Middlemore  
16711 BLEWITT, Annie1898WAL, GLA, Ynyshir Oct 1911 : Corinthian CAN Barnardos  
21902 BLINCOE, William Henry1878ENG,     Feb 1895 : Laurentian CAN Louisa Birt  
9804 BLISS, Frederick1902ENG,     Sep 1912 : Sicilian CAN Barnardos  
6412 BLISS, Henry1897ENG,     May 1909 : Corsican CAN Barnardos  
18562 BLISS, Robert1894ENG,     Apr 1910 : Empress of Ireland CAN Fegan Homes for Boys  
17360 BLIZZARD, Leonard Ernest1899ENG,    , London Mar 1910 : Tunisian CAN Barnardos  
8872 BLOCKSEDGE, Benjamin1887ENG,     Jun 1896 : Corean CAN Middlemore  
8873 BLOMBERG, Louisa1887ENG,     Sep 1898 : Dominion CAN Barnardos  
24200 BLOMFIELD, George1855ENG,     May 1870 : Ganges CAN Boy's Refuge, Whitechapel, London  
8875 BLONG, Charles 1889ENG,     Apr 1899 : Dominion CAN Fegan Homes for Boys  
8874 BLONG, George 1883ENG,     1895 : - Unknown - CAN Fegan Homes for Boys  
26841 BLOOM, Reginald Daniel1921ENG, LND, Paddington Feb 1934 : Jervis Bay AUS Fairbridge Homes  
6423 BLOOME, Alfred1897ENG, YKS, Scarborough Aug 1910 : Tunisian CAN Barnardos  
6424 BLOOME, Ernest1895ENG,     Aug 1910 : Tunisian CAN Barnardos  
14822 BLOOMFIELD, Bertram1907ENG,     Jun 1923 : Megantic CAN Salvation Army  
14821 BLOOMFIELD, Harold1915ENG,     Jul 1923 : Montrose CAN Salvation Army  
26427 BLOOMFIELD, Herbert1904ENG, OXF, Woodstock Jul 1913 : Belgic AUS Fairbridge Homes  
7690 BLOOR, Alice B1874ENG,     Sep 1888 : Parisian CAN Barnardos  
13063 BLOTT, Arthur1913ENG,     Aug 1928 : Montclare CAN British Immigration and Colonisation Association  
12985 BLOTT, Frederick C1885ENG,     Apr 1896 : Scotsman CAN Marchmont Homes (now Barnardos) Maragh  
12984 BLOTT, William V1884ENG,     Apr 1896 : Scotsman CAN Marchmont Homes (now Barnardos) Maragh  
10263 BLOW, Frederick Robert1897ENG,    , Marylebone Jul 1905 : Southwark CAN Barnardos  
9258 BLOW, William1893ENG,     Jul 1905 : Southwark CAN Barnardos  
12832 BLOWERS, Clifford1887ENG, NFK, Loddon Sep 1898 : Dominion CAN Barnardos  
12833 BLOWERS, Gladys1890ENG, NFK, Loddon Jul 1900 : Tunisian CAN Barnardos  
22651 BLOWFIELD, Alfred1909ENG,     May 1925 : Doric CAN Waifs & Strays  
8869 BLUMSEN, Earnest1882ENG,     Apr 1892 : Sarnia CAN Marchmont Homes (now Barnardos)  
23498 BLUMSEN, Robert1879ENG,     Jun 1889 : Toronto CAN Marchmont Homes (now Barnardos)  
17362 BLUMSTONE, Harry1895ENG,     Jun 1909 : Carthaginian CAN Middlemore  
21061 BLUND, J1889ENG,     Apr 1898 : Labrador CAN Barnardos  
13808 BLUNDELL, Florrie1879ENG,     May 1887 : Circassian CAN Liverpool Catholic Childrens Protective Society (now Nugent Care)  
10032 BLUNDELL, Harry1894ENG, WAR, Birmingham May 1908 : Carthaginian CAN Middlemore  
10031 BLUNDELL, Owen1896ENG, WAR, Birmingham May 1908 : Carthaginian CAN Middlemore  
13809 BLUNDELL, William1876ENG,     May 1887 : Circassian CAN Liverpool Catholic Childrens Protective Society (now Nugent Care)  
12512 BLUNDEN, Gertrude Ruby1903ENG,     Sep 1912 : Sicilian CAN Barnardos  
12511 BLUNDEN, Gladys Ethel1900ENG,     Sep 1912 : Sicilian CAN Barnardos  
23163 BLUNDEN, Sidney1898ENG,     Apr 1909 : Empress of Britain CAN Fegan Homes for Boys  
6558 BLUNSTONE, Catherine1898ENG,     Jun 1909 : Canada CAN Middlemore  
16688 BLUNT, Albert1882ENG, SSX, Eastborne Mar 1892 : Carthaginian CAN Barnardos  
23198 BLUNT, Andrew1912ENG,     Sep 1922 : Minnedosa CAN Barnardos  
6489 BLYTH, James1892ENG,     Apr 1908 : Grampian CAN Quarriers  
10464 BLYTH, Nancy1909SCT,    , Condorrat May 1924 : Cassandra CAN Sailing Alone  
7117 BLYTHE, Charlotte Adelaide1899ENG,    , West Hartlepool Jun 1912 : Tunisian CAN Barnardos  
10036 BLYTHE, Emie1878ENG,     Oct 1886 : Parisian CAN Barnardos  
6870 BLYTHE, Grace1895ENG,     Sep 1907 : Dominion CAN Barnardos  
4178 BOAD, Charles1891SCT, MOR, Forres Apr 1907 : Sicilian CAN Quarriers  
4179 BOAD, Robert1893SCT, MOR, Forres Apr 1907 : Sicilian CAN Quarriers  
7131 BOAKES, John1894ENG, LDN, London Aug 1907 : Tunisian CAN MacPherson Homes  
14132 BOATMAN, George W1888ENG,    , Edmonton Jul 1899 : Lake Huron CAN Barnardos  
27400 BODDEY, Peter Ernest1932ENG, LND, Wandsworth Jan 1949 : Ormonde AUS Big Brother Movement  
8347 BODDY, Ethel1901ENG,    , Norwich Mar 1914 : Sicilian CAN Barnardos  
8642 BODELL, Alfred Ernest1911ENG, LAN, Liverpool Jul 1925 : Athenia CAN Marchmont Homes (now Barnardos)  
17363 BODEN, William 1900ENG,     May 1910 : Tunisian CAN MacPherson Homes  
5665 BODENHAM, Harry1899ENG,     Jun 1911 : Carthaginian CAN Middlemore  
9874 BODGER, William1888ENG,     Apr 1902 : Dominion CAN Barnardos  
12338 BODMAN, Ernest J1885ENG,    , Bath Jul 1894 : Sardinian CAN Barnardos  
12339 BODMAN, Stanley James1890ENG, WIL, Calne Aug 1897 : Laurentian CAN MacPherson Homes  
17408 BODY, Charles Alfred1897ENG, LND Jul 1909 : Sicilian CAN Barnardos  
17405 BODY, Frances Ellen1901ENG,     Jul 1909 : Sicilian CAN Barnardos  
17409 BODY, William Thomas 1904ENG,     Mar 1911 : Sicilian CAN Barnardos  
14515 BOGAN, Martin1913ENG,     Oct 1927 : Montclare CAN Crusade of Rescue  
11396 BOGGIS, Johnnie Joshua1902ENG, LDN, London Mar 1913 : Corinthian CAN Barnardos  
12451 BOHINE, Herbert1893ENG,     Jul 1903 : Dominion CAN Barnardos  
10228 BOILING, John1885ENG,     Jul 1898 : Labrador CAN Barnardos  
22350 BOLAN, Patrick1871ENG,     Sep 1883 : Polynesian CAN Liverpool Catholic Childrens Protective Society (now Nugent Care)  
22790 BOLAND, Bertram1913ENG,     Aug 1930 : Antonia CAN Salvation Army  
6605 BOLAND, Francis 1902ENG,     Aug 1910 : Tunisian CAN Barnardos  
14547 BOLGER, Gerard1915ENG,     Jun 1930 : Duchess of York CAN Crusade of Rescue  
22106 BOLMER, Max1891ENG,     Oct 1903 : Dominion CAN Barnardos  
8070 BOLT, Cedric1915ENG,    , Ealing Mar 1932 : Montclare CAN YMCA  
19926 BOLT, Charles1888ENG,     Apr 1897 : Labrador CAN Barnardos  
22598 BOLT, Elizabeth1898ENG,     Jul 1911 : Sicilian CAN Barnardos  
9721 BOLT, Rosina1884ENG,     Sep 1895 : Sardinian CAN Barnardos  
22847 BOLTON, Charles P1900ENG,     Jun 1910 : Sicilian CAN Barnardos  
7742 BOLTON, Eleanor1866ENG,     Jul 1870 : Prussian CAN Maria Rye  
22719 BOLTON, George1910ENG,    , Hexham Jul 1927 : - Unknown - CAN Unknown  
6496 BOLTON, Henry R.1893ENG,     May 1908 : Kensington CAN Salvation Army  
2885 BOLTON, James1902ENG, WAR, Aston, Birmingham Jun 1913 : Mongolian CAN Middlemore  
4444 BOLTON, John Henry Edward1875ENG, MDX, Isleworth Apr 1889 : Peruvian CAN Barnardos port hope  
13228 BOLTON, Mary1886ENG,     Oct 1897 : Labrador CAN Barnardos  
11261 BOLTON, Peter1891ENG,     Oct 1900 : Tunisian CAN Barnardos  
15301 BOLWELL, Eva1868ENG, HAM, Southampton Aug 1884 : Parisian CAN Board of Guardians (Various)  
5635 BOLWELL, Henry Joseph French1899ENG,    , Devizes Oct 1908 : Dominion CAN Barnardos  
25673 BONAS, William1896ENG,     May 1909 : Corsican CAN Catholic Emigration Society  
24484 BOND, Anna J.1894 Jun 1906 : Dominion CAN Barnardos  
25709 BOND, Caroline1899ENG,     May 1909 : Corsican CAN Louisa Birt  
20017 BOND, Charles J1875ENG,     Jun 1886 : Lake Superior CAN Barnardos  
25714 BOND, Florence1898ENG,     May 1909 : Corsican CAN Louisa Birt  
22469 BOND, James1883ENG,     Jun 1892 : Circassian CAN Middlemore  
22228 BOND, John1879ENG,     Apr 1891 : Parisian CAN Unknown  
21617 BOND, Reuban J.1879ENG,     Aug 1890 : Sardinian CAN Unknown Catholic Group  
21740 BOND, Richard H.1881ENG,     Sep 1891 : Sardinian CAN Waifs & Strays  
21766 BOND, William E.1876ENG,     Aug 1892 : Sardinian CAN Waifs & Strays  
11008 BONDY, George1911ENG,    , Fulham Jul 1921 : Minnedosa CAN MacPherson Homes  
11009 BONDY, Percy1907ENG,    , Fulham Jul 1921 : Minnedosa CAN MacPherson Homes  
10951 BONE, Amelia1861ENG,     Aug 1872 : Peruvian CAN Maria Rye  
5166 BONE, Edward1912ENG,    , Newcastle upon Tyne Oct 1928 : Montcalm CAN Catholic Emigration Association  
9129 BONE, Edward 1898ENG,     Jun 1912 : Tunisian CAN Barnardos  
22125 BONE, Peter Knowles1913ENG, SSX, Eastbourne May 1931 : Westernland CAN National Association of Boys\' Clubs   
7430 BONEHILL, Minnie1871ENG, WAR, Birmingham Jun 1881 : Parisian CAN Middlemore  
9710 BONELL, Emily 1882ENG,     Sep 1895 : Sardinian CAN Barnardos  
9259 BONHAM, Ernest F1891ENG,     Jul 1902 : New England CAN Barnardos  
19823 BONIFACE, Charles1902ENG,     Apr 1913 : Teutonic CAN Hurst House Training Home  
6488 BONIFACE, David1896ENG,    , Eastbourne Mar 1908 : Dominion CAN Barnardos  
20376 BONIFACE, Edward1890ENG,     Oct 1903 : Dominion CAN Barnardos  
8884 BONNER, Fred1886ENG,     Jul 1897 : Assyrian CAN Middlemore  
6437 BONNER, John1898ENG,     Jun 1910 : Mongolian CAN Middlemore  
15567 BONNER, Sidney Thomas1907ENG,     May 1922 : Melita CAN Barnardos  
12543 BONNEY, Herbert1884ENG,     May 1895 : Labrador CAN Fegan Homes for Boys  
10425 BONNICK, Alice Annie1910ENG,    , Lambeth Sep 1924 : Melita CAN Barnardos  
7521 BONSER, Elizabeth1857ENG,     Nov 1869 : Hibernian CAN Maria Rye  
7535 BONSER, Harriett1858ENG,     Nov 1869 : Hibernian CAN Maria Rye  
19631 BONSHAM, Charles1880ENG,     Jun 1897 : Labrador CAN Barnardos  
8418 BONSQUEST, Edith1910ENG,     Sep 1920 : Metagama CAN MacPherson Homes  
8977 BONSTEAD, Agnes1898ENG,    , Newcastle upon Tyne Oct 1909 : Sicilian CAN Barnardos  
3438 BONWICK, Alexander1898ENG, ESS, Barking Mar 1907 : Dominion CAN Barnardos  
20770 BONWICK, John1895 Apr 1905 : Kensington CAN Barnardos  
3436 BONWICK, John William1894ENG, ESS, Barking Apr 1905 : Kensington CAN Barnardos  
3437 BONWICK, William James1896ENG, ESS, Barking Apr 1905 : Kensington CAN Barnardos  
14447 BOOAD, Frederick1884ENG,     Apr 1895 : Vancouver CAN Marchmont Homes (now Barnardos)  
3234 BOOKER, Mabel D.1894ENG, HAM, Portsmouth May 1907 : Dominion CAN Barnardos snazzyshazzy  
13495 BOOLE, Charles Edward1879ENG, GLS, Bristol Jun 1891 : Parisian CAN Middlemore  
13494 BOOLE, Frank1882ENG, GLS, Bristol Jun 1891 : Parisian CAN Middlemore  
5238 BOON, Charles 1916ENG,    , Ringsboro Mar 1930 : Scythia CAN Salvation Army  
9942 BOON, Cyril1891ENG, SFK, Plomesgate May 1908 : Virginian CAN Waifs & Strays  
12452 BOON, John 1894ENG,     Jul 1903 : Dominion CAN Barnardos  
19964 BOORE, Walter1888ENG,     Apr 1897 : Labrador CAN Fegan Homes for Boys  
22238 BOORE, William1888ENG,     Apr 1897 : Labrador CAN Fegan Homes for Boys  
16394 BOOTH, Ada1907ENG,     Sep 1921 : Minnedosa CAN Barnardos  
14472 BOOTH, Alfred1885ENG,     Apr 1895 : Numidian CAN Marchmont Homes (now Barnardos)  
16596 BOOTH, Annie May1892WAL, MON, Abergavenny Oct 1903 : Dominion CAN Barnardos  
22848 BOOTH, Charles1853ENG,     Jul 1870 : Nestorian CAN MacPherson Homes  
17131 BOOTH, Constance1896ENG,     Aug 1907 : Tunisian CAN MacPherson Homes  
22907 BOOTH, Daniel1901ENG,     Aug 1912 : Tunisian CAN Catholic Emigration Association  
8926 BOOTH, Dennis1916ENG,    , Lincoln Apr 1931 : Duchess of Richmond CAN Barnardos  
6942 BOOTH, Doris1898ENG,     May 1907 : Dominion CAN Barnardos  
17132 BOOTH, Dorothy1894ENG,     Aug 1907 : Tunisian CAN MacPherson Homes  
25921 BOOTH, Frederick1888ENG,     Mar 1903 : Canada CAN National Childrens Home  
22599 BOOTH, Herbert1907ENG,     Sep 1923 : Minnedosa CAN Barnardos  
13831 BOOTH, Jack Langton1912ENG, WIL, Melksham Sep 1924 : Melita CAN Barnardos  
7780 BOOTH, James1851ENG,     Jul 1870 : Prussian CAN Maria Rye  
18684 BOOTH, James W1884ENG,     Apr 1895 : Sardinian CAN Liverpool Sheltering Home  
12446 BOOTH, Joseph1892ENG,     Jul 1903 : Dominion CAN Barnardos  
3795 BOOTH, Lily1893ENG,     Oct 1903 : Dominion CAN Barnardos  
14932 BOOTH, Margaret1868ENG,     Jun 1883 : Sardinian CAN Louisa Birt  
14931 BOOTH, Mary Ann1872ENG,     Jun 1883 : Sardinian CAN Maria Rye  
17157 BOOTH, Phyllis1900ENG,     Aug 1907 : Tunisian CAN MacPherson Homes  
24144 BOOTH, W.1856ENG,     May 1870 : Scandinavian CAN Boy's Home, Great Queen Street, London  
15217 BOOTHBY, Kenneth1912ENG, YKS, Sculcoates Apr 1928 : Montnairn CAN Fegan Homes for Boys  
19646 BOOTHROYD, F1886ENG,     Jun 1897 : Labrador CAN Barnardos  
25276 BOOTHROYD, Robert1913ENG, LAN, Oldham Feb 1924 : Euripides AUS Fairbridge Homes  
23067 BOOTS, William J.1898ENG,     Apr 1909 : Empress of Britain CAN Fegan Homes for Boys  
13497 BOOTY, Clifton1877ENG, SRY, Wandsworth Apr 1891 : Parisian CAN MacPherson Homes  
13498 BOOTY, Ernest1875ENG, SRY, Wandsworth Apr 1887 : Circassian CAN MacPherson Homes  
18793 BORAS, Charles1890ENG,     Sep 1899 : Arawa CAN Barnardos  
18600 BOREHAM, William1896ENG,     Apr 1910 : Empress of Ireland CAN Fegan Homes for Boys  
8502 BORRMAN, Charles 1880ENG,     Jul 1893 : Sardinian CAN Catholic Protection Society  
10752 BOSELEY, Gertrude1872ENG,     Jun 1880 : Sarmatian CAN Maria Rye  
18248 BOSLEY, Edward1910ENG,     Mar 1920 : Sicilian CAN Barnardos  
18251 BOSLEY, Ernest1910ENG,     Mar 1920 : Sicilian CAN Barnardos  
15011 BOSLEY, Joseph1884ENG,     Sep 1898 : Numidian CAN Westminster Catholic Society  
10439 BOSSON, Emma Elizabeth1910ENG, CHS, Nantwich Jul 1923 : Minnedosa CAN Barnardos  
14582 BOSTOCK, Selina1874ENG, STS, Chesteron Oct 1887 : Sardinian CAN Maria Rye  
12544 BOSTON, Samuel1893ENG, WAR, Birmingham Jun 1906 : Siberian CAN Middlemore  
15175 BOSWELL, Cinderella1890ENG,     Jul 1900 : Tunisian CAN Barnardos  
26138 BOSWELL, W1894ENG,     Mar 1903 : Canada CAN Barnardos  
7190 BOSWORTH, Alice1896ENG,    , Worcester Mar 1908 : Dominion CAN Barnardos  
15693 BOSWORTH, George1903ENG,     Apr 1917 : Olympic CAN Dakeyne Boys Farm  
16072 BOSWORTH, Henry ENG,     Nov 1918 : Metagama CAN Dakeyne Boys Farm  
7197 BOSWORTH, William M1889ENG,    , Chelsea Sep 1899 : Arawa CAN Barnardos  
24335 BOTELL, Alfred1857 May 1870 : Peruvian CAN Annie MacPherson Homes  
24291 BOTLEY, Ivy1900 Apr 1906 : Friesland CAN Barnardos  
24292 BOTLEY, Violet1897 Apr 1906 : Friesland CAN Barnardos  
10507 BOTT, James 1911ENG,    , Measham May 1924 : Montcalm CAN Catholic Emigration Association  
8532 BOTTING, Benjamin1885ENG, MDX, Convent Garden Aug 1899 : Laurentian CAN Canadian Catholic Emigration Committee  
6438 BOTTLE, Caroline1896ENG, LAN, Prescot Mar 1910 : Tunisian CAN Barnardos  
10184 BOTTRILL, Dorothy1900ENG,     Jul 1909 : Sicilian CAN Barnardos  
IDNameDOBPlace of birthArrivals & ShipsDest.AgencyFamily links
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