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Record #4168
Name :
: Rose Agnes BURROWS (1899 - )


Father
:
Mother
:
BMD and other details
Date of Birth
: 18 Jun 1899

Marriage (1)
:
Marriage (2)
:

Date of Death
:
Abode (1) : Place of BirthEngland, Kent, Orpington
Abode (2) : Place of Death / Burial
Sailing Information
Date of Arrival
: 22 Sep 1907
Country
: Canada

Ship
: Dominion

Placement Family
:
Homes / Agencys
Institution (GB)
:

Agency
: Barnardos
NotesRose Agnes Burrows had been admitted on November 29, 1901, under a Magistrate's Order because Rose's mother Alice Burrows (daughter of William and Jemima Jeal Burrows), 22, was serving a two-month term in Holloway Prison doing hard labor for deserting Rose outside the church in St. Mary Cray. Her older sister, Victoria Maud Burrows was admitted to Barnardo's care on December 11, 1901. Victoria had been left by her mother, Alice, in the care of another woman who had taken her to the Guardians of Lambeth Workhouse. When Barnardo's took charge of Rose, they also arranged for Victoria to be admitted to their care. After her release from prison, Alice lived in a Salvation Army House in Hackney, London. Alice was not married at the time of the births of her daughters. (Possible fathers suggested: Mr. Green to Rose Agnes and Walter Turner to Victoria.)

There were several relatives of Alice mentioned in the girls' admission, including her father William, brothers Harry, George and William; sisters Eliza, Emma, Annie and Mary. Alice's mother had died
several years earlier.

In 1901, Rose Agnes Burrows, 1 year of age, was shown as an inmate in Bromley Union Workhouse, Farnborough, Kent, England, along with her sister, Victoria Maud Burrows, 3; and her mother, Alice Maud Burrows, 22. (Source: 1901 Census of England; Class: RG13; Piece: 692; Folio: 87; Page: 23.)

In February, 1902, Victoria was at a Salvation Army Home in Hackney in East London. The two girls were not kept together but were re-united and introduced to each other before boarding Dominion.

In 1907, Rose Agnes Burrows, 8 (along with her sister, Victoria Maud Burrows, 9), arrived at Quebec, Canada, with a group of 243 Barnardo children en route to Toronto, Ontario, Canada. (NOTE: Both girls stayed in Ontario.)

The trip was memorialized by The Times, London, England, September 13, 1907; pg. 2; Issue 38437; col F:

DEPARTURE OF EMIGRANTS. --Dr. Barnardo's Homes, which for many years past have carried out a scheme of emigration of selected children to Canada and the Colonies, sent off from Paddington yesterday morning their fourth and last party for the current year; 135 of their boys and 100 girls left London for Liverpool, where they embarked in the afternoon on board the Dominion for Canada. Including these, 1,081 boys and girls have been sent forth by the homes in 1907, and their grand total of emigrants since the scheme was originated is now 19,276. Of these 98 percent. have done well. --- A party of emigrants who are being sent out by the Joint Emigration Committee of the East End Fund and Charity Organization Society left Euston on Wednesday evening for Liverpool to join the steamship Dominion, of the Dominion Line, for Canada. This brings the number of those who have been sent out by the committee this season up to more than 6,000, as compared with 3, 955 last year. The party are going out to join friends who have already settled in Canada. Mr. Robert Culver, the secretary of the committee, who has just returned from the Dominion, states that the families which he was able to visit were doing well and there were no complaints. An appeal is being made for further funds to enable the committee to send out a large number of people whose cases have been passed as suitable.

In 1911, Rose Burrows, 11, was shown as a home girl to (?) and Mary McKinnon in Brock, Ontario, Canada. Her date of birth is shown as June 1900 and her immigration year is illegible.

On August 24, 1921, at Centenary Parsonage, Hamilton, Wentworth, Ontario, Canada, a marriage was registered between Rose Agnes Burrows, 22, stenographer, born in Kent, England to William Burrows and Alice Turner; and Henry Freeborn, 38, painter, born in Hamilton, Wentworth, Ontario, Canada, to John Freeborn and Mary Graham. 
ContributorsCreated : 2008-09-09 11:39:51 / From original database


Last Updated : 2009-01-18 15:32:37 /

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Surnames starting with:   A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  13 Entries        
IDNameDOBPlace of birthArrivals & ShipsDest.AgencyFamily links
6554 BURROWS, Alfred 1916ENG,     Jul 1928 : Newfoundland CAN Middlemore  
20006 BURROWS, Alfred1870ENG,     Jun 1886 : Lake Superior CAN Barnardos  
23573 BURROWS, Arthur J1909ENG,     May 1924 : Demosthenes AUS Barnardos  
14487 BURROWS, Charles Alfred1914ENG,     Oct 1927 : Montclare CAN Barnardos  
4248 BURROWS, Edith1885ENG,     Sep 1895 : Sardinian CAN Barnardos  
17271 BURROWS, Frederick1884ENG,     Mar 1899 : Dominion CAN National Childrens Home  
17272 BURROWS, Henry1885ENG,     Mar 1899 : Dominion CAN National Childrens Home  
23655 BURROWS, Leslie J1911ENG,     Oct 1925 : Benalla AUS Barnardos  
8134 BURROWS, Rose1913ENG, WAR, Birmingham Jul 1928 : Newfoundland CAN Middlemore  
4168 BURROWS, Rose Agnes1899ENG, KEN, Orpington Sep 1907 : Dominion CAN Barnardos  
4167 BURROWS, Victoria Maud1897ENG, KEN, Orpington Sep 1907 : Dominion CAN Barnardos  
6940 BURROWS, William1868ENG,     Jun 1878 : Sarmatian CAN Middlemore  
15278 BURROWS, William1873ENG,     Mar 1882 : Polynesian CAN Liverpool Sheltering Home