Children's Homes and Institutions in New York, USA
(With foundation date, operator, number of Male/Female places, age for admission, and type of children received, where known.)
- St Vincent's Female Orphan Asylum, 106 Elm Street, Albany
(1817; Sisters of Charity; Orphan and destitute girls under 16; 175F) - St Vincent's Male Orphan Asylum, 391 Western Ave, Albany
(1854; Brothers of the Christian Schools; Orphan, destitute, and wayward boys; 92M) - Holy Cross House, 72 Orange Street, Albany
(1903; Sisters of Charity; Abandoned and friendless children; 8M/11F) - House of Detention, 80 Howard Street, Albany
(1902; Mohawk and Hudson River Humane Society; Delinquent and neglected children; 7M/6F) - Frances Elliott Austin Infants' Home, 95 Elm Street, Albany
(1909; Private corporation (Episcopal); Orphan and destitute infants; 15M/11F) - St Francis de Sales Asylum, Clinton and Catherine Streets, Albany
(1886; Sisters of Charity; Orphan and abandoned children under 6; 34M/14F) - St Margaret's House, Hawk and Elk Streets, Albany
(1883; Corning Foundation; Orphan, homeless, and other infants; 30M/16F) - Albany Orphan Asylum, New Scotland and South Lake Avenues, Albany
(1829; Private corporation; Destitute and dependent children; 103M/57F) - Children's Home, 81 Spring Street, Amsterdam
(1883; Private corporation; Orphan and needy children; 20M/9F) - Cayuga Asylum for Destitute Children, 66 Owasco Street, Auburn
(1852; Private corporation; Homeless and destitute children from 2 to 12; 26M/26F) - Davenport Home for Female Orphan Children, Bath
(1863; Private corporation; Orphan girls from 5 to 9; 70F) - St Mary's Orphan Home, Chestnut Street, Binghampton
(1878; Protestant Episcopal Church; Orphan and destitute children; 88M/75F) - Susquehanna Valley Home, Home Avenue, Binghampton
(1869; Private corporation; Orphan and indigent children; 99M/56F) - Asylum of the Sisters of St Dominic, Blauvelt
(1878; Sisters of St Dominic; Destitute and neglected children; 285M/358F) - Suffolk County Children's Home, Yaphank P.O., Brook Haven L.I.
(1879; County of Suffolk; Destitute children; 36M/22F) - St Vincent's Female Orphan Asylum, 1138 Ellicott Street, Buffalo
(1848; Sisters of Charity; Homeless girls; 191F) - St Mary's Infant Asylum, 126 Edward Street, Buffalo
(1852; Sisters of Charity; Orphan children under 5; 46M/56F) - Children's Aid Society's Boys' Home, 261 Delaware Avenue, Buffalo
(1870; Buffalo Children's Aid Society; Working boys from 10 to 18; 70M) - St Agnes Training School for Girls, 3233 Main Street, Buffalo
(1907; Sisters of Our Lady of Charity of Refuge; Delinquent girls; 64F) - Working Boys' Home of the Sacred Heart, 35 Niagara Square, Buffalo
(1890; Protestant Episcopal Church; Homeless working boys; 47M) - Buffalo Orphan Asylum, 403 Virginia Street, Buffalo
(1837; Private corporation; Orphan and destitute children; 55M/69F) - German Roman Catholic Orphan Asylum, 664 Dodge Street, Buffalo
(1874; Sisters of Third Order of St Francis; Orphan and destitute children; 205M/145F) - LutheranSt John's Orphan Home, Mineral Springs Road (West Seneca), Buffalo
(1864; Lutheran churches of Buffalo and vicinity; Orphan and homeless children from 2 to 12; 45M/33F) - Immaculate Heart of Mary Asylum, William and Kennedy Streets (East Buffalo, P.O.), Buffalo
(1895; Felician Sisters of St Francis; Orphan and destitute children; 154M/110F) - Ontario Orphan Asylum, Main Street, Canandaigua
(1863; Private corporation; Orphan and destitute children; 37M/23F) - Charlton Industrial Farm School, Charlton
(1896; Private corporation; Homeless and wayward boys; 31M) - St Agatha Home for Children, Nanuet P.O., Clarkstown
(1885; Sisters of Charity (St Vincent de Paul); Orphan and destitute children; 239M/286F) - Orphan House of the Holy Saviour, 3 Beaver Street, Cooperstown
(1870; Protestant Episcopal Church; Orphan and destitute children; 34M/37F) - King's Daughters' Home for Children, Cortland
(1906; King's Daughters; Orphan and homeless children; 25M/14F) - 240 Port Watson Street, St Christopher's Home, Donns Ferry
(1881; Methodist Episcopal Church; Dependent and destitute children; 50M/76F) - St Mary's Home and School, 319 Washington Avenue, Dunkirk
(1858; Protestant Episcopal Church; Orphan and destitute children; 40M/42F) - Southern Tier Orphans' Home, 300 Franklin Street, Elmira
(1868; Private corporation; Dependent children from 2 to 16; 22M/9F) - George Junior Republic, Freeville
(1895; Private corporation; Destitute, neglected, and delinquent children; 102M/54F) - House of St Giles the Cripple, Garden City L.I.
(1890; Protestant Episcopal Church; Cripple children; 28M/20F) - Geny Homes (Orphanage Dept.), Gerry
(1886; Free Methodist Church; Orphan and homeless destitute children; 32M/33F) - St Mary of the Angels, Hartsdale
(1887; Sisters of Misericorde; Destitute children; 105M/98F) - New York Orphanage, Hastings Upon Hudson
(1806; Orphan Asylum Society in the City of New York; Destitute orphan children; 120M/105F) - Hawthorne School, Hawthorne
(1902; Jewish Protectory and Aid Society; Delinquent Jewish boys; 301M) - St John's Protectory, Hicksville L.I.
(1890; Roman Catholic Orphan Asylum Society of Brooklyn; Friendless Catholic boys; 125M) - Hudson Orphan Asylum, 400 State Street, Hudson
(1843; Private corporation; Destitute children; 29M/8F) - Ithaca Children's Home, 518 West Seneca Street, Ithaca
(1885; Private corporation; Orphan and destitute children; 9M/9F) - Gustavus Adolphus Orphans' Home, Jamestown
(1883; Lutheran Augustana Synod; Orphan and destitute children; 34M/27F) - Industrial Home of the City of Kingston, East Chester Street, Kingston
(1876; Private organization; Homeless children; 19M/16F) - St Johnland Home, Kinos Park L.I.
(1866; Society of St Johnland; Orphan and friendless children; 51M/34F) - St Joseph's Male Orphan Asylum, Ridge Road, Lackawanna
(1849; Sisters of St Joseph; Orphan boys; 228M) - St John's Protectory, Ridge Road, Lackawanna
(1864; Society for the Protection of Destitute Catholic Children; Homeless and destitute boys from 7 to 14; 515M) - Our Lady of Victory Infant Home, Lackawanna
(1908; Sisters of St Joseph; Foundlings, and orphan and homeless children; 187M/125F) - Home for the Friendless, Lake Avenue, Lockport
(1871; Private corporation; Homeless and orphan children under 16; 33M/35F) - Children's Home, Ridge Street, Middletown
(1881; County of Orange; Dependent children; 17M/6F) - Children's Home, Willis Avenue, Mineola L.I.
(1884; Private corporation; Orphan and homeless children; 42M/21F) - Warthurg Orphans' Farm School, East Lincoln Avenue, Mount Vernon
(1864; Private corporation (Lutheran); Orphan children from 4 to 10; 142M/115F) - 100 East 23rd Street, New York City (Bronx/Manhattan)
(1875; New York Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children; Destitute and neglected children; 40M+F) - Institution of Mercy, 1075 Madison Avenue, New York City (Bronx/Manhattan)
(1846; Sisters of Mercy; Orphan and indigent children; 450M/412F) - St Joseph's Home for Girls, 1075 Madison Avenue, New York City (Bronx/Manhattan)
(By 1910; Sisters of Mercy; Girls from 2 to 16) - Protestant Half Orphan Asylum, 110 Manhattan Avenue, New York City (Bronx/Manhattan)
(1835; Private corporation; Protestant half-orphan children; 94M/63F) - Darrach Home for Crippled Children, 118 West One hundred and fourth Street, New York City (Bronx/Manhattan)
(1899; Private corporation; Crippled children; 9M/11F) - Newsboys' Lodging House, 14 New Chambers Street, New York City (Bronx/Manhattan)
(1854; Children's Aid Society; Homeless working boys; 118M) - Home for Destitute Crippled Children, 141 West Sixty-first Street, New York City (Bronx/Manhattan)
(1903; Private corporation; Destitute crippled children; 11M/11F) - New York Nursery and Child's Hospital (Boarding-cut Department), 161 West Sixty-first Street, New York City (Bronx/Manhattan)
(1854; Private corporation; Homeless and Indigent children) - Orphans' Home and Asylum, 168 Convent Avenue, New York City (Bronx/Manhattan)
(1852; Private corporation; Orphan children; 36M/47F) - Juvenile Asylum, 176th Street, New York City (Bronx/Manhattan)
(1851; New York Juvenile Asylum; Truant and disobedient children, under or from a magistrate, or legally surrendered by their parents or guardians.; 960M+F; from 7-15 years) - Asylum of St Vincent de Paul, 215 West Thirty-ninth Street, New York City (Bronx/Manhattan)
(1858; Sisters Marianites of Holy Cross; Destitute orphan children; 69M/118F) - Howard Mission, 225 East Eleventh Street, New York City (Bronx/Manhattan)
(1860; Private corporation; Orphan and neglected children; 8M/7F) - Forty-fourth Street Boys' Lodging House, 247 East Forty-fourth Street, New York City (Bronx/Manhattan)
(1876; Children's Aid Society; Homeless boys; 88M) - Home for the Friendless, 32 East 30th Street, New York City (Bronx/Manhattan)
(1834; American Female Guardian Society and Home for the Friendless; Friendless and destitute girls between 3 and 14; boys between 3 and 10.; 180M+F; from 3-14 years) - Dominican Convent of Our Lady of the Rosary, 329 East Sixty-third Street, New York City (Bronx/Manhattan)
(1876; Sisters of St Dominic; Dependent children; 361M/213F) - Home for Crippled Children, 3740 Broadway, New York City (Bronx/Manhattan)
(1893; Sisters of the Annunciation (Episcopal); Crippled and incurable girls; 24F) - Mission of the Immaculate Virgin, 375 Lafayette Street, New York City (Bronx/Manhattan)
(1870; Mission of the Immaculate Virgin for the Protection of Homeless and Destitute Children; Homeless and destitute children) - St Philip's Home for Industrious Boys, 417 Broome Street, New York City (Bronx/Manhattan)
(1902; New York Catholic Protectory; Dependent boys; 37M) - Five Points House of Industry, 442 West Twenty-third Street, New York City (Bronx/Manhattan)
(1850; Private corporation; Dependent children from 2 to 14; 152M/90F) - William H. Davis Free Industrial School for Crippled Children, 471 West Fifty-seventh Street, New York City (Bronx/Manhattan)
(1900; Private corporation; Crippled children; 30M/25F) - Sheltering Arms, 504 West One hundred and twenty-ninth Street, New York City (Bronx/Manhattan)
(1864; Private corporation; Homeless children; 73M/103F) - House of Reception, 61 West thirteenth Street, New York City (Bronx/Manhattan)
(1851; New York Juvenile Asylum; Truant and disobedient children, under or from a magistrate, or legally surrendered by their parents or guardians.; from 7-14 years) - Home for the Friendless, 936 Woody Crest Avenue, New York City (Bronx/Manhattan)
(1834; American Female Guardian Society and Home for the Friendless; Orphan and homeless children; 96M/99F) - Hebrew Orphan Asylum, Amsterdam Avenue and One hundred and thirty-seventh Street, New York City (Bronx/Manhattan)
(1860; Private organization; Orphan end dependent children from 5 to 12; 714M/491F) - Messiah Home for Children, East One hundred and seventy-seventh Street and Aqueduct Avenue, New York City (Bronx/Manhattan)
(1885; Private corporation; Children of self-supporting parents) - Eighty-eighth Street, between 4th and 5th Avenues, New York City (Bronx/Manhattan)
(1833; Now York Magdalen Benevolent Society; Fallen women who desire to return to the paths of virtue; 60M+F) - St Joseph's Asylum, Eighty-ninth Street and Avenue A, New York City (Bronx/Manhattan)
(1857; School Sisters of Notre Dame; Orphan children from 2 to 16; 483M/264F) - Sevilla Home for Children, Hunt's Point (Bronx), New York City (Bronx/Manhattan)
(1889; Private corporation; Indigent girls from 5 to 10; 61F) - Hebrew Sheltering Guardian Society of N.Y. Orphan Asylum, One hundred and fiftieth Street And Broadway, New York City (Bronx/Manhattan)
(1879; Hebrew Sheltering Guardian Society; Orphan and destitute children; 408M/288F) - Hebrew Infant Asylum, One hundred and sixty-first Street and Eagle Avenue, New York City (Bronx/Manhattan)
(1895; Private corporation; Orphan and destitute children under 5; 74M/65F) - House of Refuge, Randall's Island, New York City (Bronx/Manhattan)
(1824; Now York Magdalen Benevolent Society; Juvenile delinquents on commitment by a magistrate only; 750M/250F) - Roman Catholic Orphan Asylum, Sedgwick Ave. and Kingsbridge Road, New York City (Bronx/Manhattan)
(1817; Board of Managers, Roman Catholic Orphan Asylum; Orphan children; 526M/471F) - Colored Orphan Asylum, West Two hundred and fifty-ninth Street (Riverdale-on-Hudson), New York City (Bronx/Manhattan)
(1837; Private corporation; Destitute children; 178M/125F) - New York Catholic Protectory, Westchester P.O., New York City (Bronx/Manhattan)
(1863; Roman Catholic Church; Dependent and delinquent children; 1822M/525F) - Children's Society (Receiving Home), 105 Schermerhom Street, New York City (Brooklyn)
(1880; Brooklyn Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children; Destitute, neglected, and delinquent children; 16M/20F) - Brooklyn Orphan Asylum, 1435 Atlantic Avenue, New York City (Brooklyn)
(1833; Private corporation; Orphan and destitute children; 61M/56F) - Brooklyn Training School and Home for Young Girls, 1483 Pacific Street, New York City (Brooklyn)
(1889; Private corporation; Destitute girls from 12 to 16; 63F) - Brooklyn Baptist Orphanage, 1502 Coney Island Avenue, New York City (Brooklyn)
(1893; Private corporation(Baptist); Orphan and neglected children; 13M/9F) - Orphan Home of the Dominican Nuns, 153 Graham Avenue, New York City (Brooklyn)
(1868; Sisters of St Dominic; Orphan, neglected, and indigent children; 112M/90F) - Brooklyn Howard Colored Orphan Asylum, 1550 Dean Street, New York City (Brooklyn)
(1868; Private corporation; Orphan and destitute children from 2 to 16; 143M/112F) - Sheltering Arms Nursery, 157 Dean Street, New York City (Brooklyn)
(1870; Protestant Episcopal Church; Destitute children over 1 month old; 43M/35F) - Home for Destitute Children, 217 Sterling Place, New York City (Brooklyn)
(1854; Private corporation; Destitute children; 93M/74F) - Convent of the Sisters of Mercy, 273 Willoughby Avenue, New York City (Brooklyn)
(1855; Sisters of Mercy; Destitute children and homeless mothers with infants; 503M/986F) - Brooklyn Hebrew Orphan Asylum, 373 Ralph Avenue, New York City (Brooklyn)
(1878; Private corporation; Orphan and destitute children; 297M/208F) - St John's Home, 992St Mark's Avenue, New York City (Brooklyn)
(1834; Roman Catholic Orphan Asylum Society of Brooklyn; Destitute Catholic boys; 1270M) - Orphan House, Albany Avenue and Herkimer Street, New York City (Brooklyn)
(1852; Protestant Episcopal Church; Orphan children; 54M/52F) - St Malachy's Home, Atlantic and Van Siclen Avenues, New York City (Brooklyn)
(1876; Sisters of St Joseph; Dependent children; 197M/152F) - St Paul's Industrial School, Congress and Clinton Streets, New York City (Brooklyn)
(1839; Roman Catholic Orphan Asylum Society of Brooklyn; Catholic orphan girls) - Kalman Scandinavian Orphanage, Sixty-seventh Street and Eighteenth Avenue, New York City (Brooklyn)
(1897; Private corporation; Scandinavian orphan and indigent children; 34M/34F) - Angel Guardian Home, Twelfth Avenue and Sixty-fourth Street, New York City (Brooklyn)
(By 1910; Sisters of Mercy; Destitute children) - St Joseph's Female Orphan Asylum, Willoughby and Sumner Avenues, New York City (Brooklyn)
(1873; Roman Catholic Orphan Asylum Society of Brooklyn; Catholic orphan girls; 605F) - Ottilie Orphan Asylum, Kaplan and Degraw Avenues, Jamaica, L.I., New York City (Queens)
(1892; Private corporation (German Reformed and Presbyterian); Orphan and dependent children; 49M/60F) - Bethlehem Orphans' Home, Second Avenue, College Point L.I., New York City (Queens)
(1886; Private corporation (Lutheran); Orphan children; 63M/61F) - St Michael's Home, 424 West Thirty-fourth Street, Green Ridge S.I. (office), New York City (Richmond)
(1884; Presentation nuns; Destitute Roman Catholic children under 16; 62M/91F) - Home for Seamen's Children, Castleton Avenue, New Brighton S.I., New York City (Richmond)
(1846; Society for the Relief of Destitute Children; Seamen's destitute children from 2 to 10; 54M/58F) - Richmond County S.P.C.C. Home, Castleton Avenue, New Brighton S.I., New York City (Richmond)
(1880; Richmond County Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children; Ill-treated children, pending court action; 153M+F) - St Joseph's Home for Boys, Pleasant Plains P.O., Mount Loretto S.I., New York City (Richmond)
(By 1910; Mission of the Immaculate Virgin; Homeless and destitute boys; 1106M) - St Elizabeth's Home for Girls, Prince Bay P.O., Mount Loretto S.I., New York City (Richmond)
(By 1910; Mission of the Immaculate Virgin; Homeless and destitute girls; 495F) - Newburgh Home for the Friendless, 165 Montgomery Street, Newburgh
(1861; Private corporation; Orphan and needy children; 15M/13F) - Children's Home, High Street, Newburgh
(1885; City of Newburgh; Dependent children; 21M/18F) - United Helpers' Home, 250 State Street, Ogdensburg
(1898; Society of United Helpers; Orphan, destitute, and homeless children; 22M/16F) - Oswego Orphan Asylum, Ellen Street, Oswego
(1852; Private corporation; Orphan, delinquent, and homeless children; 14M/17F) - St Francis' Home, Syracuse Avenue, Oswego
(1895; Sisters of the Third Order of St Francis; Orphan and homeless children; 32M/35F) - St Joseph's Home, 250 South Street, Peekskill
(1869; Sisters of the Third Order of St Francis; Orphan and neglected children; 624M/494F) - Noyes Memorial Home for Convalescent and Incurable Children., 636 Main Street, Peekskill
(1889; Sisters of St Mary (Episcopal); Convalescent and incurable children; 9M/11F) - St Ann's Home for Destitute Children, Mount Florence, Peekskill
(1857; Sisters of the Good Shepherd; Destitute, orphan, and indigent girls; 401F) - Peterboro Home, Peterboro
(1871; Private corporation; Neglected children; 26M/22F) - Home for the Friendless, 9 Broad Street, Plattsburg
(1874; Private corporation; Destitute and neglected children; 14M/16F) - Brooklyn Home for Blind, Crippled, and Defective Children, Port Jefferson L.I.
(1907; Daughters of Wisdom; Mentally and physically defective children under 16; 85M/81F) - St Mary's Home, 58 Ball Street, Port Jervis
(1875; Sisters of Charity; Orphan and destitute children; 74M/84F) - Home for the Friendless, 91 South Hamilton Street, Poughkeepsie
(1847; Private corporation; Orphan and homeless children; 25M/20F) - Children's Home, Randolph
(1878; Western New York Society for the Protection of Homeless and Dependent Children; Homeless and dependent children; 73M/45F) - St Margaret's Home, Red Hook
(1854; Protestant Episcopal Church; Orphan girls; 13F) - St John's Orphan Asylum, Lawrence Street, Rensselaer
(1871; Sisters of Mercy; Orphan and destitute children; 41M/30F) - Rochester Orphan Asylum, 1183 Monroe Avenue, Rochester
(1837; Private corporation; Orphan and destitute children; 67M/53F) - St Patrick's Orphan Girls' Asylum, 160 Clifton Street, Rochester
(1841; Sisters of St Joseph; Orphan and destitute girls and infants; 5M/133F) - St Joseph's Orphan Asylum, 305 Andrews Street, Rochester
(1854; Sisters of Notre Dame; Orphan children; 68M/47F) - St Mary's Boys' Orphan Asylum, 409 West Avenue, Rochester
(1864; Sisters of St Joseph; Orphan boys from 4 to 14; 205M) - Jewish Orphan Asylum, 924St Paul Street, Rochester
(1880; Private corporation; Orphan and destitute children; 15M/11F) - St Malachy's Orphan Home, Rockaway Park L.I.
(By 1910; Sisters of St Joseph; Dependent children) - St Benedict's Home for Destitute Colored Children, Rye
(1886; Mission of the Immaculate Virgin; Destitute and homeless children; 63M/85F) - Hawley Home for Children, 64 Ludlow Street, Saratoga Springs
(1888; Private corporation; Normal children from 3 to 10; 6M/6F) - St Christina Industrial School, Ballston Avenue, Saratoga Springs
(1885; Sisters of the Holy Child (Episcopal); Girls who must become self-supporting; 48F) - Children's Home, 1216 State Street, Schenectady
(1888; Private corporation; Orphan, homeless, neglected, or indigent children; 21M/14F) - Cherry Tree Home, South Main Street, Spring Valley
(1895; SA; Orphan and destitute children; 47M/39F) - St Mary of the Angels Home, Syosset L.I.
(By 1910; Sisters of Mercy; Homeless boys from 5 to 14) - Onondaga Orphans' Home, 1007 East Genesee Street, Syracuse
(1839; Private corporation; Destitute and neglected children; 113M/79F) - St Vincent's Orphan Asylum, 120 Madison Street, Syracuse
(1860; Sisters of Charity; Orphan, destitute, and abandoned girls from 2 to 14; 222F) - House of Providence, 1420 West Onondaga Street, Syracuse
(1873; Sisters of Charity (St Vincent de Paul); Destitute and abandoned boys and boarders; 203M) - Home for Boys, Tarrytown
(By 1910; Sisters of Mercy; Destitute boys from 2 to 16) - Watts de Peyster Industrial Home, Madalin P.O., Tivoli
(1894; Woman's Home Missionary Society, M. E. Church; Orphan, homeless, and destitute girls; 58F) - St Vincent's Female Orphan Asylum, 180 Eighth Street, Troy
(1848; Sisters of Charity (St Vincent de Paul); Destitute girls; 206F) - Humane Society Home, 77 Fourth Street, Troy
(1897; Mohawk and Hudson River Humane Society; Delinquent and neglected children) - Catholic Male Orphan Asylum, Hanover and Bedford Streets, Troy
(1852; Private corporation; Orphan and destitute boys; 244M) - Guardian Angel Home, Peoples Avenue and Eleventh Street, Troy
(1908; Sisters of the Good Shepherd; Abandoned, neglected, and delinquent girls; 80F) - Troy Orphan Asylum, Spring Avenue, Troy
(1833; Private corporation; Orphan and destitute children; 140M/104F) - St Joseph's Home, Thompson Street, Troy
(1892; Sisters of St Joseph; Foundlings, and orphan and homeless children; 147M/121F) - House of the Good Shepherd, 709 Genesee Street, Utica
(1872; Private corporation (Episcopal); Neglected and destitute children under 10; 77M/53F) - St John's Catholic Orphan Asylum, 80 John Street, Utica
(1834; Sisters of Charity; Orphan and homeless girls from 5 to 16; 159F) - Utica Orphan Asylum, 975 Genesee Street, Utica
(1830; Private corporation; Orphan and destitute children; 75M/73F) - St Joseph's Infant Home, Green and Addison Streets, Utica
(1893; Sisters of Charity; Orphan and destitute infants; 68M/71F) - Jennie Clarkson Home for Children, Valhalla
(1892; Private corporation; Orphan and dependent children; 28M/19F) - Brace Farm School, Valhalla
(1893; Children's Aid Society; Homeless boys; 28M) - Hope Farm, One hundred and seventy-first Street and Fulton Avenue, N.Y. (office), Verbank
(1906; Private corporation; Dependent children; 60M/86F) - Jefferson County Orphan Asylum, 506 Franklin Street, Watertown
(1852; Private corporation; Orphan and homeless children; 39M/25F) - Fairview Home, Boght Road, R.D., Watervliet
(1888; Private corporation; Orphan and homeless children from 9 to 16; 56M/34F) - St Colman's Industrial School and Orphan Asylum, Watervliet
(1881; State of New York; Orphan children; 84M/94F) - Sacred Heart Orphan Asylum, Manresa, West Park
(1889; Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart; Orphan and destitute girls; 227F) - Lake and Watts Orphan House, 463 Hawthorne Avenue, Yonkers
(1838; Private corporation; Orphan children; 62M/24F)
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