Iowa Files: All Aboard! The History of Orphan Trains in Iowa
Between 1854 and 1929 the United States was engaged in an ambitious, and ultimately controversial, social experiment to rescue poor and homeless children, the Orphan Train Movement. The Orphan Trains operated prior to the federal government’s involvement in child protection and child welfare. While they operated, Orphan Trains moved approximately 200,000 children from cities like New York and Boston to the American West to be adopted. Historian Carol Bodensteiner gave a fascinating talk on the history of this experiment in Iowa.

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Iowa History 101: Tales of the Territory

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S13 E16: Iran Peace Deal & Feral Hogs: 6/21/26: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver

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Placing Out: The Orphan Trains (2008)

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The "Righteous" Village: How a Protestant Town Hid 3,000 Children in Plain Sight

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Orphan Train Mystery and the Search Joseph Aner's Lost Past

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The Orphan Train: America’s Forgotten Children

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Picture Perfect: Iowa in the 1940s

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The Orphan Train Presentation at the Hurley Public Library

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250,000 Children With No Parents — The Orphan Trains Nobody Can Explain (1854-1929)

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The 1950s Ruined Everything

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2026 Hungry for History Student Showcase Session 1: May 15, 2026

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An Orphan Train Rider Tells His Story

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Black Des Moines: Voices Seldom Heard (1985)

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Buxton; A Black Utopia in Iowa?

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Sodder Family: CASE STUDY

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Escaping the Blitz

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Historian Timothy Snyder on ENDING Trump Nightmare FOR GOOD | PoliticsGirl

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Decades: 1910-1920 | Living St. Louis

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Riders on the Orphan Train

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