Abstract

This is the last of three papers outlining some aspects of child care in nineteenth-century New South Wales. The first described government policies in 1870 when the only form of alternative care for children was provided in institutional settings.1 The second described the Randwick Asylum for Destitute Children as an example of a large subsidised organization at a time when the favoured method of providing for dependent children changed to foster care.2 This paper will seek to assess the new foster care system during its first ten years of operation.

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