In 1955 four-year-old Stewart Lee was sent to Australia by the Fairbridge Society.
Source: Sydney Lee
During the late 19th century Britain sent over 100,000 child migrants across the British Empire.
This exhibition reveals a largely untold chapter of migration history – that of British children who were sent to Australia and other Commonwealth countries under government-endorsed child migration schemes.
From the 1860s, more than 100,000 children were sent from Britain across the British Empire and as many as 7,500 children came to Australia. They were sent by charitable and religious organisations with government support in the belief that their lives would improve and to increase the population of ‘good British stock’ and labour in the colonies.
Child migration schemes changed the lives of these children and their families dramatically and many former child migrants are still coming to terms with their past and are attempting to move forward and to heal their lives.
Child migration schemes are now largely recognised as flawed social policy and were officially ended in Australia in 1967. Both the British and Australian governments have formally apologised for their roles in the schemes.
A collaboration between the Australian National Maritime Museum and National Museums Liverpool, UK.
This exhibition is supported by the National Collecting Institutions Touring and Outreach Program, an Australian Government program aiming to improve access to the national collections for all Australians.