|   HOMES NEEDED FOR 10,000 
              BROWN ORPHANS: Deserted tots find few would-be parents, excluded 
              by color line in many orphanages 
            In South Carolina recently, a mid-wife sold an infant for $20 to 
              collect her fee for delivery of the child. 
            In Chicago a two-hour-old tot was abandoned in a shoe box on a 
              busy street by an unmarried mother. 
            In St. Louis a year-old youngster, happily adopted by a white family, 
              was returned to an agency when she began to develop Negroid features. 
            These are some of the estimated 10,000 deserted, neglected, motherless 
              Negro children who are in desperate need of homes. Victims of the 
              breakup of some 581,000 colored homes (according to 1947 U.S. census 
              bureau figures), these 10,000 brown babies are up for adoption but 
              there are piteously few would-be parents who will take them into 
              their homes. While for every one of the 150,000 white tots in 1,600 
              orphanages, there are 10 couples with outstretched arms anxious 
              to make an adoption, Negro orphans find few takers. 
            Because so few childless colored couples adopt orphans and because 
              so many orphanages strictly hold to the color line, there is a growing 
              crisis for homeless Negro youngsters that rapidly is approaching 
              calamitous proportions. Such responsible groups as the Illinois 
              Children’s Home and Aid Society were hit by 90 per cent increase 
              in Negro tots and had to turn many away. The society was overburdened 
              not only by the lack of parents willing to adopt the children and 
              the shortage of foster homes but also by the refusal of some 90 
              per cent of the state’s 106 institutions to accept Negro children 
              for keeping. 
            As a result these unfortunate children grow up unwanted and friendless 
              in unfit homes or are kept in penal institutions in some states 
              for lack of a better place – their only crime, that of being 
              brown. . . . 
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