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Organizations committed to the protection of children are mainly
a 20th-century phenomenon in Newfoundland.
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Begun in 1921, the Child Welfare Association provided services to mothers
and children in the St. John's area.
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The most important service provided by the Child Welfare
Association was in the area of immunization.
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After Confederation the need for the services of the Child Welfare
Association began to decline.
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Looking Back at Child Protection
From the files of The Gazette February 23, 1995.
Organizations committed to the protection of children are mainly
a 20th-century phenomenon in Newfoundland. The early 20th
century was a time when Newfoundland had a high birth rate, but
an equally high infant mortality rate, an alarming death rate
for women giving birth, and an inordinately high number of
families without either parent. There were many causes for these
high mortality rates, including poor nutrition, lack of milk,
lack of medical assistance, poor sanitation and contaminated
water supplies.
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The Child Welfare Centre at 132 Queen's Road, ca. 1926.
Courtesy of the Centre for Newfoundland Studies Archives
(Coll - 002, 7.14), Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. John's, Newfoundland.
(34 KB).
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On July 26, 1917, St. John's Mayor William G. Gosling
published a letter in the St. John's Daily News to Lady
Davidson, wife of the governor of Newfoundland and president of
the Women's Patriotic Association (WPA), in which he asked the
WPA to form a committee to plan a child welfare exhibit. His
sister-in-law, Adelaide Nutting, a professor of nursing at
Teachers' College, Columbia University, New York, arranged for
a trained nurse from New York to visit St. John's to give
lectures on child care. She stressed the need for an exhibit. To
this end Gosling donated his salary as mayor for 1917 ($600).
The WPA agreed to administer the exhibit.
With the end of the First World War in 1918, the Women's
Patriotic Association was no longer required to provide for
servicemen overseas. They were able to turn their attention more
fully to children. Earlier in 1918 a second nurse from New York
came to St. John's to train three nurses in child care, and a
child welfare clinic was opened. In June 1919 the WPA formed a
Child Welfare Committee which help provide money for salaries
for the three newly-trained nurses. A door-to-door canvass in
the St. John's area resulted in $6,000 being raised. In 1921 the
Women's Patriotic Association was formally disbanded and
reconstituted as the Child Welfare Association.
A participant in a perambulator
parade held in St. John's in the 1920s.
Courtesy of the Centre for Newfoundland Studies Archives
(Coll - 002, 7.08), Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. John's, Newfoundland.
(40 KB).
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The Child Welfare Association was a publicly-operated,
volunteer-based charitable organization dedicated to improving
the health and lowering the mortality rate of mothers and
children in the St. John's area. Its services were available to
all preschool children at no charge. It was jointly funded by
grants from the St. John's municipal council and the national
government, and by public subscription, membership fees, gifts
and donations. Its work involved public education about
nutrition and health care, including home visits and clinics,
several of which were established around St. John's. It
distributed milk and orange juice to needy families. It
sponsored "Health Week" and "Baby Week," which provided
information and friendly competition, including perambulator
parades. It made use of Waterford Hall, in the west end of St.
John's, as a children's hospital for a number of years, and from
1929 to 1934 operated a soup kitchen and clothing distribution
centre to help relieve the destitution caused by the depression.
The most important service provided by the Child Welfare
Association was in the area of immunization. During its years of
operation, thousands of children were inoculated against
numerous contagious diseases, diseases which would normally
cause large numbers of deaths among small children: polio,
diphtheria, whooping cough, tetanus, measles and small pox. It
provided these services from its headquarters on Queen's Road
and from various clinics it held at public buildings and schools
around the city. It also provided orthopedic, dental,
nutritional and educational services. In 1934 the government
grant was replaced by a building and by the part-time services
of a doctor and a number of student nurses, in addition to the
CWA's regular nursing staff, which at its peak numbered seven.
The government grant was later reinstated and the association
expanded its services to Bay Bulls, Petty Harbour, the Goulds,
Torbay, Bauline, Flatrock, Portugal Cove and Mount Pearl.
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A scrapbook from Baby Week, 1926.
Courtesy of the Centre for Newfoundland Studies Archives
(Coll - 002, 8.scrapbook), Memorial University of Newfoundland,
St. John's, Newfoundland.
(42 KB).
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With the expansion of the Newfoundland Department of Health
after Confederation, especially the services offered by the
Public Health Division through its public health nurses
stationed all over the province, the need for the services
provided by the Child Welfare Association began to decline. It
continued to play a role in child care until well into the 1970s
but its members, many of whom had given many years of volunteer
services, particularly as fund-raisers, to its operation, were
aware that the Department of Health was making the CWA's work
less and less necessary. At its annual meeting in 1976, the 55th
year of its existence, the Child Welfare Association voted to
disband.
The last president of the Child Welfare Association was
Patricia Russell. In 1980 she presented the papers and records
of the association that were in her possession to the Centre
for Newfoundland Studies. It was by no means the complete
records of the association, but it is a tangible record of its
work. Included are annual reports, clinical activity reports,
monthly reports for most of the 1940s, medical reports,
financial reports (1964-1977), some correspondence, circulars
including one espousing the merits of baby formula made from
goat's milk, recipes, and a scrapbook with a hand-painted cover
by Sister Mary Josephine of Presentation Congregation and a
series of photographs commemorating Baby Week 1926. A number of
additional items, photographs and clippings were presented by
Phyllis Godden, who was nurse-supervisor of the CWA from 1942 to
1974, in 1992. Together they provide a glimpse of life in St.
John's in a time when the medical services we now take for
granted were not so readily available.
November, 2000.
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