The Gladney Center for Adoption in Fort Worth, Texas, US, provides adoption and advocacy services. Following its 1880s origins, when it focused on locating homes for orphans during a period of mass migration. It evolved into lobbying, international adoptions, counseling, maternity services, education and philanthropy.
The history of the center can be traced back to 1887. Fort Worth was established in 1849 and became the center's home, at the close of the Mexican–American War. By 1886, the Texas and Pacific Railway was operating and at least four stockyards were in service close to the railroad lines. The trains brought migrants from the southeast and, in 1887, the first "Orphan Train" from the northeast. The Orphan Train Movement transported roughly 200,000 children from the northeast throughout the Midwest and as far west as Texas.
Reverend IZT Morris (born Spalding Co, Georgia, March 21, 1847), a Methodist circuit minister, began locating homes for children who had reached the end of the line in Fort Worth. He and his wife Isabella took in many children while trying to identify permanent homes for them among local residents and slowly began the Texas Children's Home Society. It was formally chartered in 1896 and incorporated in 1904 as The Texas Children's Home and Aid Society.
In 1906, a house was purchased by the board of directors on Avenue H in the city of Fort Worth. The purpose was to house children until they could be placed with a permanent family. Reverend Morris was the State Superintendent, fundraiser and chairman of the board of directors until his death in 1914. [1] Reverend Morris was responsible for finding homes for some 1000 children. Isabella ("Belle") succeeded him and supervised the society until 1924. [2]
J.B. Baker | J.C. Conner | H.H. Halsell | G. H. Mulkey |
J.N. Brown | J.V. Dealey | J. Lee Johnson | J.W. Robbins |
William Bryce | Irby Dunklin | E.H. McCuistion | L. A. Suggs |
E.R. Conner | H.B. Francis | Rev. Morris | R.M. Wynne |
Edna Gladney (née Edna Browning Kahly, January 22, 1886) joined the Texas Children's Home and Aid Society's board of directors in 1910. [3] By 1927, she had been named superintendent. She widened the scope of services to include the needs of unwed mothers and provided adoption services for their babies. In 1949 she convinced the board of directors to purchase a small hospital, the West Texas Maternity Home, so that these women could receive medical care throughout their pregnancies and have a private place to deliver their babies. The Texas Children's Home and Aid Society also operated a Baby Home where infants were cared for until they were adopted.
Gladney served as superintendent for 33 years. In recognition of her continued contribution, in 1950 the board of directors renamed the agency The Edna Gladney Home. She continued as director until 1959 when failing health forced her into semi-retirement. She died in Fort Worth in 1961. [4]
Ruby Lee Piester took over Gladney's post. Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, Gladney's maternity services programs expanded. In 1970, Gladney's campus in Fort Worth included an on-campus middle school and high school operated by the Fort Worth Independent School District, with dormitories, hospital facilities and a career-development program and apartment living center for older women. Services were intended to meet residents' physical and emotional needs with an emphasis on providing a non-judgmental environment where these women were encouraged to think positively about their future and that of their offspring.
During this period, the Home's residential facilities could accommodate up to 150 women, included a chapel, swimming pool, miniature golf course and provided both traditional school environments for middle school and high school students and a GED preparation and testing program. Career development and counseling services were available. The programs were licensed by the Texas Health and Human Services. All programs were offered free of charge to young women planning adoption.
Ruby Lee Piester joined the Home in 1960 as director of social services and was executive director from 1963 to 1983. During that time she supervised the placement of 7,800 babies. She and her husband did not have children. Piester died in 2003 and is buried at the Arwine Cemetery in Hurst, Texas.
In the 1970s, services were again expanded to include women living in the community in addition to residents. Believed to be the first of its kind in the country, Gladney offered a free crisis pregnancy telephone hotline in 1976. During her tenure, Piester pioneered an adoption program that identified adoptive parents for children born with special medical needs.
For the Home's Centennial Celebration in 1987, First Lady Barbara Bush, a Gladney "grandparent", celebrated the occasion with the agency as a special guest.
Michael J. McMahon was named president in 1988, the first adoptive parent to hold the post. In 1991, the board of directors officially changed the name of the institution to the Gladney Center for Adoption to reflect its expanded services.
During McMahon's tenure the center launched three new adoption programs: New Beginnings, which places children from Texas foster care with permanent families; the ABC program, Gladney's infant adoption program centered on meeting the needs of African American and biracial children; and its international adoption program in 1992. The first international "Gladney Baby" went home in March 1994 from Shanghai, China. Gladney celebrated its 1,000th international placement in 2002.
McMahon announced the sale of Gladney's campus on Hemphill St in Fort Worth to the Fort Worth Independent School District in June 1999. Groundbreaking for the new campus took place in October 2000. The agency moved to its present location in southwest Fort Worth in 2002. The campus includes a Visitor's Center and Adoption Museum, a counseling center, dormitory, recreational facilities, educational space, career counseling and administrative offices. By the time of his retirement in 2008, McMahon had supervised the placement of 6,674 children from the US and around the world into permanent families.
Frank R. Garrott was named chief operating officer in 2007, taking over day-to-day operations. Before becoming COO, Garrott was on the board of directors of the Gladney Fund from 1997 to 2006. In 2008, Garrott was named president and CEO. [5]
Like his predecessor, Garrott is a Gladney adoptive parent. After a career in business consulting and banking with PricewaterhouseCoopers, Citibank and Bank One, he decided to focus on Gladney. He serves on the board of the Christian Mission for the United Nations Community and recently[ when? ] joined the board of directors of the Joint Council on International Children's Services [6] and Children's Home Society of America.
Frank Garrott, who had an extraordinary record of success furthering the Gladney mission, announced his decision to retire in October 2017.
On December 1, 2017, the Gladney Center of Adoption announced the appointment of Mark Melson to be the institution's president and CEO. Gladney's board chairman Christopher Dezzi said Melson's presence as a current and established Gladney leader offered a unique opportunity for a seamless transition to the position. [7] Like his predecessors, Melson is also a Gladney adoptive parent.
In 2021, Gladney voiced support for adult adoptee access to their Original Birth Certificates in response to current proposed legislation in Texas.
2021 Board of Directors [8] |
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Mark McLeland, Chair |
Laura Wheat, Chair-Elect |
Christopher Dezzi, Past Chair |
Kenneth Heitner, Secretary |
James Unger, Treasurer |
Mark Melson, President |
Fernando Beltran |
Greg Castanias |
John Covington |
Mary Beth Dudley |
Carolyn Hood |
Robin Kochel |
Adrian Liddiard |
Kathleen Marsal |
Roger Metz |
Stephanie Perdue |
Stacey Reynolds |
Anne Reysa |
Ashley Stern |
John Thrailkill |
Jeremy Tilley |
Jay Tyler |
Beginning with Reverend Morris' commitment to finding homes, not just employment, for children, Gladney has had a history of advocacy. Edna Gladney led two major initiatives resulting in significant changes to adoption practices. In 1936, she convinced the Texas legislature to remove the word "illegitimate" from birth certificates. Her efforts led Texas to issue second birth certificates in the names of adoptive parents.
In 1951, she convinced the legislature to grant adopted children the same inheritance rights as biological children. She argued successfully that these children should be legally adopted rather than placed in long-term guardianship, as was the practice at the time. She became known within the Texas legislature as "that Gladney woman".
Piester also became well known for advocacy. She is credited with launching the first Child Welfare Advisory Board for Regional Licensing, which was established in Fort Worth for the State Department of Public Welfare. She represented the State of Texas on committees including the Texas Governor's Committee to Promote Adoption, the Governor's Commission for Children and Youth, the State Advisory Committee on Child Care Facilities and the Texas Association of Licensed Maternity and Adoption Services. [9]
In 1980, Piester co-founded the National Committee for Adoption (NCFA, now the National Council for Adoption) to focus on adoption advocacy. Despite opposition from adoption advocates across the country, a Draft Model State Adoption Act was published in February 1980 that would permit adoption records to be opened without regard to promises of privacy or confidentiality. NCFA's first official campaign worked to revise the law to better serve all parties.
The Gladney Center supported the Texas Voluntary Registry, which enables adult adopted children and birth families to make contact, or "match", when both parties enroll in the registry.
After an MGM publicist and his wife adopted a child from the Texas Children's Home and Aid Society he presented Mrs. Gladney's life story to then head of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Louis Mayer. Her life's work was the foundation for the 1941 film, Blossoms in the Dust . Greer Garson played Gladney and Walter Pidgeon played her husband Sam. Blossoms in the Dust was in the top ten films of 1941 and was nominated for four Academy Awards — Best Picture, Best Actress, Color Cinematography and Color Interior Decoration, winning the Oscar for Color Interior Decoration. Gladney was paid $5,000 for story rights, which she donated to the society.
In 1953, she appeared on the television show This Is Your Life , where she was honored for a career that oversaw the permanent placement of more than 10,000 children. [10] Texas Christian University, in Fort Worth, granted her an honorary Doctor of Laws degree in 1957. [11]
The National Council for Adoption named its Washington, D.C., headquarters after Piester (named the Ruby Lee Piester Center) in 1995. The then Texas Governor George W. Bush asked her to serve on a special committee to improve the Texas foster care system, and she was inducted into the Texas Women's Hall of Fame. [12]
In April 1991, Piester was inducted into the Adoption Hall of Fame by the National Committee for Adoption (now NCFA) and honored for 35 years of dedication to the adoption cause. [13]
Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison of Texas nominated McMahon for the Angels in Adoption award in 2008. The Congressional Coalition on Adoption Institute (CCAI) [14] honored him at an awards ceremony in Washington, D.C., on September 16, 2008.
In 2007, the Gladney Center for Adoption was among the first US adoption agencies accredited by the Council on Adoption as a "Hague-compliant" agency. The Hague Convention [15] protects against unethical, unlawful and inhumane adoption practices among adoption providers by establishing a set of standards for countries involved in international adoption.
The National Council for Adoption inducted the Gladney Center into its Adoption Hall of Fame in 2012. [16]
Reverend Morris was known as "the man with the basket". Reportedly, local railroad officials provided him with free rail passes. Gladney placed milk bottles in local retail shops for donations.
The first Gladney Auxiliary was formed in 1952 in Houston. The Dallas Auxiliary was established in 1953 and together these organizations raised a $600,000 endowment. The Fort Worth Auxiliary was formed in 1964 and held its first fundraiser, the Blossoms in the Dust Luncheon, in 1965. The 47th Luncheon was held in 2011. [17] Over time, the Auxiliaries evolved to provide volunteers, fundraising and support to Gladney adoptive families and were later renamed Gladney Family Associations. Today, there are 18 Gladney Family Associations across the US.
The Gladney Fund was established in 1992 to raise and manage funds. In 1999, a group of volunteers hosted the inaugural Gladney Cup charity golf event at Colonial Country Club, the Cup's home course. Since that time, six events have been hosted at U.S. Open golf courses throughout the US.
In 2019, the Gladney Center reported total revenue of $9,973,000, with $2,026,000 of that revenue contributed by its endowment and $4,984,000 from adoption fees. Its expenses totalled $9,859,000, including $840,000 spent on fundraising and $4,817,000 on adoption programs. At the end of 2019, it reported assets totalling $12,208,000. As of August 31, 2019, the Gladney Center reported its endowment has a value of more than $24,000,000. [18]
In December 2019, the Gladney Center purchased adoption.com and its assets, including "more than 900 adoption-related URLs, 75 adoption-related sites, two adoption apps and numerous social media sites." [19] The founder of adoption.com, Nathan Gwilliam, will become a vice president and member of the Gladney executive team as part of the transaction.
Gladney provides adoption programs, maternity services, home study services, preparation and training for adoptive families, counseling and support, adoption education and advocacy and humanitarian aid.
Blossoms in the Dust is a 1941 American biographical drama film directed by Mervyn LeRoy and starring Greer Garson, Walter Pidgeon, Felix Bressart, Marsha Hunt, Fay Holden and Samuel S. Hinds. It tells the story of Edna Gladney, who helped orphaned children find homes and began a campaign to remove the word "illegitimate" from Texas birth certificates, despite the opposition of "good" citizens. The screenplay was by Anita Loos, with a story by Ralph Wheelwright. Some of the important aspects of her life fictionalized in the film are the fact that it was Edna herself who was born out of wedlock; she and Sam eloped on the eve of her marriage to someone else, and they had much more time together before his death than given them in the film.
Edna Browning Kahly Gladney was an early campaigner for children's rights and better living conditions for disadvantaged children.
Disruption is ending an adoption. While technically an adoption is disrupted only when it is abandoned by the adopting parent or parents before it is legally completed, in practice the term is used for all adoptions that are ended. It is usually initiated by the parents via a court petition, much like a divorce, to which it is analogous.
More adoptions occur in California each year than any other state. There is domestic adoption, international adoption, step parent adoption and adult adoption.
Vanessa Diane Gilmore is a former United States district judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas. She was appointed to this position by President Bill Clinton in 1994. At that time, she was the youngest sitting federal judge in the United States. She was also the first graduate of the University of Houston to be appointed to the federal bench.
Beulah George "Georgia" Tann was an American social worker and child trafficker who operated the Tennessee Children's Home Society, an unlicensed adoption agency in Memphis, Tennessee. Tann used the home as a front for her black market baby adoption scheme from the 1920s to 1950. Young children were kidnapped and then sold to wealthy families, abused, or—in some instances—murdered. A state investigation into numerous cases of adoption fraud led to the institution's closure in 1950. Tann died of cancer before the investigation made its findings public.
The Benevolent Society, founded by Edward Smith Hall in 1813, is Australia's first and oldest charity. The society is an independent, not-for-profit organization whose main goals include helping families, older Australians and people with disabilities.
The National Association of Women in Construction (NAWIC) is a professional association for women in the field of construction. The purpose of the association is to support women in construction through networking, professional education, and mentorship. Its professional staff is based in Fort Worth, Texas.
DePelchin Children's Center, founded in 1892 in Houston, Texas, is a nonprofit organization focused on supporting and sustaining children and the families who care for them. DePelchin provides a range of services for children and families — it is an accredited foster care and adoption agency, and it also provides residential treatment for youth in foster care, as well as serving youth who are about to age out of foster care or have recently aged out of foster care. DePelchin’s services also include counseling, parenting classes, and other services focused on protecting children and keeping families strong. The center continues to be recognized at the state and federal level for cutting-edge programs, including a federal grant as a leading child trauma expert in Texas.
Pamela Cooper-White is the Christiane Brooks Johnson Professor Emerita and Dean Emerita of Psychology and Religion at Union Theological Seminary in New York.
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Catholic Guardian Services (CGS) is a human services non-profit organization sponsored by the Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese of New York with programs to help members of the disadvantaged population in the New York metropolitan area.
Sandy Ingraham is a current social policy consultant and attorney at Ingraham & Associates law firm in McLoud, Oklahoma. Ingraham is a former lobbyist at the Oklahoma State Capitol for Neighborhood Services Organization and has worked on programs such as SoonerStart and writes the annual data book Kids Count. She was inducted into the Oklahoma Women's Hall of Fame in 1996 for her advocacy work and achievements.
Maine Children's Home (MCH) (also known as Maine Children's Home for Little Wanderers) is a nonprofit agency in Waterville, Maine, that provides education, counseling, adoption, day care, and early childhood education services for pregnant teens and teen parents. Founded as an orphanage in 1899 and incorporated as the Maine Children's Home Society in 1901, it began dealing solely with adoptions in 1915. It merged with the Maine branch of The Home for Little Wanderers of Massachusetts in 1962, creating the Maine Children's Home for Little Wanderers. In 1973 it introduced an "alternative" high school program for pregnant teens and teen parents.
Ruby Lee Piester was an American social worker and advocate for adoption rights.
Lily Nie is the founder of Chinese Children Adoption International, which has overseen the international adoptions of over 10,160 Chinese children. She was inducted into the Colorado Women's Hall of Fame in 2008.
The Commission of the Yellow Rose of Texas, commonly referred to as the Yellow Rose of Texas, is an honorary commission conferred by the Governor of Texas to Texas women for exceptional community service.
Birth mothers in South Korea (international adoption) refers to the group of biological mothers whose children were placed for adoption in South Korea's international adoption practice. The decades-long phenomenon of international adoption in South Korea began after the Korean War. In the years since the war, South Korea has become the largest and longest provider of children placed for international adoption, with 165,944 recorded Korean adoptees living in 14 countries, primarily in North America and Western Europe, as of 2014.
Spence-Chapin Services to Families and Children is a New York-based licensed and Hague-accredited non-profit providing adoption services, which includes the continuum of counseling and support services to members of the adoption triad: birth parents, adoptive families, and adoptees. They provide interim care for infants as the biological parents make a plan for the child's future, and also specialize in the adoption of older children, sibling groups and children with special needs.
The Milford Industrial Home, formerly called Nebraska Maternity Home, was an institution in Milford, Nebraska, which housed unmarried pregnant women. For a while it was the only such institution in the country. It was founded by an act of the Nebraska Legislature in 1887, and the first woman was admitted in 1889. The women were under strict rules, and were encouraged to place their babies for adoption. They stayed there, usually under court order, for a period of a year. The home closed in 1954; it is estimated that over 4,000 babies were born there.
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