‘Home Children:’ Don Cherry had personal connection to honoured children’s group
2014/08/02 2 Comments
One of the relatively less known stories in Canadian history (the Government did do a relatively minor commemoration when I was at CIC and the speech by Senator Gerry St. Germain, a former home child, was particularly moving):
About 118,000 British children — one was Cherry’s maternal grandfather and war vet, Richard Palamountain — were shipped to Canada between 1869 and 1948 to work as indentured farm hands and domestic servants.
The abuses many suffered in Canada were horrific. One of them, Arthur Clarkson, who arrived as a nine year old, was horsewhipped and made to live in an unheated barn, almost costing him his frostbitten lower limbs.
“It’s really heartbreaking to hear some of the stories. These kids were actually slaves,” Cherry told The Canadian Press.
“They had to sign something for so many years and most of them didn’t know what they were signing.”
Almost every one of the home children in Canada at the time — about 10,000 — signed up to serve during the Great War that began 100 years ago, including Cherry’s grandpa. More than one-thousand died in action, most at the bloody battle at Vimy Ridge. Many had no one to mourn them. Others died without notification to their relatives.
Don Cherry had personal connection to honoured children’s group.
