Description of book
In 1959 David Hill’s mother – a poor single parent living in England – reluctantly decided to send her sons to Fairbridge Farm School in New South Wales where, she was led to believe, they would have a good education and a better life.
David was lucky – his mother was able to follow him out to Australia – but for most children, the reality was shockingly different. From 1938 to 1974 thousands of parents were persuaded to sign over legal guardianship of their children to Fairbridge to solve the problem of child poverty in Britain while populating the colony. Now many of those children have decided to speak out. Physical and sexual abuse was not uncommon. Loneliness was rife. Food was often inedible. The standard of education was appalling.
Here, for the first time, is the story of the lives of the Fairbridge children, from the bizarre luxury of the voyage out to Australia to the harsh reality of the first days there; from the crushing daily
routine to stolen moments of freedom and the struggle that defined life after leaving the school. This remarkable book is both a tribute to the children who were betrayed by an ideal that went terribly awry and a compelling account of an extraordinary episode in Australian–British History.
Reviews
‘This book is a heartbreaker you can’t put down, a calmly narrated and impeccably researched tale of children from poor British families transported to Australia not in the eighteenth but in the twentieth century; of their bewildered and graphic adventures under the emotional and physical parsimony of the Fairbridge Farm School ... The reader yearns to reach out to the children who, say, are given guns to shoot rabbits and use them to suicide instead. For Hill to be able to detail the story in such clinical detail is itself a triumph of spirit and craft and humane forgiveness.’ TOM KENEALLY
‘This is the story of upper-crust do-gooders who did bad: dreaming of Empire, they sent the children of the poor to a world without love. David Hill amasses evidence of the brutality and slavery to which they turned eyes blinded by their own righteousness. A compelling and moving account of how institutional cruelty was covered up by secrecy and wishful thinking.’ GEOFFREY ROBERTSON QC
“This is the story of a different stolen generation...”Sun Herald 3/6/07
“David Hill amasses evidence of the brutality and slavery of children by adults whose eyes were blinded by their own ineptness and corruption. Even do gooders failed to recongise institutional cruelty covered up by secrecy and wishful thinking.” The Weekly 19/5/07
“Written with compassion and authority, this is an intimate and disturbing account of the maltreatment of thousands of children over decades.” Independent weekly. 19/5/07
“...society has not invented a reliable substitute for a loving, caring, nuturing, protecting parent.” SMH 28/4/07
“Interspersed between the testimony of former child-migrants, Hill’s voice is remarkably restrained. He does not cry out but allows the truth to damn the institution and the individuals who ruined the lives of innocent children.” The Age 19/5/07
Product Details
Imprint:Random House Austral
Subject:Autobiography/Biography
Books by David Hill
1788
(Paperback)
FORGOTTEN CHILDREN
(Paperback)