Some interviews from the Bringing Them Home Oral History Project are available to listen to online in cases where interviewees have given their permission for this to happen. Other recordings and transcripts of interviews are available to in the Library. A number of interviews are subject to restricted access. For further information, please contact the National Library.
In this interview Ted Hampton speaks about his parents, who placed him at St. John's Hostel in Alice Springs in 1950 when he was 12 years old in order to get an education. He attended Hartley Street School for three years and then moved to St. Francis House in Adelaide from 1953 to 1956.
Ted Hampton briefly describes St John's Hostel and then talks about living conditions at St. Francis House. After many construction jobs around Central Australia, Hampton became a vocational officer. He talks about his wife, an Arrente woman and their children, and expresses his opinions on the policy of child removal. At time of this interview, Hampton was a caseworker with Link-Up.
The interview is available to listen to online. A full transcript can also be requested. No timed summary is available.
We do not currently have any records linked to this organisation, but records may exist. The Find & Connect Support Service can help people who lived in orphanages and children's institutions look for their records.
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The Find & Connect Support Service can help people who lived in orphanages and children's institutions look for their records.
Last updated:
13 May 2022
Cite this: http://www.findandconnect.gov.au/guide/nt/YE00264
First published by the Find & Connect Web Resource Project for the Commonwealth of Australia, 2011
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