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  1. 4 Φεβ 2022 · Segregated Young Men's Reformatories in Maryland during the Great Depression. The Maryland Training School for Boys (1850) and the House of Reformation and Instruction for Colored Boys (1890) existed as segregated reformatories until 1960.

  2. The Victor Cullen Center (VCC) traces its origins to 1907 when it was built and originally named Hilltop State Hospital. The facility was the first state-funded tuberculosis sanatorium in Maryland. In 1965, the facility became a reform school for boys.

  3. In 1918, the facility changed its name again to the Maryland Training School for Boys. That name remained for 67 years until the facility adopted its current name in 1985. CHS is named after a former Baltimore County Sheriff who led a distinguished law enforcement career and died in 1984.

  4. The images below are from The History of Boys, a register that recorded information about boys admitted to the State Reform School (later renamed the Lyman School for Boys) during the years 1856 and 1857. The first “history” connects the student and his family to slavery and the Underground Railroad, and the second provides details of the ...

  5. Photo by Diane F. Evartt. Charles H. Hickey, Jr. School. House of Refuge, 1850-1910. Maryland School for Boys, 1910-18. Maryland Training School for Boys, 1918-22. State Department of Education, Maryland Training School for Boys, 1922-43.

  6. 14 Απρ 2019 · What was long referred to as the Boys’ Village of Maryland began in the 1870s, established in 1870, according to the Maryland Historical Trust, as “one of the earliest and largest juvenile detention and reformation centers” when created as the “House of Reformation and Instruction for Colored Boys.”

  7. The Baltimore Manual Labor School for indigent boys, also known as the Arbutus Farm School, was established in 1841. The school emerged from of a larger social movement developing in urban Victorian society at the time.

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