Berachah Home (Arlington, Tex.)
Biographical notes:
The Berachah Home was established in Arlington, Texas, on May 14, 1903, by the Rev. J.T. Upchurch and his wife, Maggie Mae, as the Berachah Industrial Home for the Redemption of Erring Girls. It was operated under various names as an establishment for homeless, usually pregnant girls, in part by the Berachah Society in Dallas as part of the Nazarene Church. The Home closed in 1935, but was reopened later that year by the Upchurch's daughter, Allie Mae, and her husband, Frank Wiese, as the Berachah Child Institute. The Institute ceased operation in 1942. The University of Texas at Arlington purchased the property in 1963.
From the description of Collection, 1901-1985. (University of Texas at Arlington). WorldCat record id: 19831644
The Berachah Home was established on Rescue Hill on South Cooper Street in Arlington, Texas, May 14, 1903. 1
Reverend James Tony (J.T.) Upchurch, the Home's founder, initially established the Berachah Rescue Society in Waco, Texas, in 1894 for the purpose of redeeming and aiding prostitutes and other "fallen" women. After some success, he and his wife Maggie Mae moved to the Oak Cliff area of Dallas, Texas, in 1903 to continue the "mission" in Oak Cliff's slum areas. One newspaper account contends he was "driven away [from Waco] by angry fellow Methodist church members who opposed his missionary work with prostitutes." 2
A trip to Arlington resulted in the purchase of the original twenty-seven acres of land for the establishment of the Berachah Home for homeless, usually pregnant, girls. These girls came from Texas and the surrounding states to have their babies and learn to care for themselves. Adoption was not allowed as Reverend Upchurch believed mothers and children should not be separated.
During the next thirty-two years, the Home expanded to include forty more acres, purchased in 1928, a hospital/clinic, nursery, dormitory, dormitory and dining room named Hammil Hall, printing shop, handkerchief factory, chapel, office building, schoolhouse, auditorium, barn, and a cemetery.
The girls were kept busy working in the printing shop, gardening, operating the handkerchief factory, teaching at the school, and working at the hospital/clinic.
The Home was funded by Dallas-Fort Worth area businessmen. It was primarily for the contributors that Reverend Upchurch published The Purity Journal, to keep them informed about the Home's affairs.
The Home closed in 1935 for reasons not clearly known, but perhaps due to competition from the Edna Gladney Home in Fort Worth, or because of Reverend Upchurch's poor health. It was reopened later that year as an orphanage, the Berachah Child Institute, by Reverend Upchurch's daughter Allie Mae and her husband, Reverend Frank Wiese. In 1942 the property was purchased by the Christian Missionary Alliance. Correspondence in Box 1, Folder 3 indicates Reverend Wiese attempted to get the Dallas Church of the Nazarene to take over the Berachah Child Institute in 1941, but the offer was rejected. The University of Texas at Arlington purchased the property in 1963 and is the current owner.
On March 7, 1981, an historical marker was erected at the cemetery site, the only surviving structure on Rescue Hill.
Notes:
1 The Berachah Home was originally named the Berachah Industrial Home because of the handkerchief factory operated on the site.
2 Arlington Citizen-Journal, 21 January 1981, Section C, p. 1. Box 1, Folder 2.
Sources:
Arlington Citizen-Journal . 21 January 1981. Box 1, Folder 2.
Dallas Times Herald . 8 March 1981. Box 1, Folder 2.
Fort Worth Star-Telegram . 22 February 1981. Box 1, Folder 2.
Manion, Lynn and Jan Dolph. A Short History of the Berachah Home and Berachah Cemetery, Arlington, Texas. Paper presented to The University of Texas at Arlington, City and Regional Planning 5391, 1979. Box 1, Folder 1.
From the guide to the Berachah Home Collection AR280., 1901-1985, (Special Collections, The University of Texas at Arlington Library)
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Subjects:
- Children
- Children
- Church work with women
- Church work with women
- Church work with women
- Female juvenile delinquents
- Female juvenile delinquents
- Social work with women
- Social work with women
- Women
- Women
Occupations:
Places:
- Texas--Arlington (as recorded)
- Berachah Cemetery (Arlington, Tex.) (as recorded)