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  1. Jun 4, 2019 · A butter box (Ideal Maternity Home Survivors) The children they couldn't sell were burned in the Home's furnace or buried in the backyard of the property. They are also said to have separated and created siblings and twins according to what their customers wanted.

  2. Butterbox Babies is a film adapted from the book Butterbox Babies by Bette L. Cahill, which is based on the true story of the Ideal Maternity Home, a home for unwed pregnant mothers, during the Great Depression and Second World War.

  3. The Butterbox Babies - Horrific Canadian Child Rights Story. Survivors of dark episode in Canada's history trace their past. By SUSAN K. LIVIO, STATEHOUSE BUREAU. Ilene Seifer Steinhauer as an infant at The Ideal Maternity Home and as an adult today (right below).

  4. Mar 14, 2021 · From the horrible practice of baby farming to the exposition that snared the Youngs in their own twisted web of lies & greed, here’s a chilling account of the midwife who starved & killed hundreds of children and buried their bodies in small wooden grocery boxes typically used for dairy products, hence the term “Butterbox Babies”.

  5. The adoptees came from the Ideal Maternity Home, an illegally run home for unwed mothers in the rural east Canadian province of Nova Scotia, where many babies were sold on the black market to desperate couples from New York and New Jersey in the 1930s and '40s.

  6. Dec 3, 2016 · The half-metre pine grocery crates served as unmarked wooden coffins for infants who died at the Ideal Maternity Home in East Chester, N.S., and were buried on the property and at a cemetery...

  7. Feb 2, 2022 · The mysterious tragedy of the Butterbox Babies is a story of deceit, greed, and murder. Even now, nearly 100 years later, what happened at the Ideal Maternity Home in East Chester, Nova Scotia still horrifies and baffles historians and the descendants of those involved.

  8. Nov 23, 2021 · These babies were fed molasses and water to starve them. The babies died within a few weeks. And their bodies were placed in delivery wooden boxes from the local creamery with a label,...

  9. The title of Bette Cahill's book, Butterbox Babies is a reference to the "butter boxes," wooden grocery crates from a local dairy used as coffins for the babies killed at the Ideal Maternity Home. [4] The 1995 film Butterbox Babies was adapted from the book. [5]

  10. www.evidencelockerpodcast.com › transcripts › transcript-56-the-butterbox-babiesTranscript: 56. The Butterbox Babies | Canada

    In the spring of 1935, Eva Nieforth of Nova Scotia was in love with a young man called Walter. When she found out she was pregnant, they had to keep it a secret, as it was still very much a scandal to have a baby out of wedlock in Canada in the 1930s. Unmarried and alone, Eva did not have many options.

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