Showing posts with label Roth Margaret (1893-1936). Show all posts
Showing posts with label Roth Margaret (1893-1936). Show all posts

Monday, May 4, 2026

Margaret Roth (1893-1936) - Secretary of Berry Street Babies' Home

In my last post (read it here) I looked at the way foundlings or abandoned babies were named, and many of these little ones ended up at the Berry Street Babies' Home. Miss Margaret Roth was the secretary of this organization from 1928 until 1936, I thought it was an interesting role and I'd find out more about her and her family.

Her father, Louis Roth was born in Blankenese, in Germany, around 1860. He migrated to South Australia, and was naturalized there in September 1884; his occupation was on his naturalization papers was listed as a bookbinder. (1)  By March 1886, Louis had moved to Sale in Victoria and established himself as a Hairdresser and Perfumer in Raymond Street and advertised  his services in the local paper Haircutting in English, French, and German styles most carefully done. Shaving easily executed with agreeable refreshment. Shampooing, especially in hot weather, much recommended. (2) 


Louis the hairdresser
Gippsland Times, March 10, 1886 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article62271556

Two years later, the entrepreneurial Louis had branched out into selling stationery, tobacco, soaps and gifts and in the 1890s he had renamed his shop -  Louis Roth’s Fancy Goods Emporium. In December 1896, in an advertorial the local paper reported that - Mr Louis Roth, who has landed his importations of novelties from Germany and England, announces that he will keep his premises open until 10 o'clock every night up till Christmas. The display of Christmas goods at Mr Roth's is certainly a beautiful one(3)


Louis' Fancy Goods Emporium
Gippsland Mercury, April 3, 1894 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article268336575

On March 11, 1890 Louis married 21 year-old Marguerite Elizabeth Bisson at the Lutheran Church in Melbourne, with the service conducted  by the Reverend Herman Herlitz; the occupation on his  marriage certificate was a bookseller. (4) Marguerite, who arrived in Melbourne on the Austral in 1888, had been born on November 14, 1868 in Liverpool in England, the daughter of Henri Charles  Bisson, a boat builder, and his wife Elizabeth;  Henri had been born at St Helier, on the island of Jersey. Marguerite had been baptized at  Our Lady of Reconciliation de La Salette, Liverpool, a Catholic Church, so it is interesting that she was married in a Lutheran Church. (5)

Louis and Margaret (as she was also called) had five children -  Margaret born in February 1893 in Fitzroy; Louis less than a year later in December 1893, in Sale; Ida, in 1896 in Sale; Nestor, 1898 in Sale and Freida Elsa, born in 1900 in  St Kilda. (6) During the family’s time in Sale, Louis was the bandmaster of the local German band; donated prizes to the pupils at the Wesleyan Methodist Sunday School; stood unsuccessfully for the local Council in 1895; and in 1897 proved his patriotism by presenting all his juvenile patrons in the hairdressing salon with a handsome gift to commemorate Queen Victoria’s Diamond Jubilee.  In 1900, Louis sold the business and the family moved to Melbourne. (7)

In 1903, the Electoral Rolls show that he was a bookseller in Carlton; in 1906, still in Carton, a stationer; in 1909 the Roths were living in Elsternwick and he was a commercial traveller and later an agent; by 1917 they had moved to Surrey Hills and Louis’ occupation was a Manufacturer’s Agent. (8) Louis died on September 27, 1922 at the age of 62 at his  home Maison Louie, 2 Grenville Street, Hampton.  His probate papers list yet another occupation, that of  leather manufacturer. (9)


Louis' obituary
Gippsland Times, October 2, 1922 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article62600012

His wife Margaret died  on August 18, 1946, also at Maison Louis, and her death notice said she was the loving gran of five. Her grandchildren were Margaret, Pamela and Nestor Roth, the children of her son Nestor; Lionel Glenn, the son of Ida and her husband, James Glenn and Gelda Watson, the daughter of Elsa and her husband, Francis John Watson. (10)

Now to their eldest daughter, Margaret, who was born on February 23, 1893 in Fitzroy.  (11) As noted in the Electoral Rolls, Margaret had a few administrative jobs such as a book-keeper and a clerk, and in 1915 had a short stint as a junior teacher; however in 1928 she became the Secretary of the Berry Street Babies’ Home also known as the Foundling Home. (12) Established in 1877 as the Victorian Infant Asylum, in 1881 it moved to a building in Berry Street in East Melbourne.  In 1913, they purchased a property in Beaconsfield, and operated a second facility there.  Berry Street looked after abandoned babies and babies whose mother had died or could no longer care for them as well as helping single mothers and training mother craft nurses. It was a charity entirely financed  through fundraising  and donations. (13)

The role of the Secretary was interesting and varied and Margaret often appeared in newspaper reports connected to the activities of the Babies' Home, for instance promoting their annual appeal for eggs or talking about children available for adoption. (14) One of her duties was to interview prospective parents who wanted to adopt the babies and The Herald reported in 1929 that Never a day passes without the honorary secretary, Miss Margaret Roth, interviewing someone who is keen on adopting a baby. (15)

In an interview in The Herald in 1933, Margaret explained further the adoption process -

"The adoption is really the simplest section of our work," continued Miss Roth, "I think there is an affinity between prospective foster parents and the children. Frequently, I have watched a woman walk into our nursery, and without a moment's hesitation say, "There is the baby I have been waiting for!" "Often that particular child is one of the most unattractive in our eyes!"

"When our babies visit the Royal Show each year, they sometimes find foster parents among the crowds that file past our stand. Then sometimes a woman will walk up to the nurse, saying, "Here is Arthur. Do you remember, I adopted him three years ago at the Show?"

"But our system of adoption is not as haphazard as it sounds. Foster parents are compelled to produce two testimonials - one from a clergyman or a doctor, the other from some prominent citizen. Then we visit their homes, after which there is no interference from hospital authorities." (16)

There was another interesting interview with Margaret published in 1934, which highlights the sad circumstances some little children found themselves in, but also shows how resilient children can be.
 
Two Little Orphan Twins In Need of a Home.
Who has a home for two little orphan twins, Margaret and Kathleen, aged 5? Margaret and Kathleen were taken to Berry Street Foundling Home when they were babies. Foster parents were found for them, and in their care they were kept until December, when the adopting mother died. Now they are back at the Foundling Hospital and Infants’ Home at Beaconsfield. Although they are perfectly happy, the secretary (Miss Margaret Roth) feels that, as they have been used to home life, it is advisable for them to be placed in a private home.

Both children are auburn haired, bright eyed and interested in every thing. Slightly bigger than Margaret, Kathleen is a sturdy youngster with a roundish face and soft hair with a slight wave. Margaret’s hair is darker with a decided wave. She has a smaller oval face which looks up wistfully and keenly.

"Both children are extremely attached to each other. They are loyal, affectionate, and most intelligent,” said Miss Roth. “They are both going to school and are in the kindergarten. The reports we have received from the school are that they are doing well and are very popular. We are most anxious to find homes for them, but would prefer the two to be taken into the one home, as I am afraid they would fret for each other’s company,” continued Miss Roth.

Persons interested should apply to Miss Roth at the Berry Street Found ling Home, East Melbourne, for particulars.
(17)


Margaret and Kathleen, the orphan twins. 
Sun News-Pictorial, March 6, 1934 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article276648198

Margaret retired from the role in March 1936, due to ill health and died at the age of only 43 on September 8, 1936. (18) She is buried with her parents in a double grave in the Baptist section at the Brighton General Cemetery.  Interesting that they are buried in that section as Margaret (the mother) was baptized as a Catholic; she and Louis were married in a Lutheran Church and Margaret, (the daughter) was baptized Lutheran, but was received into the Anglican Church at St Peters Eastern Hill in Melbourne at the age of 33. (19) Clearly a very ecumenical family.

Before we finish we will look at the four other children of Louis and Margaret Roth. Louis Carl, the second child, was born on December 4, 1893, in Sale, and is commemorated on the family headstone, having died during World War One. Captain Louis Carl Roth, M.C., served with the 2nd Australian Pioneer Battalion and Died of Wounds on October 6, 1918. This was his short obituary -
Captain Louis Charles Roth, M.C., of the 2nd Pioneer Battalion, died in France on October 6. Captain Roth was born in 1894, and in peace time had been 2nd Lieutenant in the 46th Senior Cadets, Elsternwick. He was also in the Brighton Rifles. Captain Roth was twice mentioned by Sir Douglas Haig in despatches. He was a native of Sale, and served through the Gallipoli campaign, was wounded at Armentieres in 1916, and received shell shock at Ballecourt last May. He is an old Caulfield Grammarian and a past student of the Working Men's College. His Military Cross was gazetted last New Year's Day. (20)


Captain Louis Roth (1894-1918)
Image: Australian War Memorial  Photograph H06637


Margaret was clearly close to her brother and as late as 1933, fifteen years after his death, she inserted this In Memoriam notice for him, signed as Margey.
The Argus, October 6, 1933 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article11698864


Ida was the third child on the family, born May 5, 1896 in Sale. She attended Melbourne High School and became a teacher starting her career in March 1914 at Elsternwick State School; she had various other appointments, including a stint at Clydebank, near her birthplace of Sale, and then resigned in April 1926 as she got married to James Martin Glenn; they had the one son, Lionel. Ida returned to the Education Department for a few years during World War Two, when married women were needed as teachers as so many men had enlisted.  Ida died December 16, 1981 and James September 2, 1972 and they are buried in the family grave with her parents and her sister Margaret.  (21)

Nestor was born on February 9, 1898 in Sale. He married Doris Margaret Werrett in 1924 and they had three children, Margaret, Pamela and Nesta.  Nestor, who was an accountant,  died on April 2, 1956 and is buried at Box Hill Cemetery, with his wife Doris, who died in 1977. (22) 

The last child of Louis and Margaret Roth was Frieda Elsa, born July 29, 1900 in  St Kilda. Elsa, as she was called, attended University High School, and began a teaching career with the Education Department in March 1919. (23) She was an actress involved with the Green and Tan Dramatic Club, an amateur organisation consisting entirely of old pupils or members of the staff of the University High School, the colors of which are green and tan, hence the name. (24) One review of their performances noted that Miss Elsa Roth, as Lady Tonbridge, exhibited fine dramatic feeling. (25) 

Elsa resigned in August 1923 to marry Francis John Watson, M.A., M.Sc., who became the head  of the Chemistry Department at Melbourne Technical College.  They had the one daughter, Gelda Frieda. Francis died in October 1945, and Elsa (who had remarried to Lowe Martin Hanstein) died on July 2, 1987, and was cremated at Springvale. Their daughter, Gelda, who died in 2021, is buried in the Roth family grave with her grandparents and her two aunts - Margaret and Ida.  (26)


Footnotes
(1) Naturalization papers at the National Archives of Australia  https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=3182794
(2) Gippsland Times, March 10, 1886, see here. 
(3) Examples of his advertisements - Gippsland Times, April 16, 1888, see here; Gippsland Times, April 2, 1894, see hereGippsland Mercury, April 3, 1894, see hereGippsland Times, December 14, 1896, see here.
(4) Roth/Bisson marriage certificate. 
(5) Unassisted passenger lists (1852-1923) at the Public Records Office of Victoria, VPRS 947; Marguerite's baptism record from Ancestry.com. - Liverpool, England, Catholic Baptisms, 1741-1919 and the 1881 British Isles Census Index
(6) Index to the Victorian Births, Deaths and Marriages.
(7) Gippsland Times, January 17, 1895, see here Gippsland Mercury, May 22, 1894, see hereGippsland Times, August 12, 1895, see hereGippsland Times, June 3, 1887, see here. Clearing sale -Gippsland Times, May 24, 1900, see here.
(8) Electoral Rolls on Ancestry.com
(9) Louis - death notice - The Argus, September 29, 1922, see here; Will and Probates papers at the Public Records Office of Victoria, VPRS 7591.
(10) Margaret - death notice - The Argus,  August 19, 1946, see here.  
(11) Teacher Record Books at Public Records Office of Victoria, VPRS 13579.
(12) Electoral Rolls on Ancestry.com; This is the first reference I can find of Margaret being Secretary - The Age, July 12, 1928, see here.
(14) The Herald, October 25, 1928, see here.
(15) The Herald, November 30, 1929, see here.
(16) The Herald, July 25, 1933, see here.
(17) Sun News-Pictorial, March 6, 1934, see here
(18) Margaret - Death notice - The Age, September 9, 1936, see here; Obituary - The Age, September 9, 1936, see here
(19) Margaret - Brighton Cemetorians database, https://www.brightoncemetorians.org.au/; From Ancestry.com -  Victoria, Australia, St. Peter's Eastern Hill, Baptisms, 1848-1915
(20) Louis - Attestation papers at the National Archives of Australia, see here  https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=11545851 ; 
Death notice - The Argus, November 30, 1918, see here; Obituary - The Herald, November 30, 1918, see here.
(21) Ida - Teacher Record Books at Public Records Office of Victoria, VPRS 13579;  Brighton Cemetorians database, https://www.brightoncemetorians.org.au/. Lionel is the only child of theirs listed in his grandmother's death notice - The Argus,  August 19, 1946, see here
(22) Nestor - death notice - The Argus, April 3, 1956, see here; Index to the Victorian Births, Deaths and Marriages; Electoral Rolls on Ancestry.com; Find a Grave - https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/123938728/nestor-roth 
(23) Elsa - Teacher Record Books at Public Records Office of Victoria, VPRS 13579.
(24) Hurstbridge Advertiser, June 20, 1924, see here; another mention of a performance -  The Argus, May 16, 1921, see here
(25) Hurstbridge Advertiser, June 20, 1924, see here
(26) Elsa - Teacher Record Books at Public Records Office of Victoria, VPRS 13579; The Herald, October 29, 1945, see here; The Argus, October 9, 1945, see here. SMCT database  - https://www.smct.org.au/ 
Brighton Cemetorians database, https://www.brightoncemetorians.org.au/ 
I can't find the date when Elsa married Lowe, but this is his and Elsa's death notice, which proves it - 


The Age, November 22, 1971, Page 16 from newspapers.com


The Age,  July 3, 1987, Page 24 from newspapers.com

Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Naming the Nameless - Abandoned Babies

This post looks at the interesting way that abandoned babies or foundlings were named and it all started because I came across this article in The Herald in February 1936, about a little baby girl being found in Beaconsfield Parade, St Kilda  - 

Blue-eyed ten days baby found under palms
In a babes-in-the-wood setting, a 10-days-old baby girl, well clothed and nourished, was found by a young man on the lawn beneath a palm tree on the western footpath of Beaconsfield Parade, St Kilda, a few yards from Fitzroy Street, at 9.30 a.m. today.

The young man, agitated over his discovery, stopped Mr and Mrs F. Coillet
(1) in Beaconsfield Parade and asked what he should do with his find. "My daughter and I stood watch over the baby while the men got a policeman, " Mrs Coillet said today. "I caught only a glimpse of a black head, and she didn't cry until the policeman picked her up. She was wrapped in a pink bunny-rug, and in the darkness looked like a paper parcel, lying just off the footpath on the grass. We had passed the spot - 100 yards from Fitzroy Street - 10 minutes earlier, and I don't think the baby could have been there then."

The baby was taken by Constable M. P. Vernon to the Berry Street Foundling Hospital, where little time was lost by Matron McGain in supplying the waif with a name. Taking Beaconsfield and Vernon as a basis, it was easy to evolve "Verna Field."

It is believed that the child was left beneath the palm only a little while before it was found. It was not in need of food and had not suffered from exposure. "Verna" has blue eyes and does not cry.

No home has been found yet for "John Nolan," who was discovered on the doorstep of the nurses home at the Police Hospital, St. Kilda Road, on August 30. He has grown into a fine healthy child in the months of waiting, the foundling hospital reported today. "Stephen Bell," the last waif taken to the hospital, found at the gate of the institution by a nurse on October 4, was reunited with his mother through police inquirie
s. (2)



Verna Field, the foundling baby, with Sister Mandeville-Halls at the Berry Street home today.
The Herald, February 14, 1936 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article244822295

The name of John Nolan, mentioned in the above article, came from the fact that the Police Hospital, where he was found,  was on the corner of Nolan Street and St Kilda Road.  Stephen Bell, who was found at the Berry Street Home gate, was probably named for the bell at the gate.

In 1922 the Weekly Times, reported on the Berry Street Babies' Home or Foundling Home, in East Melbourne, under the headline - Naming the Nameless - the article is partially transcribed below -

Naming the Nameless
[In] one of the spotless nurseries of the Foundling Home in Berry street, East Melbourne, there you will find babies in abundance, there are 33 of them at present. Every one of them seems anxious to
discover the good things that life holds for them. Some of them have only found the unhappy things so far.

To the Foundling Home come babies who have no real home. Abandoned on doorsteps, in public places, in parks, they find their way to the institution. When a mother dies, or is unable to care for the tiny newcomer, the child may, if necessary, find sanctuary there. Some, indeed, are born there, little nameless outcasts...

Many of the foundlings are anonymous gifts to the institution, and for these names must be found. Here is where the ingenuity of Matron A. Mowbray Flack, who is in charge, manifests itself....She chooses the names from the circumstances of the babe's discovery.

One laughing infant hails the stranger with a crow expressive of extreme good-fellowship. Blue-eyed and fluffy-haired, he lets you know that the world is a jolly old place after all. Yet he was found on an old verandah by a police constable and has seen his share of life in a courthouse. Therefore he has been named Bobby Court. So frail was he at first that for many weeks he lingered between life and death. But he was a sturdy little fighter, and now he howls for his favorite brand of baby's food as lustily as any.


One of the babies at the Foundling Home.
Weekly Times, September 2, 1922 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article224006459

Worthy of a Heroine
A demure young lady toys with her rattle a few cribs away. She was found on the doorstep of the Home last March. She is Dora March. Lorraine Palmer has a past worthy of a heroine of melodrama. She was picked up in Palmer street, East Melbourne, one dark, cold night, when the rain was beating down in sheets. The miserable clothes which covered her were drenched.

Matthew Door was found on the back doormat. Belle Lane was found at the tradesmen's entrance to the Home, which has a bell and is in a lane Albert East - well, everybody knows Albert street, East Melbourne. (3)


Another Foundling Home baby
Weekly Times, September 2, 1922   http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article224006450 


In November 1935, the Sun News-Pictorial reported on the naming of two abandoned babies -

Abandoned Babies Named
The seven-weeks-old baby girl, found on the Swanston Street steps of St. Paul's Cathedral on Monday night, has been named Pauline Flinders by the police, who have transferred the child to the Royal Park home.

Another girl of the same age was found abandoned on the steps of the Broadmeadows Foundling Hospital at 9.30 p.m. on Monday. The child has been called Noeline Auburn. The surname was inspired by the color of the baby's hair. (4)

It was a sad reality of life that in the days before the single parent benefit and with the stigma of having a child out of wedlock, that many women thought abandoning their baby was the best option; but there was some sympathy for these mothers; the Sun News-Pictorial reported in 1924 -

Too many babies! Abandoned Ones
Although policemen are not without soft spots in their hearts for the mother who abandons her baby, knowing that it is often the climax of a despairing struggle with circumstances, the order has gone forth that too many babes are being abandoned, and that fuller inquiries are to be made in all cases reported in future. (5)

Trying to find the mother was essential, as having just given birth, she may have needed medical attention; and also she may have changed her mind, after the event. Many of the mothers made an effort to leave their baby in a safe space, such as the Foundling Home or, in the following case, on the door step of the home of Mrs M.T. Weilant (6), of Dryburgh Street in West Melbourne. The following is from a report in The Age from July 1922, which was very sympathetic towards the mother - 

A Child Abandoned. Mother's sad plight
A story was unfolded in the Criminal Court yesterday concerning baby Wellington, who, barely a month old, wrapped in warm clothing and a rabbit fur coat, with a feeding bottle and tin of lactogen tucked beside him, was gently laid in the night on a strange doorstep in West Melbourne. The child set up a yell that caused the occupants of the house to pull aside the window blind and look out. They saw him, and with the assistance of another neighbor picked him up. That cry secured him simultaneously a home and shelter at the country's expense and provided the ground work for the defence of his unhappy mother, who was lurking in the shadows on the opposite side of the road, and who, immediately she saw her baby safely picked up, disappeared in the night.

The mother of the baby, Ivy Wellington, of Footscray, was charged with abandoning a child, under the age of two years. As the paper  reported  the Wellington family had fallen on evil times - her husband had left her and was an admitted criminal. Then Ivy, with a child two years old and this new-born infant boy to care for she became desperate. She had no means. She went to the East Melbourne home, but they would not take in the child. Fearing the infant must starve, she resorted to desperate measures. She pawned her boots, and bought a feeding bottle and a tin of lactogen. Placing these beside the child, wrapping it up warmly, she tramped to West Melbourne, and selecting a house in Dryburgh-street she placed the infant on the doorstop and went across the road to watch....then she saw the woman come out and lift the baby. Then satisfied the baby would be cared for she went away.

The Jury, after hearing the evidence quickly returned a verdict of not guilty. Sadly, after this Ivy was also charged with breaking and entering.  I have no information as to what happened to her baby and toddler, but it is a tragic story all round. (7)

In another case, from 1928, a mother gave her baby to a woman whom she probably perceived to be a motherly type - 

Mother of 12 fosters abandoned baby. Put In Her Arms In Street
While standing on the comer of Lennox and Victoria streets, Richmond, at about 10 p.m. on Friday, Mrs H. Lewis of Oak street Richmond, was approached by a young woman carrying a baby and a parcel. "Will you mind my baby and parcel for one minute? I have caught my husband with another woman opposite. I want to catch him," she said.

Mrs Lewis took the baby and parcel; and the woman ran down Lennox street, apparently in pursuit of a man and woman some distance away. About 50 yards away a car was waiting, and the woman jumped into this and was driven in the direction of Kew. Mrs Lewis took the baby to the police station. It was dressed in expensive clothes. The parcel contained a number of good clothes and a note saying "Be kind to Beryl."

The baby, which is well nourished, is a girl, about a fortnight old. Richmond police are anxious to communicate with the mother, who could be identified by Mrs Lewis. In the meantime Beryl is finding a happy home with Mrs Lewis, who is married, with 12 children. Her husband is out of work. (8)

In May 1938, a little girl was named after the two policeman - 

Foundling Baby named after Police Officers
A baby girl, two hours old, found in a shelter at the corner of Beaconsfield Parade and Pickle Street, South Melbourne, on Monday night and taken to the Berry Street Foundling Home by Detective Wight man and Plainclothes Constable Hillman, has been named May Wighthill. Hearing a faint cry in the shelter, a woman found the baby wrapped in a paper parcel. She weighs 6 lb. and, according to her nurse at the hospital, “has the loveliest blue eyes.” Efforts are being made to trace the mother. (9)


Little abandoned baby, May Wighthill
Sun News-Pictorial, May 4, 1938 http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article277676363

In two more examples - in 1934 a little girl found in Carlton was named Madeline Carlton, after the street and suburb where she was found. (10) Madeline Street was originally the northern extension of Swanston Street, from Victoria Street through Carlton to its intersection with Keppel Street. (11) In May 1949 a baby boy was found abandoned in Royal Park and taken to to Berry Street and he was named Charles, after Prince Charles, the new Royal baby, who was born in November 1948. (12) There could hardly have been a larger contrast in the circumstances of their birth, than foundling Charles and his namesake Prince Charles.

There are no winners in any of the many stories of abandoned babies -- the mother was desperate, the children were unwanted. The Berry Street Foundling Home was only for young babies and they had an uncertain future because as soon as the babies begin to toddle about, the time has come for them to go. Some of them are boarded, numbering 140 at present; some go to other institutions, and some are adopted. (13)

In a report in 1933 of the 56th Annual General Meeting of the Berry Street Babies' Home, the Secretary, Miss Margaret Roth (14) explained how the procedure for placing the babies worked -
"The adoption is really the simplest section of our work," continued Miss Roth, "I think there is an affinity between prospective foster parents and the children. Frequently, I have watched a woman walk into our nursery, and without a moment's hesitation say, "There is the baby I have been waiting for!" "Often that particular child is one of the most unattractive in our eyes!

"When our babies visit the Royal Show each year, they sometimes find foster parents among the crowds that file past our stand. Then sometimes a woman will walk up to the nurse, saying, "Here is Arthur. Do you remember, I adopted him three years ago at the Show?" 

"But our system of adoption is not as haphazard as it sounds. Foster parents are compelled to produce two testimonials - one from a clergyman or a doctor, the other from some prominent citizen. Then we visit their homes, after which there is no interference from hospital authorities."

"If a baby finds no foster parents for some reason, we try to board it out. In my opinion, this is more satisfactory in every way than leaving it in some Institution for the first 14 years of its life. Again we take the utmost care in the boarding-out system. Alter selecting the home, the members of the hospital committee visit it periodically to ensure the child is happy."
(15)

Miss Roth also said this about abandoned babies - 
"Foundlings occupy only a small percentage of the hospital cots. The last foundling, baby Constance, who was discovered in a city park was adopted before she had been in the home for three months. Another was left on the Tandara verandah with the note, "This is Leslie. Please be kind to him." (16) Tandara was Berry Street's Mothercraft Training School in East Melbourne.

I can only hope that Verna Field, John Nolan, Stephen Bell, Bobby Court, Dora March, Lorraine Palmer, Matthew Door, Belle Lane, Albert East, Pauline Flinders, Noeline Auburn, May Wighthill, Madeline Carlton and all the other abandoned babies like little Leslie, had a happy life. 

Footnotes
(1) Mr and Mrs Coilett were, I believe, Francis Hilaire Coilett, a carpenter, and Olga Beatrice Coilett, listed in the Electeral Rolls at  74 Patterson Street, Middle Park.
(2) The Herald, February 14, 1936, see here;  There is also a report of finding Verna in The Age, February 15, 1936, see here.
(3) Weekly Times, September 2, 1922, see here.
(4) Sun News-Pictorial, November 27, 1935, see here.
(5) Sun News-Pictorial, September 3, 1924, see here.
(6) Mrs M.T. Weilant, was Myrtle Frances Weilant, who lived at 38 Dryburgh Street, West Melbourne,  with her husband Fred, junior, who was a butcher. (Source: Electoral Rolls on Ancestry.com)
(7) The Age, July 18, 1922, see here.
(8) The Herald, January 3, 1928, see here. Other cases of babies abandoned in a safe place (or hopefully  a safe place) The Age, October 2, 1942, see here and The Argus, November 10, 1949, see here.
(9) Sun News-Pictorial, May 4, 1938, see here
(10) The Herald, April 12, 1934, see here.
(11) Carlton Community History Group http://www.cchg.asn.au/faq.html
(12) The Argus, May 11, 1949, see here.
(13) Weekly Times, September 2, 1922, see here.
(14) Miss Margaret Roth - died on September 8, 1936, aged only 43. She had been the secretary at Berry Street for eight years, until her resignation in the March. (Death notice, The Age, September 9, 1936, see here; short obit - The Age, September 9, 1936, see here.) I have written about her and her family here https://victoriaspast.blogspot.com/2026/05/margaret-roth-1893-1936-secretary-of.html
(15) The Herald, July 23, 1933, see here.
(16) The Herald, July 23, 1933, see here.