Babies for Sale: The Tennessee Children's Home Adoption Scandal
By (Author) Linda T. Austin
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
21st June 1993
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Child welfare and youth services
Insurance and actuarial studies
362.709768
Hardback
192
Width 140mm, Height 210mm
397g
In 1950, the Governor of Tennessee called for an investigation of the Tennessee Children's Home black market baby operations, said to have grossed $1 million for Georgia Tann, the superintendent of the local branch of the home. Tann was accused of fraudulently persuading pregnant mothers to relinquish their children. A number of Hollywood celebrities adopted children through the home, namely Joan Crawford, June Allyson, and Dick Powell. During the investigation, local attorneys and justices were found to be part of the scandalous network of adoption that allowed adoptive parents to be out-of-state residents. The story is dramatic and shows southern politics at its worst--congenial, respected public figures running shady deals in the back room. Thousands of children were placed in adopted homes during the agency's operation. Each case is a fascinating story involving the search and reunion of adopted children with their natural families.
Linda Tollett Austin, an attorney in the state of Tennessee, has a PhD in American History with a specialization in the history of the South. Her article about the Tennessee Children's Home Society scandal in the Tennessee Historical Quarterly (1991) won the John Trotwood Moore Award for the best article of the year.