
Between Brunswick and Mecklenburg Squares in Bloomsbury lie Coram’s Fields, children’s playgrounds and sports pitches to which no adult may be admitted unless accompanied by a child. And at 40 Brunswick Square an elegant building houses the Foundling Museum and Art Gallery. To the side sits a bronze of Thomas Coram.

Thomas Coram (1668-1751) was a ship builder and sea captain. Born in Lyme Regis in Dorset, he went to sea at the age of eleven, later establishing successful businesses first in America, and later in London.
In the early eighteenth century the mortality rate for children under five in England was 75%. This was the direct result of poverty. Thousands died from cheap gin given to them by their mothers as an appetite depressant, an estimated 1,000 babies were abandoned every year on the streets of London, children were deliberately blinded or maimed before being sent out to beg, and infanticide was common.
Unlike the authorities of the day for whom poverty was no more than a symptom of idleness and moral degeneracy, Thomas Coram had a big heart, a great love of children and an unwavering resolve. He determined to establish a home for children whose mothers could not look after them. An ugly combination of byzantine legal restraints and royal prerogatives meant that Coram needed a charter of incorporation from the king before he could establish his Foundling Hospital. For seventeen years he trudged the streets of London lobbying influential people to sign his petitions requesting a charter. The church and the nobility were not helpful. But eventually he was able to exploit the fashion for charitable works amongst society ladies to obtain their signatures, and through their influence those of their husbands. A charter was granted, and money donated.
The first thirty children were admitted to the Foundling Hospital in 1740.
Unlike its continental predecessors Coram’s Hospital was a secular institution, maintained by public subscription. Babies were not deposited anonymously but brought in by their mothers on admissions days. Demand for places always exceeded supply and in the early days admittance was determined by lottery. If mothers drew a white ball from a bag their child was accepted, a black one meant there was no place for them, a red put them on a waiting list in case any of those initially accepted were found on examination to have infectious diseases, in which case the Hospital could not risk admitting them. A brutal system, but so were the alternatives of later years when admissions were based on the moral character of the mother, restricting places to those babies whose mothers had been deserted, widowed, or raped.
Coram always hoped that the children would be reunited with their mothers if their circumstances changed and they could afford to take them back. When the babies entered the Hospital, they were baptised with new names and given new clothes to protect the mothers’ identity. But a billet recorded each child’s date of admission, sex, age, original name, and details of the clothing in which they had arrived. A piece of material was taken from this clothing, half of it remaining with the mother and the other half attached to the admission document. Mothers were also encouraged to leave a small token. The billet was then wrapped, sealed, numbered, and the child given an identity tag with their number. In the event of a mother seeking to reclaim her child or needing to prove her innocence if she were accused of infanticide, production of the matching fabric, and recognition of the token would lead to the opening of the billet and the identification of the child.


Few women were ever able to reclaim their children, and by 1790 when the token system was replaced with receipts, 18,000 tokens had been left. Today there is a heartbreaking display of the unclaimed tokens in the Foundling Museum: coins, playing cards, little pieces of lace or embroidery, buttons, medals, small bracelets and rings,









But Coram was determined that the children who remained in his care would have the best life and opportunities possible. They were fostered in the countryside until they were five years old, when they returned to the Hospital. There they were provided with decent food, practical if not pretty clothing, health care, inoculations, and education, and at Coram’s Hospital the latter was considered as important for girls as for boys. And if this sounds a little bleak, remember the alternative. When the children left, they were well placed to find employment, albeit usually in the military or in domestic service, but again remember the alternative.
The Hospital was also the venue for Britain’s first public art exhibitions. William Hogarth was an early supporter of Coram: he and his wife Jane fostered children, and he donated artworks to the Hospital encouraging fellow artists to do the same. The latter were not slow to realise the benefits of having their work on display before the affluent patrons and visitors to the Hospital. They began holding annual dinners there and these gatherings evolved into the establishment of the Royal Academy in 1768. Meanwhile the Hospital built up an admirable collection of contemporary art.
Music too flourished at the Foundling Hospital. Children with talent were encouraged and there was a band. Handel wrote the Hospital’s anthem and directed annual benefit concerts featuring the Messiah and Music for the Royal Fireworks in the Hospital chapel.
There was a sad coda to Coram’s life, for after all his work and achievements he was voted off the board of governors, probably due to his lack of sycophancy and inability to flatter potential donors. He continued to attend the baptisms, stood godfather to more than twenty babies, and regularly sat in the Hospital colonnades distributing gingerbread to the children. After the death of his wife, he neglected his private affairs and with his fortune dispersed he faced difficult times. His friends raised a subscription to provide him with an annuity for the last two years of his life.
Thomas Coram is now in his third burial place. Initially, in accordance with his wishes, he was buried in the chapel of the Foundling Hospital. When the old buildings were demolished and the Hospital moved out to Berkshire in 1935, Coram moved with it being reinterred in the crypt of the new chapel. In 1955 when the last children left the Foundling Hospital and the buildings were sold to Ashlyn’s school Coram was again exhumed and translated to St. Andrew’s church in Holborn.


An inscribed stone remains in what is now Ashlyn’s school chapel, it commemorates
Captain Thomas Coram, whose name shall never want a monument, so long as this Hospital shall subsist.
But Coram’s real memorial is neither in Saint Andrew’s church nor in Ashlyn’s school. Back in Coram’s Fields are the seven acres of children’s park and playgrounds. After the original Hospital was demolished its committee room, picture gallery and oak staircase were transferred to the Foundling Museum. And the work of the charity, now known simply as Coram, continues to be directed from the adjacent Coram campus. Today the charity focuses on adoption, fostering, health and drug education in schools, support for vulnerable young people leaving care and those facing homelessness. It is committed to celebrating and destigmatising care and continues the Coram tradition of using music and art to promote its aims.


See https://coramstory.org.uk for more on the history and current work of Coram.
For more on the last years of the Foundling Hospital in Berkshire see Memories of the Foundling Hospital, recalled by three of the last children to be resident there, on You Tube, Coram April 2021




















