Talitha Cumi Home // 1912

One thing I love about Boston is that nearly every old building has such a rich history that takes so much time to compile and write up (this account keeps me busy)! Located on Forest Hills Street in Jamaica Plain, this stucco building caught my attention when driving by, so much so, that I had to stop and go back. The building was constructed in 1912 as a home for unwed mothers called Talitha Cumi Home (a phrase from the Bible meaning “Arise, young woman”). The charitable organization outgrew their space in the South End and sought greener pastures and open space in Jamaica Plain. The group had been organized in 1836 by “earnest Christian women” who longed to open a “door of hope” to “those hopeless and helpless girls who found themselves facing the sadness and shame and wrong of unwed motherhood.” The Talitha Cumi Home allowed pregnant women to reside and birth their children before their pregnancy began to show. The site originally included an administration building and a hospital with both structures connected by a covered breezeway. The home closed in the 1950s and the former home for unwed mothers has since been converted to a middle school.

2 thoughts on “Talitha Cumi Home // 1912

  1. Barbara J King's avatar Barbara J King August 14, 2023 / 9:38 am

    my mother Barbara Mae Grant had me at this place. Can you see the records there? Just curious why she was took to this place. She kept me and didnt adopt me out. She was from Rockland Mass. Did she have address on the father. I still haven’t met him or family members

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    • Buildings of New England's avatar Buildings of New England August 14, 2023 / 9:07 pm

      I am not exactly sure where the records went, maybe the Massachusetts State Archives?? Some information may not be publicly accessible though.

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