Available for both in person and virtual lectures.
Perfect for elementary schools, Sherry offers in person or virtual author visits showing the students how a book is created. In this fun filled presentation, Sherry utilizes her own children's books to help children visualize and understand the writing process, further discovering how words on a paper become a book. Images from school visits can be seen below.
Looking for a presentation for older students?
In researching her upcoming historical fiction series about the Orphan Trains, The Orphan Train Saga, Author Sherry A. Burton has put together presentations that are sure to entertain persons of all ages. Sherry incorporates a visual aid presentation to keep the audience involved. During her presentation, Sherry’s goal is to entertain, enlighten and educate the minds of everyone in attendance. Sherry’s presentations are perfect for Schools, Libraries, Colleges, Historical Society’s, Woman’s Groups, or anyone wishing to discover tidbits of hidden history.
The History of the Orphan Trains
Did you know that at one time there were over thirty thousand children of all ages living on the streets in New York City? Boys and girls as young as four and five years old, living and working for pennies a day. In a time before child labor laws, boys and girls worked alongside men and women in factories to help put food on the table. Oftentimes children would resort to thievery or join gangs just to survive. Growing old in those times was a rarity. One man, Charles Loring Brace, made it his life’s mission to help these children. His vision while not perfect helped to relocate many of New York’s homeless children to rural settings across the county and by doing so offered them a life they may not have otherwise seen. While no one knows the exact number, estimates show over two hundred thousand children were relocated in the seventy-five year run of the trains we now know as the Orphan Trains. Care to learn more?
In researching her upcoming historical fiction series about the Orphan Trains, The Orphan Train Saga, Author Sherry A. Burton has put together presentations that are sure to entertain persons of all ages. Sherry incorporates a visual aid presentation to keep the audience involved. During her presentation, Sherry’s goal is to entertain, enlighten and educate the minds of everyone in attendance. Sherry’s presentations are perfect for Schools, Libraries, Colleges, Historical Society’s, Woman’s Groups, or anyone wishing to discover tidbits of hidden history.
The History of the Orphan Trains
Did you know that at one time there were over thirty thousand children of all ages living on the streets in New York City? Boys and girls as young as four and five years old, living and working for pennies a day. In a time before child labor laws, boys and girls worked alongside men and women in factories to help put food on the table. Oftentimes children would resort to thievery or join gangs just to survive. Growing old in those times was a rarity. One man, Charles Loring Brace, made it his life’s mission to help these children. His vision while not perfect helped to relocate many of New York’s homeless children to rural settings across the county and by doing so offered them a life they may not have otherwise seen. While no one knows the exact number, estimates show over two hundred thousand children were relocated in the seventy-five year run of the trains we now know as the Orphan Trains. Care to learn more?