This picture was taken August 4, 1948, and
published in a Chicago newspaper. It
shows 4 young children: SueEllen (top left), Lana (top right),
Milton (bottom left), and Rae (bottom right).
The mother, Lucille Chalifoux, was shielding
her eyes from the camera, not sobbing as I first thought, according to the
newspaper reports from the time, but then how do we really know. She was 24,
married to an unemployed man 16 years older, and pregnant with her fifth child
in six years at the time of the photo. Who’s to judge her true feelings?
After the picture appeared in papers throughout the
US, offers of jobs, homes and financial assistance poured in for this family.
What Happened Next
No one knows how long the sign stood in the yard.
Apparently shortly thereafter the father abandoned the family, and records show
he had a criminal record. Lucille went on governmental assistance. A fifth
child, David, was born in 1949.
The storyline is not complete, but David was either
removed from the home or relinquished in July 1950. He was covered in bed bug
bites and in rough shape. He was adopted by a loving but strict home and ran
away at 16, spent 20 years in the military, and has been a truck driver ever
since.
Rae says that she was “sold for $2 [in Aug. 1950]
so her mother could have bingo money and because the man her mother was dating
did not want anything to do with the children.” Milton was standing nearby
crying, so that family took him too. Sadly, their new father was horribly
abusive. Rae ran away at 17. Milton was removed from the home due to abuse
(unclear at what age) and eventually ended up in a mental hospital diagnosed
with “schizophrenia and having fits of rage”. He was released in 1967 at age
23. He eventually married, moved to Arizona, and is now divorced.
No one knows what happened to Lana, other than she
died of cancer in 1998. SueEllen was adopted, but I’ve not been able
to find out any additional information other than she had two sons. She told
her children that she was sold by her mother.
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