A Home For Destitute Little Girls
Maria Susan Rye
(1829-1903)
When the Marquis of Lorne travelled across Canada in 1884, prepearing his Canadian Travel Guide, he had this to say about one of the lesser known attratctions in Ontario:

"
There are other institutions near Toronto which deserve notice, and which do not receive it from the guide-books. Among these is Miss Rye's home for girls, thirty miles away by steamer across the lake.  The neat young lady, the untidy children, and the substantial house with its broad verandah, shown in the engraving, have all a special interest for English readers, for they represent Miss Rye's girls' home, the result of the education rshe causes to be given, and the raw material which she takes in hand, and changes to such good effect. Miss Rye and Miss MacPherson (Anna MacPherson who ran a similar establishment) have both shown how thoroughly successful such a system as theirs may be, when carefully worked. "
'Girls as Taken Off the Streets' - Marquis of Lorne
Home Children Emigration Scheme
The "Home Children Emigration Scheme" was part  of a movement that began in 1869 and ran for seventy years, whereby more than 100,000 children were removed from families, orphanages, workhouses and the streets of England, Scotland and Ireland and sent to Canada, Australia, New Zealand and Rhodesia; as indentured servants.

Charles Dickens writes of the horrible conditions in Victorian England for these young urchins, so to spare them from hunger, poverty, or a life of crime, the scheme certainly seemed humane.  However, though many of the girls did very well, there were also many who would spend the remainder of their lives in poverty and servitude. 

There were as many as fifty organizations involved in the incentive including the Bernardo Home,  Annie MacPherson, Fegan Homes, Dr. Stephenson and the National Children's Home and a host of religious organizations and work houses.  But the home that Mr Lorne speals of operated as
Maria Rye's Emigration Home for Destitute Little Girls.
Maria Rye's Emigration Home for Destitute Little Girls
Maria Susan Rye, the daughter of a solicitor, was born in 1829 in London, England.  Well educated, she always had a keen interest in women's issues, founding the Female Middle Class Emigration Society in 1861.  Her first project was the training of young, educated women for placement as law stationries, copiers and governess positions and between 1861 and 1868, she traveled to New Zealand, Australia and Canada placing her proteges in work situations. 
In 1868, when mading such a visit to Canada, she purchased the old court house and jail in Niagara-on-the-Lake, and the following year turned it into a home for 120 young girls.
From The Builder, April 17, 1869: "The Liverpool Workhouse committee have decided to entertain a proposal from Miss Rye, to take all their orphan girls for her emigration scheme, each girl being supplied with £8 by the parochial authorities. Mr. Rathbone, M.P., brought Miss Rye's scheme forward".
'Miss Rye's House as it is' - 1884
Marquis of Lorne
In November of 1869, Maria ws on her way to Canada with the first of her children, many from the Kirkdale Industrial School. The girls were placed in Niagara, St. Catharines, Hamilton, Toronto, Chatham, Guelph, Mount Forest, Arthur, Woodstock, London, Newcastle, Port Stanley, Sherwood, and Petrolia in Ontario; as well as Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Quebec and the United States. From the St. John, N.B. Daily Telegraph, November 14, 1869:

"The children brought over By Miss Rye have some of them been taken to their new homes in the city and different parts of the province. The remainder are at the Protestant Orphan Asylum, awaiting their guardians' arrival. The children are all smart and intelligent looking, and can all read, write, and sing. When the Peruvian was about leaving Quebec for Montreal, Captain Smith went to the railway station at Point Levi, to say good-bye to Miss Rye. So kind had he been to the children on the passage out that they gathered about
him, and it was with difficulty that he cleared himself of them; and after he had gone away and they knew they should not see him again, their little faces shewed the sadness they felt at losing so kind a friend. With more than ordinary thoughtfulness, and induced, no doubt, by his knowledge of their condition, he furnished them with sufficient bread, meat, etc., to keep them from being hungry on the way to Portland, where they all arrived in good spirits, though very tired from the sea voyage, immediately followed by their railway trip.


"Mr. Gregan, of New York, at once took charge of them and ordered beds to be spread for them in the ladies' cabin, while supper was made ready, to which they did ample justice. We trust that Miss Rye will be induced to bring another troop of these fine children to homes which are always awaiting them in this province, and that as their experience amongst other people become known in Great Britain their older relatives may find it to their interest to come over also and avail themselves of the advantages which New Brunswick offers to the industrious settler. Mr. Shives expects that those who have applied will call for the girls now in his charge before Saturday next."
In 1875, The Doyal Report criticized her efforts and she stopped recruiting for awhile; but by 1884 she was back in business.  Again, the Marquis of Lorne: 
"Provided that the children are brought to Canada when young, and that proper establishments under good supervision be provided for them, too many cannot be sent. I have on several occasions visited the Home shown in the wood-cut, and nothing can exceed the cleanliness and healthiness of the house and its situation. The girls looked as though they thoroughly appreciated the good done them, in the happy life they were leading. 

It promised to make them useful members of society, and from the accounts received of the pupils who had been already placed with families in town and country, the promise had the security of the experience of the past, to induce the belief that the careful individual attention and love bestowed would not be thrown away.  The official inspection had proved that the Goveernemnt authorities were well satisfied with the institution."
'After Eleven Years in the Home - Marquis of Lorne
Emigrant Girls in Canada

Illustrated London News, August 25, 1877
The beneficent labours of Miss Rye, in managing and personally superintending the industrial emigration of destitute female children and grown-up girls to the British colonies, have frequently been noticed. She has repeatedly visited both Canada and Australia, in charge of large numbers of these young people, whom she has taken care to place in suitable household service amongst respectable families of the colonists. At the end of last may she went out to Canada, accompanied by another lady, in the ship Sardinian, with seventy-three young persons, of whom ten were boys, seven girls in their teens, and the rest quite little children. Many of them were from the London workhouses.

We have received from the lady who is with Miss Rye, at the town of Niagara, on Lake Ontario, a very satisfactory account of their proceedings. All their juvenile charges were safely provided for, on the 13th ult., except thirty, for whom they expected soon to find comfortable homes. Our correspondent says:-"Miss Rye is exceedingly particular in placing out these children, suiting the tender and timid ones to kindly and indulgent
mistresses, and the wild, lawless ones to stricter managers. Nor is she satisfied to place children with householders, even those whose certificates from their ministers are satisfactory, if she has reason to think they are hard or careless. The results of her work are certainly wonderful. About one per cent only have been found to go astray out of nearly 1200 pauper children. Boards of guardians ought to send out the contents of their
schools, they would, at their age, soon adapt themselves to Canadian requirements. This is certainly the paradise for working men and women.

The Canadians are a homely people, full of energy and enterprise, but living simple, primitive lives, among their farms, fruit, and cattle; sitting down with their servants, generally, at the same table. I am no longer
surprised at their readiness to take our children. Their wives do their
own housework, perhaps with the help of one little maid, ten or twelve years old, who is brought up rather as a child of the house. She is clothed and maintained by her master and mistress, up to the age of fifteen, when she has three dollars a month wages, till she is eighteen, after which she can make her own terms, and is on the same footing as other Canadians. But the majority of Miss Rye's girls become adopted in the family and are frequently included in the testamentary arrangements made for other children. As for boys, the one thing wanting to Canada is hands to cultivate the land. At the age of eighteen anyone can claim a hundred acres of land, to clear and cultivate it, and to possess it for ever, so that our "gutter children" may become the future landlords of the country.

Whole districts are waiting to be occupied, with rich arable land, where corn can be sown and ripened in two
months, or peaches and cherries, and other fruits to supply foreign markets; with forests, minerals, and fisheries of untold value; and with vast lakes and rivers for the conveyance of their produce. But this is no country for drones. The town of Niagara, from which I write, is surrounded by a pastoral population in their thriving homesteads. The old townhall has been partly converted into a meat market, and the old county prison is now Miss Rye's Distributing Home. The Judge's court is made the dormitory for a hundred
little girls, and small beds are placed also in the spectators' gallery, while the butter and other provisions are kept in the condemned cell. Our poor little waifs and strays of London life have terribly sad histories, many being children of drunkards, suicides, adulterers, and felons now in penal servitude. Of course, they may go wrong even in Canada, but it is certain that they will have fewer opportunities to err, and no vicious
connections to drag them down. It is touching to see them here at play, before they are sent out to work." We have an implicit reliance upon the writer's correct testimony and sound judgment; and we would especially commend this statement to public attention just now, when Miss Rye's late controversy with the Local Government Board shows that her useful efforts of charity have been ill appreciated in certain official quarters.  The Emigrant-Girls' Home in Canada
Illustrated London News, Sept 29, 1877
"...There has been some controversy in official quarters upon the merits of this system; and mr. Doyle, an Inspector of the Local Government Board, who was sent out to Canada, reported that it had in many cases proved satisfactory. It appears that in the six years terminating with 1876, Miss Rye had landed at her establishment in Niagara 1100 children from the streets and workhouses of England, and it reflects credit upon the sanitary and dietary regulations to which her numerous charge has been subjected that during this
entire period the death rate in the number specified amounted only to fifteen. She is reluctantly compelled to admit, however, that sixteen of the workhouse girls fell, and that a considerable number besides had displayed violent temper and extreme insubordination, resulting in a frequent change of situation and sometimes in their return to the Home. Nor is this fact strange, when their previous lack of firm but gentle discipline is taken into account. She also admits having lost sight of twenty-eight girls under fifteen years of age.

"Notwithstanding these partial failures and disappointments, we receive the testimony of the Toronto correspondent of the Standard in favour of Miss Rye's proceedings. "We in Canada," he says, "know something of her work, and we in Canada are to a great extent satisfied that it is a good work, and fairly well done. It is true she is overtaxed; it is true that single-handed she is not equal to the labour and expense of doing the whole thoroughly. No one person, man or woman, however much his or her heart may be in the
work, can possibly supervise the collection of the children in England, their exportation, their reception here, the selection of homes for them, and keep up also a careful systematic supervision over them for many years..."
Marie retired in 1895, and returned to England, turning her home and work over to the Church of England Waifs and Strays Society.  She died in 1903 at the age of 74.  During her 26 years working with young emigrant children, she had placed more than 5,000. 

I have found two excellent sites should you wish to further investigate the scheme in general, or look for possible ancestors.
Alphabetic List Of Miss Rye's Children, February 1, 1878
The author of this site has listed all of Maria's records to 1878.  She gives names, ages and future placements
Samatian Shipmates
Dedicated to the British Home Children who Sailed with Maria Rye aboard the Samatian in June of 1874
Great first hand account with many good links
Women in Canadian History Home Page
Canadian Women Home Page
Uniquely Canadian Site Map
Victorian Canada Home Page