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The Heart Behind Helping Hand Home

For more than 130 years, Helping Hand Home has served children who have experienced complex trauma. Through a continuum of care, we provide a safe haven for children to heal. Our three program areas include: foster, adoption and post-adopt services; 24-hour residential and therapeutic care; and an onsite University of Texas Charter School. We want every child we serve to feel safe, seen and loved.

 

The Home delivers a continuum of services that includes

Residential Treatment Services

Foster, Adoption, & Post-Adopt Services

Education At On-Site Charter School

With private and community support, we fulfill our mission of healing the most vulnerable children and restoring them to healthy families.

Residential Treatment Program

Helping Hand Home is a place of hope and healing, unlike any other. We serve children and families who have experienced complex trauma. We believe every child deserves a loving and healthy family setting. Through a continuum of trauma-informed therapeutic care, we provide a safe haven for children to heal. We seek to enrich, educate, and empower through loving care, professional treatment, and innovative evidence-based services that heal.
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Pearson Therapeutic Foster Care and Adoption

The Pearson Therapeutic Foster Care Program was founded in 1995 on the belief that a loving home can save a child. Our foster care program serves children from birth to 18 years old, some of whom need treatment services but can function successfully in a foster home with specially trained and supported foster parents. HHH is also licensed to perform adoptions.
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Helping Hand Home/ UT Charter School

Since 2008, we have partnered with the University of Texas Charter School System to provide an on-site campus that meets the unique educational and behavioral needs of our children, helping them successfully transition to public school.
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About Us

Humble
Beginnings

In 1893, an abandoned newborn was discovered in a shoebox at Austin’s railway station. Word of the baby girl spread quickly, and just as quickly, several women who were leaders in the missionary societies of their various denominations volunteered to take responsibility for the child. They took her into their homes, cared for her and gave her a name: Mary Austin.

 

Soon, many other abandoned and neglected babies were brought to the women. These dedicated women pooled their resources and purchased a small cottage on Guadalupe Street where the babies could be cared for. Little did they know that this first childcare facility in Austin would operate continuously from that time forward.

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Rapid
Growth

Within a few short years, the original cottage was too small to take care of all the children needing safe haven. In 1899, a much larger home on East 11th Street was purchased. Over the next quarter century, this second home served hundreds of children.

 

In 1925, the Rotary Club of Austin donated a new facility on a tree-shaded lot in the Hyde Park neighborhood, where Helping Hand Home is located today. The original Avenue B facility was replaced in 1978, and over time, three additional buildings were acquired to complete the current campus.

 

Helping Hand Home has evolved from a basic childcare facility for abandoned children into a residential treatment center for children who have experienced extreme abuse and neglect.

Evolution

In 1995, the Home expanded its services to include therapeutic foster care. The program serves children from birth to 21 years old, some of whom require treatment services but can function successfully in a home environment. In addition to foster care, the home is also licensed for adoption services.

 

The new children’s wing was completed in the winter of 2001, allowing the home to increase the number of children served to 41 and creating additional spaces for healing.

About Us

Expansion

Within a few short years, the original cottage was too small to take care of all the children needing safe haven. In 1899, a much larger home on East 11th Street was purchased. Over the next quarter century, this second home served hundreds of children.

 

In 1925, the Rotary Club of Austin donated a new facility on a tree-shaded lot in the Hyde Park neighborhood, where Helping Hand Home is located today. The original Avenue B facility was replaced in 1978, and over time, three additional buildings were acquired to complete the current campus.

 

Helping Hand Home has evolved from a basic childcare facility for abandoned children into a residential treatment center for children who have experienced extreme abuse and neglect.

Helping Hand Home has achieved international accreditation throughthe COA for over eight years. This means that our programs, services,administration, and management have been rigorously evaluated and meetthe highest standards of best practice and ensure the best outcomes for ourchildren and families