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The Sauk Centre Home School for Girls was established in 1907 as the State Industrial School for Girls, to provide for the care, training, and education of girls who had been declared delinquent and committed by the courts. The school was built on a site in Sauk Centre, Stearns County and opened in 1911 as the Minnesota Home School for Girls. Girls who had been inmates at the State Training School for Boys were transferred to the facility. The school facility then included an administration building, hospital, chapel, pumping plant, farm building, and cottages to house 160 girls.
All of the policies of the State Training School in Red Wing relating to inmate commitment, education, training, and general operations were applied to the Home School for Girls as well. Girls were committed when convicted by the court of a crime. Entering inmates ranged in age from eight to sixteen years, and remained at the school until they reached age twenty-one, or were discharged. Girls received common school education and instruction in sewing, cooking, laundering, general housework skills, and farming.

In 1951, a temporary residence for the care of severely retarded children (the Sauk Centre Home for Children) was established at the Home School for Girls. It occupied three cottages on the site, and salaries and maintenance costs were divided between the Home School for Girls and the Home for Children.
In 1959, the commission and the school became part of the newly created Corrections Department, under its Youth Conservation Division. In 1967, it changed its name to the Minnesota Home School and expanded its programs to include some delinquent boys. The school became the Minnesota Correctional Facility--Sauk Centre in 1979 serving as a reception, diagnostic, and treatment center for male and female juvenile offenders between the ages of twelve and eighteen years from the western region of the state.
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Dating Site App Sauk Centre Minnesota Zip
From 1911 to 1960 the school’s superintendents were women.
The school was closed on July 1, 1999, with all residents being transferred to other facilities.
A History of the Minnesota Home School, 1911-1976, by Joan McDonald.
Sauk Centre, Minn.: Minnesota Home School Citizens Committee, 1976.
MNHS call number: HV9106.S462 M565
Dating Site App Sauk Centre Minnesota
Records for the Minnesota Home School for Girls at Sauk Centre can be viewed in person at the library or ordered online from our Correctional Institution (Prison) Records Request.
The Sauk Centre Home School for Girls was established in 1907 as the State Industrial School for Girls, to provide for the care, training, and education of girls who had been declared delinquent and committed by the courts. The school was built on a site in Sauk Centre, Stearns County and opened in 1911 as the Minnesota Home School for Girls. Girls who had been inmates at the State Training School for Boys were transferred to the facility. The school facility then included an administration building, hospital, chapel, pumping plant, farm building, and cottages to house 160 girls.

All of the policies of the State Training School in Red Wing relating to inmate commitment, education, training, and general operations were applied to the Home School for Girls as well. Girls were committed when convicted by the court of a crime. Entering inmates ranged in age from eight to sixteen years, and remained at the school until they reached age twenty-one, or were discharged. Girls received common school education and instruction in sewing, cooking, laundering, general housework skills, and farming.
In 1951, a temporary residence for the care of severely retarded children (the Sauk Centre Home for Children) was established at the Home School for Girls. It occupied three cottages on the site, and salaries and maintenance costs were divided between the Home School for Girls and the Home for Children.

In 1959, the commission and the school became part of the newly created Corrections Department, under its Youth Conservation Division. In 1967, it changed its name to the Minnesota Home School and expanded its programs to include some delinquent boys. The school became the Minnesota Correctional Facility--Sauk Centre in 1979 serving as a reception, diagnostic, and treatment center for male and female juvenile offenders between the ages of twelve and eighteen years from the western region of the state.
From 1911 to 1960 the school’s superintendents were women.
The school was closed on July 1, 1999, with all residents being transferred to other facilities.
A History of the Minnesota Home School, 1911-1976, by Joan McDonald.
Sauk Centre, Minn.: Minnesota Home School Citizens Committee, 1976.
MNHS call number: HV9106.S462 M565

Records for the Minnesota Home School for Girls at Sauk Centre can be viewed in person at the library or ordered online from our Correctional Institution (Prison) Records Request.