• Arms of Hope is a Christian care organization that assists children and single-mother families in need. With more than 150 years of combined experience of helping children and families, Medina Children’s Home and Boles Children’s Home merged in April 2009 to form Arms of Hope. Services are offered through these two residential campuses and Family Outreach Centers in five Texas cities.

  • Ben Richey Boys Ranch & Family Program has been a vital part of the Abilene community since 1947, when the first group of boys came to live on the ranch. Providing safe, loving, stable homes for children in need has always been a priority. When the need for assistance to single mothers and their children became a growing concern, the Family Program was added.

  • Boys and Girls Country (BGC) is a Christian home for children whose families are in crisis. Located 35 miles north­west of downtown Houston, BGC can accommodate 88 children and college students. Children live on campus in cottages with trained Teaching Parents.

  • Boysville was founded in 1943 after Rev. Don Holiman witnessed orphaned, abandoned, and homeless boys sleeping in San Antonio’s Travis Park. Today, Boysville is a nationally accredited home to both boys and girls ranging in age from birth to 23 years old.

  • In 1932 Catherine Brownson bequeathed her estate to establish The Brownson Home for children in need. It was Catherine’s vision that The Brownson Home never be considered an orphanage but rather a “HOME”, with all of the children being one family. The is the principal that continues to guide the direction of The Brownson Home today.

  • In the 1930s, during the Great Depression, business owner and former semiprofessional athlete, Cal Farley, became concerned about children who roamed the streets of Amarillo, Texas. Farley told his friends about his vision of giving boys a place to live where they could find a purpose.

  • In 1969, Central Texas Children’s Home began as a promise to help troubled children have a second chance. We’ve devoted our efforts to provide a safe haven for boys and girls impacted by trauma, abuse, neglect, abandonment, and selfishness.

  • Cherokee Home for Children was founded in 1958 by a group of caring Christians who witnessed a great need to care for children of Mexican-descent who were overlooked by society and in need of a loving home. Today, we serve any child in need of a loving, structured family setting.

  • Children At Heart Ministries is a family of Christian ministries that began in 1950, when Louis and Billie Sue Henna of Round Rock, Texas, donated the land and first five buildings to the Baptist General Convention of Texas to establish Texas Baptist Children’s Home to serve dependent and neglected children.

  • Children’s Home of Lubbock is a community of volunteers, workers, and supporters that put efforts together to make life better for children who need to see that love and care exist in a world that has often been unfair and unjust. The Home has been a staple of the Lubbock community since 1954 and has served over 7,100 abused and neglected children throughout our history.

  • Children’s Village began serving Tyler, Texas and the surrounding counties in 1980. We strive to create a life for children in our care that is as normal as any other child in the community.

  • Christ’s Haven For Children is a nonprofit organization centered around the core values of Normalcy, Dignity, and Hope. We are located in the north Fort Worth/Keller area and provide a trauma-informed, family model of care for displaced children, teens, and young adults.

  • None of what Foster’s Home has done in 60 years of existence, nor what we shall do from this point forward, is possible without businesses, churches and individuals who partner with us. I like to tell people that when they give to Foster’s Home they are making an investment in a child’s future. It’s an investment in hope.

  • Hendrick Home for Children (HHC) in Abilene, Texas, offers services for children and single-parent families who need a jump start in their lives. We believe in second (and more) chances.

  • Since 1967, building strong relationships has been the foundation of our program at High Plains Children's Home and Family Services, Inc. Children in our care reside in a natural home environment with up to seven other housemates and a loving couple who serve as houseparents.

  • Hill Country Youth Ranch, founded in 1977, was built on 265 acres of donated land one mile west of Ingram, in the heart of the Texas Hill Country. Volunteers joined to carve out the first roads, drill wells, and construct an educational village for abused children.

  • At the Lee & Beulah Moor Children’s Home, our mission is to provide quality programs and services for children and families in the El Paso, Texas region who are in need of care and guidance in achieving healthy life skills, goals and objectives.

  • Founded in Waco, Texas, in 1890, Methodist Children's Home serves youth through residential programs on the Waco campus and Boys Ranch. Each location is unique in its offerings, but together provide a caring, education-focused community designed specifically to meet the needs of the children in our care.

  • Presbyterian Children’s Homes and Services believes that the most powerful way to help children is by strengthening their families. We accomplish this by living into our philosophy of care which is to be family centered, strength focused, and goal driven.

  • Established in 2017, Simple Sparrow Care Farm has served as a trauma-informed care farm, utilizing land, gardens, and animals to support educational and therapeutic outcomes.

  • In 1952, Laura Boothe Overby watched as her dream for a children’s home came to fruition on her 600+ acre ranch outside of Pettus, Texas under the direction of Rev. Jess Lunsford. Over the next 70 years STCH Ministries would become home to over four-thousand children.

  • Texas Girls & Boys Ranch operates under three licensed programs. Each of these programs have a few things in common. All three operate within the expectations of the same Vision, Mission, and Core Values. Each program provides the same services and offers similar care.

  • The Texas Pythian Home is located on 164 acres of farmland on the east side of Weatherford. The campus includes the main building and 2 dorms, playgrounds, a softball field, tennis and volleyball courts and a swimming pool. Children live in the dorms, attend Weatherford ISD schools and local churches.

  • The West Texas Boys Ranch is a non-profit organization offering guidance, structure and opportunities through a family-based program and Christian environment so young men may realize their greatest potential. Since its inception more than 75 years ago, West Texas Boys Ranch has served thousands of boys from Texas and beyond.