History of National Adoption Month
(Text Obtained from Child Welfare Information Gateway)
For over two decades, National Adoption Month has been promoted and celebrated every November in communities across the country. Many national, State, and local agencies as well as foster, kinship care, and adoptive family groups will help spread the word through programs, events, and activities that help raise awareness for thousands of children and youth in foster care who are waiting for permanent, loving families.
Read below to learn how National Adoption Month started and grew to what it is today.
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1976
Massachusetts Governor Michael Dukakis announced an Adoption Week to promote awareness of the need for adoptive families for children in foster care. -
1980
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1984
President Reagan proclaimed the first National Adoption Week. -
1990
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1995
President Clinton expanded the awareness week to the entire month of November. -
1998
President Clinton directed the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to develop a plan to expand the use of the Internet as a tool to find homes for children waiting to be adopted from foster care. -
2000
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2008
President Bush provides an explanation of National Adoption Month in Spanish. -
2010
Thousands of children are waiting for their forever home.
Join us this month by spreading events, messages, and stories to raise awareness for the adoption community!