Aimee there were 24 jpg's on it, all handwritten letters, records etc, so when I get time I'm going to transcribe them all before I upload them on to Ancestry.
But the bits I did read was that the application for them to go to the orphanage was made my a George Wilson who was the local minister.
The Salvation Army & the local community had collected a fund to send with the children as a contribution to the Orphanage of ÂĢ20, this was in 1897, but today that could have been around ÂĢ2000 or close to.
It also included letters from a Dr, certifying that they weren't riddled with whatever that might infect the rest of the children in the Orphanage.
Then later letters show when they left the Orphanage, the date, who they went to live with and the address. The youngest of the children was taken in by a baker in Street, Somerset, but he returned him to the orphanage 2 months later, despite his wifes protests because he was 'useless' due to his deafness. A few months after that he returned to Sunderland to live with his brother Andrew (my great grandfather).
That's all I've read for now.