A small group of people from Wilton Baptist Church in Wilton, Connecticut and the French-Speaking Baptist Church of Stamford, Connecticut, visited Haiti in 2001 and 2002 on mission trips where they witnessed the deplorable conditions of Haiti and their impact on the children. The group decided to build an orphanage and school in Hinche, Haiti, the home Emmanuel St. Juste (one of our founders and pastor of the French-Speaking Baptist Church of Stamford). Money was raised by the French-Speaking Baptist Church of Stamford collecting a dollar from each member each Sunday and from George Brunstad, a member of Wilton Baptist Church, who, at age 70, became the oldest person to swim the English Channel in record time. Land was purchased and COHH was formed as an Internal Revenue Service Section 501(c)(3) tax-exempt corporation in 2004. Construction of the orphanage and school began in 2005. It took 5 years to build the orphanage and school and 6 years for COHH to become an approved NGO. Both endeavors were not free of pitfalls and incredible aggravation. The school opened in 2011 with 15 children in the first grade. The school only accepts up to 15 children each year, at the first-grade level, who are extremely poor and would not otherwise be able to attend school. COHH now has 135 children in grades 1 through 9and 33 employees. The children who joined COHH in first grade not knowing how to read or write in any language, are now in high school and able to read, write and speak in Kreoyl, French, Spanish and English. Our graduates continue their education in private schools by passing the required national exams. COHH currently supports all of its graduates through completion of their high school education. This book chronicles through contemporaneous blogs, the 20 years of COHH in Haiti.