What is believed to be the biggest collection of images on the Stolen Generations in Western Australia is searching for a home.

Dumbartung Aboriginal Corporation collected the pictures to educate school students, but only had the funding to showcase the exhibit for one night.

"This story in terms of what happened to these young children haven't been told in any of the education curriculums throughout this country," Dumbartung co-ordinator Robert Eggington said.

He said he hoped funding would come through to allow the organisation to show the exhibit to other school students during NAIDOC week in July.

"The whole of the NAIDOC committee only got $8,000 for what they call community activities, but with this one I think there should be a grant made outside of the normal NAIDOC funding," Mr Eggington said.

"I would say to the Government they should hire the same type of screens and then have it somewhere it can be accessed by school groups and sessions, and then Dumbartung can go through the stories prior to the students going through the exhibition."

Residents of the Carrolup mission gathered for a photo ( Supplied: Dumbartung Aboriginal Corporation )

The exhibit showcases images from missions and reserves which were areas of land where white settlers forced Aboriginal people to live.

Missions were in the control of churches and missionaries while reserves and stations were generally run by government.

"This all comes from the dispossession of Aboriginal people from their land and the Stolen Generations through to 1905 Native Welfare Act drawn up by AO Neville," Mr Eggington said.

"They are totally responsible for one of the great holocausts ever committed against a race of people on this planet."

Wedding between an Aboriginal couple taking place at the Moore River Mission. ( Supplied: Dumbartung Aboriginal Corporation )

Mr Eggington took school students from Clontarf Aboriginal College to the Carrolup Mission near Katanning in the Great Southern.

"I think what was important there, was they were able to walk on the same grounds, to feel what it was like to be in some of the most isolated settings that these missions were," he said.

"Reconnect with a lot of the pain, the suffering of what those young kids went through when they were taken away, forcibly removed from their mothers.

The State Government has been contacted for comment.