With the demise in Victoria of industrial schools and the introduction instead of a system of 'boarding out' 'neglected' children, the girls' reformatory was moved to temporary quarters in Melbourne. It soon relocated again to Coburg, to new premises 'in immediate contiguity' to Pentridge Prison. It operated there from 1875 until 1895 when it closed.
The girls' proximity to prisoners, not to the mention to the city, caused the government to consider relocating the reformatory to more appropriate surroundings. The Secretary of the Department reported in 1891 of how the next 'desirable site' for the reformatory would be distant from the prison, the city, and also inaccessible to the girls' relatives and former associates, 'whose visits almost invariably have been found to have an evil influence and very unsettling effect on the girls'.
At the reformatory, girls were trained in domestic service, sewing and doing the laundry of private citizens in the area.
In 1890, an editorial in the Age lauded the private reformatory known as Brookside and compared its farm life with the conditions facing girls at Coburg. It posed the question, 'Can no one else be found to emulate this truly noble example?'
Following the closure of the Jika Reformatory for Girls, the residents were allocated to either the Homes at Brookside, the Roman Catholic Reformatory for Girls at Oakleigh and the Albion Reformatory for Girls, run by the Salvation Army in Brunswick.
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Last updated:
27 July 2023
Cite this: http://www.findandconnect.gov.au/guide/vic/E000315
First published by the Find & Connect Web Resource Project for the Commonwealth of Australia, 2011
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