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Victoria - Organisation

Beaconsfield Babies' Home (1915 - 1946)

  • Beaconsfield Babies' Home

    Beaconsfield Babies' Home, 1938, courtesy of Berry Street Archives.
    Details

From
1915
To
1946
Categories
Adoption Agency, Babies' Home, Home and Non-denominational
Alternative Names
  • Berry Street Babies' Home (Beaconsfield)
  • Berry Street Foundling Home

The Beaconsfield Babies' Home was opened in 1915, in Beaconsfield. It was run by the Foundling Hospital and Infants' Home, which also operated the Foundling Hospital and Infants' Home in Berry Street, East Melbourne. The Beaconsfield Babies' Home was closed in 1946.

Details

The Beaconsfield Babies' Home was established in May 1915. It was run by the Foundling Hospital and Infants' Home (incorporated in 1914), which also operated the Foundling Hospital and Infants' Home in Berry Street, East Melbourne.

Berry Street had long been advocating for a country home, 'handy to Melbourne', to house its children. Such a home would enable the buildings in East Melbourne to function as a 'receiving home', and provide a more salubrious environment for children.

In 1913, the Committee purchased a property at Beaconsfield to provide such a country home. The Beaconsfield Babies' Home was opened on 6 May 1915 by Lady Stanley, wife of the Governor.

Initially, Beaconsfield was used for pre-maternity cases, and as a convalescent home for mothers when discharged from the Women's Hospital.

In a Christmas Appeal published in the Argus on 14 December 1916, it was stated that 58 babies were being housed in the institutions at Beaconsfield and East Melbourne. The Appeal was for money or goods so that older children (who were boarded out once they reached 12 months of age) could receive their 'annual Christmas treat' at the East Melbourne institution. The Foundling Hospital also sought donations (money, clothing, toys) for the babies in its care.

In her history of Berry Street, Penwill writes that the community of Beaconsfield was very involved in the Babies' Home:

The local residents befriended the nurses and invited them into their homes. Women of the district took an interest in the children and women at the Home, and sewed, knitted and visited. They then formed an auxiliary to raise money, while their menfolk made vegetable plots and provided goods from their own gardens.

The Beaconsfield Babies' Home provided training for mothercraft nurses.

During the Second World War, Berry Street was taken over for use by the military. In 1942, staff, children and mothers were moved to Beaconsfield Babies' Home.

The Beaconsfield Babies' Home was closed in 1946 and the mansion where it was housed fell into a state of disrepair before being demolished in 1963. However, part of the building, the 'Kenilworth Coach House' remained and was mentioned as an important historic site in the City of Kardinia's 'Beaconsfield Township Strategy' (2001).

After the Home closed, there were some plans, which did not eventuate, to erect cottages on the site at Beaconsfield. When it was finally sold in 1963, funds were used as a building fund for the institution in East Melbourne.

Location

1915 - 1946
Location - The Beaconsfield Babies' Home was located on Kenilworth Avenue, Beaconsfield. Location: Beaconsfield

Related Archival Collections

Related Glossary Terms

Related Organisations

Publications

Books

  • Penwill, Beryl, Looking Back, Looking Forward: the story of 'Berry Street' Child and Family Care, Berry Street Child and Family Care, Melbourne, 1979. Details

Online Resources

Photos

Beaconsfield Babies' Home
Title
Beaconsfield Babies' Home
Type
Image
Date
1938
Source
Berry Street Archives

Details

Sources used to compile this entry: Penwill, Beryl, Looking Back, Looking Forward: the story of 'Berry Street' Child and Family Care, Berry Street Child and Family Care, Melbourne, 1979.

Prepared by: Cate O'Neill