Some people may find content on this website distressing. Read more
Western Australia - Organisation

Perth Girls' Orphanage (1868 - 1942)

  • Orphanage Industrial School for Protestant Girls, Perth

    Orphanage Industrial School for Protestant Girls, Perth, 1900, courtesy of Department for Child Protection and Family Support, Superintendent of Public Charities and Inspector of Industrial and Reformatory Schools, Report 1900, p.21.
    Details

From
1868
To
1942
Categories
Anglican, Home, Orphanage and Protestant
Alternative Names
  • Adelaide Terrace Orphanage, Perth, for Protestant Girls (also known as, 1907 - )
  • Girls' Protestant Orphanage (also known as, 1897 - )
  • Girls' Protestant Orphanage Industrial School (also known as, 1898 - )
  • Orphanage Industrial School for Junior Protestant Girls, Perth (also known as, 1903 - )
  • Perth Orphanage for Girls (also known as)
  • Protestant Orphanage (also known as, 1868 - 1942)
  • The Girls Orphanage, Perth (also known as)

Perth Girls' Orphanage was established as the 'Protestant Orphanage' in 1868 with 8 children, including one boy. It operated in a building near the Causeway, for children of all denominations aged 2-14 years. Children who were not orphans were also admitted. In 1882 the Home moved west up Adelaide Terrace. The Home was run by the The Committee until 1889, the Orphanages' Committee until 1939 and the Anglican Orphanages Board of Management until it closed. The premises were evacuated in 1942 and the Home became part of Swan Homes in Middle Swan.

Details

The Perth Girls Orphanage opened on 1 June 1868 with seven girls and one boy and plans to increase the number of children 'as the funds allow'. The orphanage was located in two cottages near the Causeway. At a meeting in Fremantle in November 1868, it was reported that children came from the Perth Workhouse - which was desirable not only because those children were greatly in need but also because the Government gave an allowance for taking those children. In 1882 the Girls' Orphanage moved to larger premises in Adelaide Terrace which were further enlarged in 1902 and 1904. The Perth Girls' Orphanage continued in Perth until 1942, when children and staff were evacuated to the Boys' Orphanage at Middle Swan during World War II. They never returned to the Perth site.

By November 1868, there were 11 orphans living at the orphanage, which had room for up to 20 children in total. The Rules of the orphanage allowed for admission of children from 2-9 years of age and 'honourable dismissal' at age 12-14, into service. Although called an 'orphanage' it seems that the founders intended from the outset to take destitute children who were not orphans, from any locality and any creed. The founders also acknowledged the need to admit boys, but there was a preference to take girls because of 'the greater gain there will be to society by the protection and education of girls' as Archdeacon Brown was reported to say. However, at least one boy was admitted in 1868 and by 1869 a new building for boys was erected on the same property, along with a school room.

The Perth Girls' Orphanage was able to be relatively selective in the girls it admitted. In 1881, a case was reported about:

a girl of seven years old, convicted lately of larceny, the child of abandoned parents, and brought up in misery and vice, for whome the Colonial Secretary had sought refuge in the Protestant Orphanage. A local Act gives the Governor in Council power to send such children to the Orphanages, which it was proposed in such cases to use for the purposes of reformatories, but a condition for the admission of these children was that the directors of the orphanages be 'willing' to receive them…the Manager of the Protestant Orphanage very properly declined to receive the child, fearing, not without good cause, that one practically acquainted with impurity and vice, might have an evil influence upon the rest. The West Australian 21 October 1881, p.3

In evidence to the Select Committee of the Legislative Council on the State Children Act Amendment Bill in October 1918, the Anglican Archdeacon of Perth said that there was 'no separate institution for little children' and that although they had two children 'under three and four years' they didn't want to take children that young. The younger children generally had separate dormitories and school work but had to 'live in the same place' with older children.

The removal of the Girls' Orphanage to 'the Swan' nearer to the Boys' Orphanage had been suggested by Bishop Hale as early as February 1888. Recolation was supported by the Colonial Surgeon, Dr Waylen who 'had often said' that yearly cases 'of low fever and diptheriac throat' were caused by the low, damp and inadequately drained site on Adelaide Terrace.

In 1892 a Select Committee of the Legislative Assembly of the Western Australian Parliament agreed to a proposal by the Anglican Church that the lands that had been donated to the Church for use as an orphanage could be sold to 'obtain a more healthy site and to erect more convenient buildings'.

In 1908, the older girls were required to attend East Perth State School. Later, the senior girls went to the James Street Central School. From about 1917, pre-school age boys were no longer admitted to the Swan Boys' Orphanage. Instead, they were admitted to Perth Girls' Orphanage so that they could have kindergarten classes. The boys were transferred to Swan Boys' Orphanage when they reached school age.

A letter of appreciation of the The Daily News Orphans' Christmas Cheer Fund in 1915 gives an insight into life at the Perth Girls' Orphanage. The letter shows that donations enabled the children to occasionally have extras that were not part of their daily experience:

…presents were given to each child, sweets and cakes were provided, and afterwards the children were taken for two picnics to the Zoo. Letter, 23 August 1916 published in The Daily News 2 December 1916, p.10

Government reports (Signposts 2004, p.425) show that Perth Girls' Orphanage was a significant institution in Western Australia. In 1935, it was reported that 638 girls had been admitted to the Home in the period since 1904. There were 67 children, aged from 18 months to 16 years, resident at the Home in September 1935. In 1937, there were 80 children in the Home: including 18 'private cases' and 62 children who were wards of the State. There were 5 boys and 18 children under six years of age. In the five years leading up to the relocation of Perth Girls' Orphanage to Middle Swan, there were around 50 to 59 children at the Home each year who were wards of the State.

The other statistic that was regularly reported (Signposts pp.424-425) was the number of young people attached to the Perth Girls' Orphanage who were 'at service' or 'placed at service'. That is, working-age girls who were placed with employers (under a formal agreement) or who worked within the institution. Generally, around 10 to 20 girls of working age were recorded as being 'at service' each year between 1926 and 1942.

In 1942, the Perth Girls' Orphanage relocated to Middle Swan, on the same site as the Swan Boys' Orphanage, and became part of Swan Homes.

Events

1868 - 1882
Location - Perth Girls' Orphanage was located in Adelaide Terrace near the Causeway in Perth. Location: Perth
1882 - 1942
Location - Perth Girls' Orphanage moved to new premises in Adelaide Terrace, Perth. Location: Perth

Timeline

 1868 - 1942 Perth Girls' Orphanage
       1943 - 1959 Swan Homes
             1960 - 2010 Swanleigh

Related Legislation

Related Organisations

Publications

Books

  • Battye, JS, The Cyclopedia of Western Australia (1912), Hesperian Press, Victoria Park, 1985. Vol 1, p.506. Details
  • Peterkin, A. Roy, The Noisy Mansions : the story of Swanleigh 1868-1971, Perth Diocesan Trustees, Anglican Church of Australia, Midland, Western Australia, 1986. pp.1, 6-7, 19, 20, 26-27. Details

Book Sections

  • 'Colonial Secretary's Department', in JS Battye (ed.), The Cyclopedia of Western Australia (1912), vol. 1, Hesperian Press, Victoria Park, 1985, pp. 502-507. Details

Reports

  • Report by the Superintendent of Poor Houses, Government Printer, Perth, 1882-1889. 1883, 1884, 1886, 1887, 1888, 1889. Details
  • Report by the Superintendent of Poor Relief, Government Printer, Perth, 1890-1896. 1890, 1891, 1892, 1893, 1894, 1895, 1896. Details
  • Report by the Superintendent of Relief and Inspector of Charitable Institutions for the year, Government Printer, Perth, 1897. Details
  • Report by the Inspector of Charitable Institutions, Government Printer, Perth, 1898. Details
  • Select Committee of the Legislative Assembly, Report of the Select Committee of the Legislative Assembly Appointed to Consider the Perth Protestant Orphanage Lands Sale (Private) Bill, Government Printer, Perth, 1892. Details
  • Western Australia. Charities Department, Report by the Superintendent of Public Charities and Inspector of Industrial and Reformatory Schools, Government Printer, Perth, [W.A.], 1899-1907. 1899, 1900, 1902, 1903, 1904, 1905, 1906, 1907. Details

Online Resources

Photos

Report of the Select Committee of the Legislative Assembly Appointed to Consider the Perth Protestant Orphanage Lands Sale (Private) Bill
Title
Report of the Select Committee of the Legislative Assembly Appointed to Consider the Perth Protestant Orphanage Lands Sale (Private) Bill
Type
Document
Date
9 December 1892
Source
State Records Office of Western Australia, Western Australia Votes and Proceedings 1892,

Details

Orphanage Industrial School for Protestant Girls, Perth
Title
Orphanage Industrial School for Protestant Girls, Perth
Type
Image
Date
1900
Source
Department for Child Protection and Family Support, Superintendent of Public Charities and Inspector of Industrial and Reformatory Schools, Report 1900, p.21

Details

Orphanage Industrial School for Protestant Girls, Perth, 1906
Title
Orphanage Industrial School for Protestant Girls, Perth, 1906
Type
Image
Date
1907
Source
Department for Child Protection and Family Support, Superintendent of Public Charities and Inspector of Industrial and Reformatory Schools, Report 1906, before p.17

Details

Report of the Select Committee of the Legislative Council on the State Children Act Amendment Bill
Title
Report of the Select Committee of the Legislative Council on the State Children Act Amendment Bill
Type
Document
Date
19 November 1918
Source
State Records Office Western Australia, Western Australia Votes and Proceedings 1918 Vol.2 Paper A2
Note
p.24

Details

Boans Father Christmas, Perth Girls' Orphanage, 1930s?
Title
Boans Father Christmas, Perth Girls' Orphanage, 1930s?
Type
Image
Date
1930
Creator
Mitchell, E. L. (Ernest Lund)
Source
Boans collection of photographs, State Library of Western Australia

Details

Coogee Home [I]
Title
Coogee Home [I]
Type
Image
Date
1931 - 1959
Source
Anglican Diocese of Perth, Western Australia, Archives

Details

Coogee Home [II]
Title
Coogee Home [II]
Type
Image
Date
1946 - 1948
Source
Anglican Diocese of Perth, Western Australia, Archives

Details

Perth Orphanage
Title
Perth Orphanage
Type
Image
Date
1979
Source
Department for Child Protection and Family Support, Department for Community Welfare, Western Australia , Annual Report 1979, p.14

Details

The Noisy Mansions : the story of Swanleigh 1868-1971
Title
The Noisy Mansions : the story of Swanleigh 1868-1971
Type
Document
Date
1986

Details

Old Perth Girls Orphanage building on Adelaide Terrace, Perth
Title
Old Perth Girls Orphanage building on Adelaide Terrace, Perth
Type
Image
Date
3 April 2014
Source
Australian Broadcasting Corporation

Details

Sources used to compile this entry: 'Advertising [Perth Girls' Orphanage]', The Inquirer & Commercial News, 20 May 1868, p. 2, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article69385692; 'Perth Protestant Orphanage', The Inquirer & Commercial News, 4 November 1868, p. 4, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article69386835; 'Occasional Notes [Home for Girls]', The West Australian, 21 October 1881, pp. 2-3, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article2985788; 'Perth (P.) Orphanage', Western Mail, Charles Harper, J.W. Hackett, James Gibey, for the Western mail office, Perth, 18 February 1888, p. 25, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article32709953; Report by the Superintendent of Relief and Inspector of Charitable Institutions for the year, Government Printer, Perth, 1897; Report by the Inspector of Charitable Institutions, Government Printer, Perth, 1898; 'The Daily News [Christmas Cheer Fund]', The Daily News, 2 December 1916, p. 10, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article81358001; Battye, JS, The Cyclopedia of Western Australia (1912), Hesperian Press, Victoria Park, 1985. Vol 1, p.506.; Information Services, Department for Community Development, 'pp.423-424', Signposts: A Guide for Children and Young People in Care in WA from 1920, Government of Western Australia, 2004, https://signposts.communities.wa.gov.au//pdf/pdf.aspx; Peterkin, A. Roy, The Noisy Mansions : the story of Swanleigh 1868-1971, Perth Diocesan Trustees, Anglican Church of Australia, Midland, Western Australia, 1986. pp.1, 6-7, 19, 20, 26-27.; Report of the Select Committee of the Legislative Assembly Appointed to Consider the Perth Protestant Orphanage Lands Sale (Private) Bill [Document], Date: 9 December 1892; Report of the Select Committee of the Legislative Council on the State Children Act Amendment Bill [Document], Date: 19 November 1918; Western Australia. Charities Department, Report by the Superintendent of Public Charities and Inspector of Industrial and Reformatory Schools, Government Printer, Perth, [W.A.], 1899-1907. 1899, 1900, 1902, 1903, 1904, 1905, 1906, 1907.; Email from Diocesan Archivist, Anglican Diocese of Perth, 19th August 2014.

Prepared by: Debra Rosser