Difference between revisions of "Redbanks School"
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|StreetSuffix=Road | |StreetSuffix=Road | ||
|Locality=Redbanks | |Locality=Redbanks | ||
| − | |Geocoordinates=-34. | + | |Geocoordinates=-34.489650496155, 138.55828285217 |
|DateEstablished=1879 | |DateEstablished=1879 | ||
| + | |Date approximate=No | ||
|CeasedOperation=1937 | |CeasedOperation=1937 | ||
| + | |Date approximate2=No | ||
|BusinessPurpose=Education | |BusinessPurpose=Education | ||
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| − | The Redbanks Wesleyan Church was listed as opening | + | The Redbanks Wesleyan Church was listed as opening a provisional school during 1879-1880. The land for the church was identified as Part Section 46 Hundred of Grace. It was documented on the 21st of December 1880 that the land was conveyed by Joseph Dix to the Minister Controlling Education. |
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| + | In 1880 Redbanks was part of the Dublin School district, and no teachers' names or number of pupils were recorded until 1881, when Ada F. Langdon was listed. She taught until 1889. In 1891 the Board of Advice from Dublin recommended that the Redbanks school be closed. Mr Talbot and Mrs Matters pressured the Education Department into reopening the school and in September 1906 the Education Gazette reports Redbanks again as a new school. Miss McRae was the first teacher and the average attendance at school was 15 or 16 children. The school was made a class 9 in 1913, when Miss Rosalie K. Collins came as a teacher. She had a horse and buggy and boarded with Miss Bowler, the Korunye school teacher, in the Korunye school house. Miss Collins taught until the end of 1918 with an average of nearly 23 children, the largest attendance at Redbanks school. Lillian M. Adams taught 19 children in 1919. Redbanks School had a neat, well kept garden, each bed surrounded with stones. One lesson pepper trees were planted. The children who planted one each were Linda Wait, May Helps, Olga Leske, Bill Pritchard and Cyril Hall. These trees grew very slowly, as the ground is stony, but persisted, along with some native shrubs and some tall gums in tidy rows. In 1920 Miss Ellen Toole, a local girl, taught 18 children for five years. In 1937 the school was made a class 7 school and Miss Beatrice Higgins and Frank E. Fischer (a local teacher) shared the closing year. This building never opened as a school again. | ||
Redbanks School Teachers | Redbanks School Teachers | ||
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| 1881-1888 | | 1881-1888 | ||
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| School closed | | School closed | ||
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| − | + | {{Info | |
| − | + | |Related Articles=Barabba School, Dublin School, Establishment of Dublin School, Feltwell School, Grace Plains School, Korunye School, Lewiston School, Long Plains School, Lower Light School, Mallala School, New Two Wells School Opening, Port Gawler North (Two Wells) School, Port Gawler West School, Reeves Plains School, Stony Point School, Two Wells School, Wild Horse Plains School, Windsor School, Redbanks Wesleyan Methodist Church, | |
| − | + | |Sources=Mallala Museum research notes | |
| − | + | |FlickrID=5061689499 | |
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Latest revision as of 13:47, 4 September 2020
| Type of organisation: | Government
|
| Street name: | Germantown |
| Street suffix: | Road |
| Town or locality: | Redbanks |
| Date established: | 1879 |
| Ceased operation: | 1937 |
| Business or purpose: | Education |
The Redbanks Wesleyan Church was listed as opening a provisional school during 1879-1880. The land for the church was identified as Part Section 46 Hundred of Grace. It was documented on the 21st of December 1880 that the land was conveyed by Joseph Dix to the Minister Controlling Education.
In 1880 Redbanks was part of the Dublin School district, and no teachers' names or number of pupils were recorded until 1881, when Ada F. Langdon was listed. She taught until 1889. In 1891 the Board of Advice from Dublin recommended that the Redbanks school be closed. Mr Talbot and Mrs Matters pressured the Education Department into reopening the school and in September 1906 the Education Gazette reports Redbanks again as a new school. Miss McRae was the first teacher and the average attendance at school was 15 or 16 children. The school was made a class 9 in 1913, when Miss Rosalie K. Collins came as a teacher. She had a horse and buggy and boarded with Miss Bowler, the Korunye school teacher, in the Korunye school house. Miss Collins taught until the end of 1918 with an average of nearly 23 children, the largest attendance at Redbanks school. Lillian M. Adams taught 19 children in 1919. Redbanks School had a neat, well kept garden, each bed surrounded with stones. One lesson pepper trees were planted. The children who planted one each were Linda Wait, May Helps, Olga Leske, Bill Pritchard and Cyril Hall. These trees grew very slowly, as the ground is stony, but persisted, along with some native shrubs and some tall gums in tidy rows. In 1920 Miss Ellen Toole, a local girl, taught 18 children for five years. In 1937 the school was made a class 7 school and Miss Beatrice Higgins and Frank E. Fischer (a local teacher) shared the closing year. This building never opened as a school again.
Redbanks School Teachers
| 1881-1888 | Ada R Langdon | 1920-1924 | Ellen Toole, a local girl |
| 1889-1890 | Harriette C. Ward | 1925-1927 | Edna M. Birchall |
| 1891 | School closed | 1928-1932 | Mary Fennessy |
| 1906 | School reopened | 1933-1934 | Gwyndoline M. James |
| 1906-1909 | Miss McRae | 1935-1936 | Kenneth H. Pearce |
| 1910-1912 | Pamela Tamblyn | 1937 | Beatrice C. Higgins |
| 1913-1918 | Rosalie K. Collins | 1937 | Frank E. Fischer |
| 1919 | Lilliam M. Adams | 1937 | School closed |
Sources
- Mallala Museum research notes
Memories of Redbanks School
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