St Martin's House, 'a new hostel for senior boys from children's institutions, sponsored by St John's Home for Boys', was officially opened in June 1944 (The Argus 29 May 1944, p.6).
At St Martin's House:
'The boys enjoy greater freedom and personal attention at the hostel. They make some contribution towards their maintenance from their weekly wages, but most of their earnings are banked for their future use or spent in training for a profession or trade (The Argus 12 June 1944, p.6)'
In June 1953, St John's Home for Boys launched an appeal to complete 'the first working boys' hostel of its kind in Victoria'. The 'new' St Martin's House was located in a brick building on the grounds of St John's Home for Boys in Balwyn Road, Canterbury. It was opened by Prime Minister Menzies 30 November 1953. Newspapers reported on the event:
'The £12,500 hostel is build of oatmeal-coloured bricks and has a white pergola, gaily painted rooms and built-in furniture.
Twenty boys, aged 15 to 19, live in the hostel and all have jobs. They pay between £2 5/ and £3 5/ for board, do the washing up, their laundry (in a washing machine) and iron their own shirts (The Age 30 November 1953, p.4)'
The opening of St Martin's House marked the 'first step of a rebuilding programme' at St John's Home, according to the chairman of the board of management, Mr Caldwell.
He stated that 1 in every 4 boys accommodated at St Martin's House would be a British migrant (St John's Home was one of the institutions in Victoria to receive child migrants from Britain).
A Department of Human Services publication states that in 1978, St Martin's was converted to a 'specialist hostel' but does not provide further details (Jenkinson, Volume One, 2001). St Martin's House was listed in the Department's 'Approved Community Services Register' in 2000/2001 (Jenkinson, Volume Two, 2001).
Last updated:
02 November 2022
Cite this: http://www.findandconnect.gov.au/guide/vic/E000111
First published by the Find & Connect Web Resource Project for the Commonwealth of Australia, 2011
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