Francis Armstrong, the interpreter at the Native Institution from 1834 was a Methodist. He was the earliest 'Wesleyan' known to be formally associated with out of home care in Western Australia. Another notable person was the Reverend John Smithies who arrived with his wife, Hannah, and family in 1840 and established the Perth Native School in that year. The Wanneroo Native School followed in 1844 and Gerald's Mission (York) from 1851-1854. An Order of the Sisters of the People started in the 1890s and it is not uncommon to see Sisters named as carers in the Methodist children's homes during the first few decades of the twentieth century. The Methodist Church established the Methodist Girls' Home in 1918, the Methodist Children's Home (later, Mofflyn) in 1922, and Werribee Farm School in 1929. As part of the broader Australian church, the Methodist Overseas Mission ran Mogumber (at Moore River) from 1951 until it closed. By the 1950s, the Methodist Church was also running high school hostels in regional and metropolitan areas, for Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal students.
From its inception, the Methodist Church was also involved in 'outreach' activities, including establishing the Wesley Church Canteen in the city. The Methodist Church started a Newspaper Boys' Club', which ran in the 1920s and was reported to support boys who sold newspapers on the streets and who had 'come to know many of the difficulties of life very early indeed' and who needed 'helpers' who understood and appreciated the boys' 'special characteristics and often their special form of bravado'. This outreach, social work approach possibly influenced the relatively early adoption of 'in home' support that was being practised from Mofflyn in the mid-1980s as an alternative to taking children 'into care'.
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Last updated:
21 October 2022
Cite this: http://www.findandconnect.gov.au/guide/wa/WE00980
First published by the Find & Connect Web Resource Project for the Commonwealth of Australia, 2011
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