The change of name from Gosford Farm Home for Boys to Gosford Training School followed the introduction of the Child Welfare Act 1923. When the new Act was introduced the Gosford facility was transferred from the Department of Public Instruction to the Child Welfare Department.
The Annual Report of the Child Welfare Department in 1930 set out the principles behind the Gosford Training School
'... the elder boys are admitted, and by a process of character- building consisting of drill and individual training based on each boy's psychological peculiarities, pass through successive grades or classifications in the institution until it is thought they are once more fit for a trial on conditional discharge ... As regards the future, it is intended to develop the training of the boys to a greater degree in manual work, particularly in regard to working in wood and metal - also, to make some training possible for wards over 14 years of age before apprenticing them to employers.'
It also described some of the routine and the work the boys did:
'On admission a lad is allotted to No. 1 company, which
occupies No. 1 dormitory, and he has to earn his transfer from there up
to No. 4 company and dormitory before he is considered as ready for
release on probation …
The training consists of orchard, farm and dairy work, roadmaking,
levelling, clearing, tree felling, and other work incidental to a farm.
A manual training class is in operation, and each lad must take part in
organised physical training and sport and learn to swim.'
The 1932 Annual Report made special note of the effects of the
Depression on the boys entering the training school; admitting that
the cause of the 'failure' of most of the 'recidivist' boys was their
'bad home conditions'. It described the bodily effects of the
Depression:
'It has been noted that many of the lads admitted during these
years were in a poor physical condition, many of them suffering from
malnutrition, and steps had to be taken to build them up to the
standard of health maintained by the Department. Many of them had been roaming the country looking for work and had endured severe privation.
As a result, on admission they were weakened in physique.'
The regime at Gosford was condemned by an inquiry held in 1934 by JE McCulloch. McCulloch reported that the punishment regime at Gosford included allowing the older boys to administer corporal punishment to younger boys, without supervision by staff. This included older boys forming a gauntlet, through which boys under punishment were obliged to run while the older boys hit them. The staff were untrained, and some McCulloch considered were mentally unstable. McCulloch also observed the staff allowed boys to work in unsafe situations, such as standing on the edge of giant coppers to boil laundry. The regime does appear to have changed after McCulloch's report, but the discipline practices he wanted stopped at Gosford were allowed to continue at Gosford's annexe, Riverina Welfare Farm for Boys at Yanco.
The site of Gosford Training School is, in 2014, part of Mt Penang Parklands.
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Last updated:
31 May 2023
Cite this: http://www.findandconnect.gov.au/guide/nsw/NE01149
First published by the Find & Connect Web Resource Project for the Commonwealth of Australia, 2011
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