The Native Workers' Training College was established by Retta Long, the founder of the Aborigines Inland Mission, to train Aboriginal workers for ministry.
At the time of the official opening, by Leonard and Retta Long in April 1939, the college had two students. The Durham and Gloucester Advertiser reported:
'Mrs Long, in her address, said that Pindimar meant "vessels for carrying water", and this would apply to the students going back to their own people, carrying the "living water."'
The Durham and Gloucester Advertiser described the Native Workers' Training College in May 1940:
'The college is a new venture in the work amongst Australian aborigines, and is the only one of its kind in Australia. It has been established recently at Pindimar, Port Stephens, and at present there are five aboriginal full-bloods in residence at the college.
These students are being taught building, construction, agricultural work, in addition to being given a missionary training and such general knowledge as will be helpful amongst their own people. After they complete the college course, they will return to outback stations to work amongst their own people.'
Heather Radi says that the college began as 'little more than a training centre for Sunday School teachers, but by the 1950s a trickle of applicants for the ministry began.'
Later photographs, in the State Library's Collection, show a number of girls, many of them very young, engaged in domestic chores. One can only hope they also received training in ministry.
Last updated:
10 June 2021
Cite this: http://www.findandconnect.gov.au/guide/nsw/NE01607
First published by the Find & Connect Web Resource Project for the Commonwealth of Australia, 2011
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