The land on which Redcliffe was situated was originally owned by Henry Edward Peirson (who had been born at Heytesbury, Wiltshire, England), and functioned as a sugarcane plantation called Redcliffe Plantation. Following Peirson's death the property was left to his daughters, who, in 1947 and again in 1953 left it in trust to the Ann Street Presbyterian Church in Brisbane to be run as a training farm for poor boys.
The home was intended to provide residents with agricultural training on the property, which included work on the sugarcane plantation, running a herd of 40 dairy cattle, maintaining a piggery, and keeping chickens. A plantation of 1500 avocado trees was later planted on the property. The boys attended the local Goodwood state primary school and Childers State High School, and received a Christian upbringing. A house was later purchased at Avoca Street, Bundaberg, to cater for boys who wished to undertake apprenticeships.
In 1977 the terms of the Peirson Memorial Trust were changed to allow the admission of girls to the Goodwood homes as well as boys, in order to allow family groups to stay together.
It was stated in a 1995 court hearing regarding the management of the Peirson Memorial Trust that there were only 6 children living in homes run by the Trust, down from 21 in 1985. During this period the majority of the boys being placed in the home were wards of the state. Despite this drop in numbers, the Heytesbury Home continued to operate for another 15 years. In 2000 its mode of management changed from being run as a family group home with house parents, to being run by a number of staff rostered on shifts. Heytesbury closed in 2011.
Last updated:
25 July 2022
Cite this: http://www.findandconnect.gov.au/guide/qld/QE00454
First published by the Find & Connect Web Resource Project for the Commonwealth of Australia, 2011
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