The School of Homecrafts Hostel, at 43 Berry Street, East Melbourne, was situated on land was originally reserved by the government for the establishment of an 'asylum for the training of domestic servants'.
The Training Home for Girls (also known as Servants' Training Institute) operated on the site from 1883 until around 1923. On 1 May 1923 the Argus reported that premises were 'about to be reopened under the auspices of the Church of England, as a school of homecrafts, where it is proposed to give girls a complete training in every branch of household activities, cooking and laundry work, sewing and the care and management of children in infancy and in the kindergarten stage'. The paper also reported that the building had undergone 'extension alterations' and would be refurnished. Young women at the School would receive two years of training.
In 1935, the Girls' Friendly Society handed over management of the School of Homecrafts to the Mission of St James and St John. It received its first girls from St Agnes' Girls' Home) in Glenroy in July 1935, for 'training in domestic arts and other occupations calculated not only to be useful and interesting to themselves but of great value in securing them suitable positions and in teaching them to be helpful and reliable to the utmost in such positions.'
In their history of the Mission of St James and St John, Monk and O'Donoghue write that the Mission's provision of hostel accommodation for young people from 14 to 18 reflected anxiety about 'the temptations of adolescence' and children previously receiving supervision and guidance in children's homes 'going astray'.
The girls, generally former residents of institutions, aged between 14 and 18 years, were trained in laundry work at the School of Homecrafts, until the laundry was closed in 1939. The Mission then established a school for 'training girls in domestic economy'.
From this point on, the School accommodated not only ex-institutional young women, but also those from the country doing courses such as Domestic Science, Teaching and Hairdressing. Monk and O'Donoghue note that it closed in 1976.
In 1978, the Mission of St James and St John established Beryl Booth Court on the former site of the School of Homecrafts Hostel.
In 1997 the Mission of St James and St John became part of Anglicare Victoria. At this time, records of the Mission were transferred to Anglicare Victoria. These included records of the various orphanages, homes and other residences run by the Mission. The custodian of these records is Anglicare Victoria.
Last updated:
14 January 2019
Cite this: http://www.findandconnect.gov.au/guide/vic/E000087
First published by the Find & Connect Web Resource Project for the Commonwealth of Australia, 2011
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