Last Updated: January 30th, 2026
New South Wales
1912 - 1946
The Parramatta Girls Training Home was the name given in 1912 to the former Parramatta Girls Industrial School. It accommodated around 160 to 200 older girls at a time. The girls had been charged with crimes, or committed by welfare organisations. In 1946, after a public controversy, its name changed again to the Parramatta Girls Training School. Girls were placed in Parramatta for a variety of reasons: they had been committed by welfare organisations; had been charged with crimes; were on remand or because they had not settled into foster placements or other institutions. For most of its existence, Parramatta combined the functions of training school, for girls in the welfare stream, and reformatory, for girls on criminal charges. Until 1928 it received girls as young as two years of age. The institution at Parramatta has a long history including several name changes from 1887 to 1975. It has been estimated that up to 30,000 girls passed through Parramatta over this time; it is
Last Updated: January 30th, 2026
Caption taken from YouTube: Abandon All Hope is the first documented history of the Parramatta Girls Home – a project made possible through the Parrastories Heritage and Stories fund, Parramatta City Council. Until now the story of this State operated welfare institution has remained relatively unknown. The document examines the site’s archaeological heritage together with an overview of the statutory and societal forces and the individual and collective experiences of the young people who once resided within its walls.
Last Updated: January 30th, 2026
New South Wales
1944 - 1950?
Lawson Rural Centre, in Lawson in the Blue Mountains, was a children’s home established by the Homes and Hostels Committee of the Home Mission Society, part of the Church of England’s Sydney Diocese, in 1944, after the property was offered to the Anglican church. It was the only small home run by the Anglican Home Mission Society. The staff included a matron and a farm manager (Sydney Morning Herald, 14 December 1945). In 1945, the chairman of the Church of England Homes Committee, Bishop Hilliard, said that the house in Lawson was “deemed an excellent and healthy spot … We entertained high hopes for it and we still do” (Sydney Morning Herald, 3 September 1945).
Last Updated: January 30th, 2026
New South Wales
1856 - 1997
The Home Mission Society of the Anglican Diocese of Sydney, also known as the Church of England Home Mission Society, was established in Sydney in 1856. It was originally called the Church Society before its name was changed to the Home Mission Society in 1911. It ran several children’s Homes through its Homes and Hostels Committee, and also provided chaplaincy at the children’s courts. Both Care Force and Charlton Youth Services developed from the Home Mission Society. In 1997 the Home Mission Society changed its name to Anglicare. The society’s main objective was to help needy parishes by building new churches, rectories and schools, paying clergy, and evangelising and bringing more people to the church. The Society began to increase its social welfare work in the
Last Updated: January 29th, 2026
South Australia
1940 - 1979
The Sacred Heart Orphanage was established in 1940 at Crystal Brook. Run by the Good Samaritan Sisters, it originally catered for children in need whose fathers had been killed during World War II. In the 1970s the orphanage accommodated children between 4 and 15 years of age. The institution closed as an orphanage in 1979. Sacred Heart Orphanage was originally established by the Catholic Church to cater for children in need whose fathers had been killed during World War II. It was run by the Order of the Good Samaritan Sisters. Other than the children’s home at the Umeewarra Mission near Port Augusta, it was the only home in the north of the state. In the 1970s an agreement was signed with the Department of Community Welfare and government assistance was provided to the institution. This funding allowed the orphanage to accommodate any boys and girls between the ages of 4 and 15 who needed short or long term care. It normally catered for up to twenty children under the care of t
Last Updated: January 28th, 2026
Victoria
2004 - current
Deaf Children Australia is a national organisation advocating and providing services and resources for deaf children and their families in Australia. It was formed as a national body in 2004, but had previously operated as the management body for the Victorian College for the Deaf. Deaf Children Australia hold a collection of records and heritage items relating to the Victorian College for the Deaf and its predecessors, the Victorian School for Deaf Children and the Victorian Deaf and Dumb Institution.
Last Updated: January 28th, 2026
Western Australia
1902 - 1916
Girls’ High School, Kalgoorlie, was established in 1903 by the Sisters of the Church as a boarding and day school for girls. The first students were nine girls aged 8-11 years who had been brought by the Sisters in 1901 from the Orphanage of Mercy, Kilburn in England. These girls lived at Kalgoorlie for some years and completed their schooling at Perth College. From 1908, Girls’ High School, Kalgoorlie was run by the Community of the Sisters of the Church until it ceased operating the school in 1916. On 13 March 1903, Sister Sarah and nine of the English orphan girls moved from Perth College to Kalgoorlie where the Sisters had, in 1902, taken over a school in a makeshift building about half an hour’s walk from Hannan Street. This was known (Battye, p.79) as Girls’ High School, Kalgoorlie and it had originally been established in 1898, according to Doncaster (1998). It seems that the girls and Sisters boarded first at Mrs Watson’s Boarding House (which was also known as St John’s Lod
Last Updated: January 28th, 2026
Australian Capital Territory
1976 - 2015
Outreach House was established in 1976 and was run by the Richmond Fellowship of the ACT Inc. It provided housing for young people aged 11 to 18 years who were unable to live at home. The program promoted educational opportunities and participation in social and recreational activities. The House closed around 2015.
Last Updated: January 28th, 2026
Australian Capital Territory
1986 - 2016
Marlow Cottage, Kaleen, was established in 1986 under the Children’s Services Act 1986 and closed around 2016. It was originally known as Kaleen Youth Shelter and was run by the Welfare Branch, and later the Housing and Community Services Bureau of the ACT Government. It was established to provide accommodation for 12- to 17-year-olds who were on court orders deemed at risk of abuse or neglect, or because they must reside as directed as a condition of bail. In 1995 the Government decided to privatise the operations of the Shelter and tenders were advertised in September 1995. Public outcry ensued, with concerns that the transition from a public sector service was a sign that the government did not want to provide services for the community, that it was a cost-cutting measure, and would potentially put the local community at risk. A motion in the Legislative Assembly narrowly failed to pause the transfer of ownership with the intention to keep it in the public sector. One tender was
Last Updated: January 28th, 2026
Victoria
1995 - current
Victorian College for the Deaf was the new name given in 1995 to the Victorian School for Deaf Children. The college is located on the corner of High St and St Kilda Rd, Prahran. Some students reside during the week at a family group home in the south-eastern suburbs.
Last Updated: January 28th, 2026
Understanding the background of state and territory welfare systems can make it easier to find records. For example, in South Australia there was a centralised government department that was usually involved in organising a child’s placement in ‘care’ so it makes sense to start with government records; in Victoria, until the 1950s many placements were likely to be arranged more informally by churches or charities (known as “voluntary” or “private placements”). Records may not be held by government archives, but with the past provider, or organisation that holds their records. Australian Capital Territory | New South Wales | Northern Territory | Queensland | South Australia |
Last Updated: January 28th, 2026
Western Australia
1962 - 2000?
Charles Perkins Hostel in Halls Creek began in 1962 as a government-run hostel for school-age children, on the site of the old Australian Inland Mission. By 1995, its role had changed to child protection placements. Around 2000, its name was changed to the Yurag-Man-Gu Taam-Purru Placement and Support Centre. Charles Perkins Hostel in Halls Creek, opened in March 1962 as a government-run hostel for school-age children, on the site of the old Australian Inland Mission. It was an Aboriginal education and employment hostel, named after Charles Perkins, who had been a Minister for Native Welfare. By the end of its first year of operation, 44 Aboriginal children were living there. Until 1963, these children were under the guardianship of the Commissioner of Native Welfare. By 1971, there were seven staff looking after 90 boys and girls of primary-school age who went to school in Halls Creek. In 1972, the Department for Community Welfare (DCW) took over the child welfare responsibil
Last Updated: January 28th, 2026
Western Australia
2000? - 2007
Yurag-Man-Gu Taam-Purru Placement and Support Centre was the new name given to the government-run Charles Perkins Hostel in Halls Creek around 2000. Children who could not live at home with family were accommodated there. In 2007, it became known as the Yurag-Man-Taam-Purru hostel.
Last Updated: January 28th, 2026
Western Australia
2007 - current
Yurag-Man-Gu Taam-Purru Hostel was the new name given to the government-run Yurag-Man-Gu Taam-Purru Placement and Support Centre, Halls Creek, in 2007. Children who could not live at home with family were accommodated there. By around 2013, it was more commonly known as the Yurag-Man-Taam-Purru Group Home. Hodgkins, Crawford and Budiselik explain “‘Yurag-Man-Gu Taam-Purra’, the name selected for the residential child care facility, means ‘a good place for kids’ and is a phrase from two East Kimberley languages: Djaru and Kitja.” Yurag-Man-Taam-Purru Hostel was called a few different names in Government reports including Yurang-Man-Gu-Taam-Purru Hostel in Department for Child Protection Annual Report 2007-08 (p.44) and Halls Creek Hostel in Department for Child Protection Annual Report 2008-09 (p.36). It was also commonly referred to as just Yurag-Man-Gu Taam-Purru.
Last Updated: January 28th, 2026
South Australia
1917 - 1960
The Mareeba Babies’ Hospital was established in Woodville in 1917. It took over the role of the St Peters Babies’ Hospital caring for sick infants under the age of two. Originally under the control of the Inspector General of Hospitals, with the Babies Hospital Association acting in an advisory role, it came under the control of the Adelaide Children’s Hospital Board in 1951. In 1960 it became the Mareeba Children’s Annex of the Queen Elizabeth Hospital. The Mareeba Babies’ Hospital was established at 19-21 Belmore Terrace, Woodville in 1917 in a large building that had been used as accommodation for sick soldiers but was no longer required by the military authorities. It took over the care of infants under the age of two, predominantly with digestive ailments, from the Babies’ Hospital at St Peters which was established by the Babies’ Hospital Association in 1915. The Babies’ Hospital Association committee was made up of philanthropic women and prominent Adelaide doctors. Its first
Last Updated: January 23rd, 2026
New South Wales
1918 - current
The New South Wales Department of Child Welfare (and its predecessor and successor departments) created a wide range of records about state wards. These records contain personal information about former wards of the state, and include case files, ward history cards, foster parent files, registers and indexes of children in certain types of institutions, after-care files, and records relating to the operation of Homes and institutions for young people. The majority of these records are held by Museums of History NSW (State Archives), although more modern records from the 1980s onwards remain in the custody of the Department of Family and Community Services. Access Conditions Access to these records is restricted. In New South Wales, records relating to individuals, such as case files and correspondence are closed to public access for 100 years. Records such as registers and indexes are closed to public access for 80 years. Care Leavers wishing to access records about thems
Last Updated: January 23rd, 2026
Queensland
1940 - current
The Silky Oaks Haven for Children, in Manly West, was operated by the Open Brethren and the Council of Silky Oaks Children’s Haven. It was established at Toowong in 1940 and moved to Manly in 1946, and was licensed as a foster home. The first State children were admitted to Silky Oaks in April 1950. From the 1970s, Silky Oaks established a number of cottage homes. Silky Oaks Haven for Children was licensed under The lnfant Life Protection Act 1905 on 6 September 1940. Silky Oaks was licensed as a residential facility under The State Children Act 1911 on 30 March 1957. The first family group cottage was completed in 1965/66 and licensed under The Children’s Services Act 1965 on 4 August 1966. The name Silky Oaks was adopted because the kitchen at the Cross Street residence at Toowong was made from Silky Oak timber. The original home is over 100 years old. It provided the first dormitory style accommodation for the children. In 1946 Silky Oaks moved to M
Last Updated: January 23rd, 2026
Western Australia
1966 - December 2020
Cooinda, in Mount Lawley, was established in 1966 by Methodist Homes for Children at the request of the Department of Native Welfare as hostel to accommodate Aboriginal teenage girls working in Perth. The Heritage Council documentation states “Although managed by the Methodist Church, the Department of Native Welfare remained responsible for the placement and location of employment for residents at Cooinda.” Up to fourteen girls could be accommodated at the hostel. By December 1974, Cooinda is described in The ‘Homes’ Herald as caring for ten teenage girls who are either working or studying, and are usually state wards. From 1977 it was run by the agencies of the Uniting Church, later known as Mofflyn, and in 1987 it was transferred to the Department for Community Services. Cooinda remained a departmental facility for Aboriginal student accommodation until it closed in December 2020. It is reported in the Heritage Council documentation that prior to its closure Cooinda
Last Updated: January 23rd, 2026
Victoria
1947 - 31 January 1986
The Kardinia Children’s Home in Belmont (Geelong) was established in 1947 and was run by the Salvation Army. Originally it opened as a toddler’s home and accommodated children aged between two and five with children sent to Salvation Army children’s homes in Melbourne upon reaching school age. Later on it provided for children of all ages and children often attended the local Belmont Primary School. From 1965 cottage homes were opened on the Kardinia grounds to enable siblings to stay together and the institution was also known as Kardinia Child Care and Family Services Centre. All residential care of children ended at Kardinia on 31 January 1986. In 1983, the residential units declared as approved children’s homes at Kardinia Child Care and Family Services Centre were Paringa Cottage, Attunga Unit, Wallara Cottage, Birralee Unit and Kyewong Cottage. In around 2003 when the property was being “cleaned out”, the personal files of children who had been at the Home were destroyed. I
Last Updated: January 23rd, 2026
From the 1930’s to the 1980’s newborn babies were removed from their unmarried mothers immediately after birth, often without any contact or even sight of the child, to be placed with a married couple. The shame and stigma of pregnancy outside of marriage was such that maternity homes were established where families could send their daughters to have their children to be adopted out, with or without her consent. There were few options for unwed mothers to keep their baby. Little financial support was available to single mothers, and many more institutions were engaged in what we now know as forced adoptions than there were safe places for a single mother to take care of her baby. Mothers were subject to abuse in maternity homes, sometimes shackled to the bed during birth until their baby was removed, drugged and forced to sign papers consenting to adoption, or misled by social workers about financial support
Last Updated: January 23rd, 2026
Queensland
1 September 1960 - 2016
Nicklin Cottage Family Group Home, in Aspley, opened in 1960 and closed in 1984. It was run by the Methodist Church until 1977 when management of the home was transferred to the Uniting Church. Nicklin Cottage Family Group Home was licensed under the State Children Act 1911 on 27 October 1960 and then the Children’s Services Act 1965 on 4 August 1966. The home reopened in early 2011 and in 2014 was operating as a residential home for young people between the ages of 12 and 17 years. It closed again in 2016.
Last Updated: January 22nd, 2026
New South Wales
1951 - 2011
The Cobar War Memorial Children’s Hostel, also known as Cobar Memorial Home for Boys, opened in 1951. It accommodated up to 48 children from a large portion of the Western District Division in an area extending up to 200 miles from Cobar, so they could attend school in in the town. Cobar War Memorial Children’s Hostel was built as a war memorial in 1950. It was opened by the Minister for Education, RJ Heffron in 1951, and run by a private committee. The funds to build it were raised from residents of the town and district, who subscribed the £17,000 cost. Bursaries and fees assistance for children from poorer families were provided by various funds and organisations, including Cobar RSL. In 1966, ongoing financial difficulties resulted in the closure of the Hostel on August 25th, at the end of the school term. The closure left little alternative accommodation for the 30 children who had boarded at the Hostel. However, this closure appears to have been temporary, as the Cobar Mem
Last Updated: January 22nd, 2026
New South Wales
c. 1954 - current
Camp Toukley, located on the Central Coast of New South Wales, was established in 1954 as a holiday camp for children living at Lutanda Children’s Home. Operated by Lutanda Children’s Services, the camp was built on 57 acres of land. Over time its main purpose changed to running holiday camps for groups of children, family group camps, and religious retreats, however it continued to operate camps for children in out-of-home care. In 2019, Lutanda Camps was renamed CCC Camps, and Camp Toukley became known as CCC Central Coast. According to its website, as of 2026 CCC Camps continues to operate out-of-home care camps for “primary-aged children in foster care”.
Last Updated: January 22nd, 2026
South Australia
c. 2001 - current
Louise Place was the new name given to St Joseph’s Refuge at Fullarton in 2001. It operated under the management of Centacare and provided accommodation and services for young pregnant women, new parents and their children. Louise Place was still operating in 2018.
Last Updated: January 21st, 2026
Queensland
c. 1904 - 1986
The Cherbourg Aboriginal Settlement was located on the lands of the Wakka Wakka people, near the town of Murgon in south eastern Queensland. The Salvation Army missionary William J Thompson established a mission at Barambah in 1899. Initially it was sponsored by the Ipswich Aboriginal Protection Society. In 1904-1905 the Queensland government took over management of the Barambah Aboriginal Settlement, as Cherbourg was also known at that time. In 1986, Cherbourg became a DOGIT (Deed of Grant in Trust) and the community began managing its own affairs. The Cherbourg Aboriginal Settlement was located in the South Burnett district of south east Queensland. In 1899, William J Thompson of the Salvation Army began negotiations with the Queensland government to establish an Aboriginal mission – 1280 acres of land at Barambah was gazetted as an Aboriginal reserve in March 1900. Thompson was the first superintendent and the mission was sponsored by the Ipswich Aboriginal Protection Society.
Last Updated: January 21st, 2026
Queensland
c.1984 - 2010
Beemar Yumba Aboriginal Children’s Hostel was a residential care service at Cherbourg funded by the Queensland Department of Child Safety from around 1984 to 2010. It accommodated children between the ages of 5 years and 15 years, who required out of home care due to statutory intervention or parental agreement. All children and young people were referred to Beemar Yumba Hostel by the Department of Child Safety. The hostel opened after the boys’ dormitory at Cherbourg was closed in 1982. The “run-down” hostel building was replaced with a new $1.1m 12-bed shelter in 2005 (ABC news, 2004). In 2009, it became part of the Cherbourg Historical Precinct (Cherbourg Memory website). Beemar Yumba Hostel Aboriginal Corporation, which ran the hostel, was deregistered in November 2010. The new building, funded by the Queensland State Government in 2004 accommodated 12 children. The facility also incorporated a carers’ residence and adminis