Archives



Collection of material relating to Mentally Incurable Children’s Association, State Library of Western Australia

Collection of material relating to Mentally Incurable Children’s Association, State Library of Western Australia (1978 – 1980s) is a small collection of brochures and promotional material about the organisation that ran Nulsen Haven. This information is held in the State Library of Western Australia’s JS Battye Library of West Australian History Collection. The State Library…

Nulsen Haven

Nulsen Haven was a home for children with intellectual disabilities. It was run by the Mentally Incurable Children’s Association (MICA) in the Perth suburb of Redcliffe from 1956. In May 1975 a new dormitory was opened at Nulsen Haven. In 1986, MICA became the Nulsen Haven Association Inc (known as ‘Nulsen’). By 1992, the Home…

Mentally Incurable Children’s Association

The Mentally Incurable Children’s Association (MICA) was formed in 1954 to develop appropriate respite and longer term accommodation for children with severe intellectual disabilities. In 1956, with the support of then Minister for Health, Emil Nulsen, a Home which was called ‘Nulsen Haven’ opened in Redcliffe. MICA later changed to its present name, Nulsen Haven…

Hawkevale

Hawkevale was started by the Slow Learning Children’s Group (SLCG) on a property in Maida Vale in 1957. It was a ‘farm village’ for adolescents and adults with intellectual disabilities, and offered accommodation, employment and recreation. Hawkevale was replaced by a new facility in High Wycombe in 1970. Hawkevale was named after the Premier, Mr…

Slow Learning Children’s Group of W.A. records, 1950-1980

The State Library of Western Australia’s JS Battye Library of West Australian History Collection contains records of the Slow Learning Children’s Group. The collection includes minutes of meetings, history, newspaper cuttings, and promotional leaflets. Access Conditions This collection is open and available for public access. To access these records please contact the State Library of…

Irrabeena

Irrabeena began in 1961 as the Slow Learning Children’s Group’s diagnostic and assessment centre in Perth. In 1964, Irrabeena became part of the Mental Health Services. Children were assessed at Irrabeena before placement. It is not yet known when Irrabeena closed, but no mention of it has been found since the early 1990s.

Collection of information relating to the Slow Learning Children’s Group of W.A., State Library of Western Australia

The State Library of Western Australia’s JS Battye Library of West Australian History Collection contains records of the Slow Learning Children’s Group. This collection is identified by the Ephemera number PR9182. The collection mostly contains brochures that describe the Slow Learning Children’s Group’s services, resource and key events, including fundraising. Access Conditions This collection is…

Activ Foundation : collection of ephemera material, State Library of Western Australia

The State Library of Western Australia’s JS Battye Library of West Australian History Collection contains records of the Activ Foundation. This collection is identified by the Ephemera number PR1370. The collection mostly contains brochures that describe Activ Foundation services, products and key events. Access Conditions This collection is open and accessible by the public. For…

Slow Learning Children’s Group

The Slow Learning Children’s Group (SLCG) began in Perth in 1951. A group of parents whose children had intellectual disabilities created an organisation that resulted in educational and training programs, appropriate residential facilities, meaningful employment and pathways to independence for all Western Australians with intellectual disabilities. In 1989, the SLCG changed its name to Activ…

Royal Commission to inquire into the Heathcote Mental Reception Home and the administration of mental hospitals generally, State of Western Australia

A Royal Commission to inquire into the administration of Heathcote and other mental health hospitals was held in Western Australia in 1938. The Report of the Royal Commission does not mention children, but it does describe conditions at Heathcote and Claremont during years when children were sent there. Hospitals in the mental health system were…