Cora Lynn, where my father, uncle and aunties attended school, was happy to voluntarily consolidate - as local Councillor Dan Kinsella reported -
In May 1951, the Pakenham Gazette could report that the school had opened and that four buses conveyed 130 children from surrounding districts to Pakenham Consolidated School. At present there are 258 pupils attending the School, and it is hoped that in September several other schools will be consolidated, raising the attendance to over 400 children. (15)
However, the official opening by the Minister of Education, Mr A.E. Shepherd, did not take place until November 18, 1953, in front of a crowd of 500 people, including the Director of Education, Mr Ramsay. At this time there were 550 students at the school and a staff of 21. (16) In 1966, when I was in Grade 2, the school population was 550 (plus 94 post-primary students) and there was a space shortage because my classes that year were conducted down the street at the Anglican Church hall. In 1970 there were 600 students. (17)
The first Head Master was Charles Hicks. The schools that formed the Consolidated School were
Army Road No. 3847 (closed April 1947)
Cora Lynn No. 3502 (closed May 1951)
Koo-Wee-Rup North (Five Mile) No. 3198 (closed November 1959)
Mount Burnett No. 4506 (closed October 1949)
Nar Nar Goon North No. 2914 (closed October 1951)
Nar Nar Goon South No. 4554 (closed May 1951)
Officedale No. 4242 (closed May 1951)
Pakenham South No. 3755 (closed September 1951)
Pakenham Upper No. 2155 (closed January 1952)
Rythdale No. 4231 (closed September 1951)
Toomuc Valley No. 3034 (closed September 1951)
Tynong No. 2854 (closed April 1951)
Tynong North No.4464 (closed December 1951) (18)
In 1967 Pakenham High School was established at the Pakenham Consolidated School site and it moved to its existing location in 1970. (19) Pakenham Consolidated School moved from Main Street to Rundell Way in 1997 and the Main Street site was sold. Some of the old school buildings that had come from the closed schools were shifted to Beaconhills College in Pakenham.
Before we look at some photographs of Pakenham Consolidated School, here is an overview of the history of the Pakenham State School, No. 1359. The School had opened on a 2-acre site adjoining the Toomuc Creek in January 1875. The successful tenderers for the school building were the firm of Lane, Orviss and Fanning and the contract price was £252/19/0; this was gazetted in the Victoria Government Gazette, October 9, 1874. The School operated half-time with the school named Pakenham South, No. 2139 (later called Cardinia) in Bould Road, Cardinia until April 1879. (20)
Lane, Orviss and Fanning won the contract to erect the original Pakenham State School, on the Toomuc Creek.
The original Pakenham State School which opened in 1875 on the Toomuc Creek.
Public Records Office of Victoria VPRS 14517/P0001/28, L579
In 1891, the school moved to the Main Street Pakenham site into a new building, the builder for which was A. Goad; the tender price was £170 and it was accepted in February 1890 (21). An extension was added in 1908, which could accommodate 40 children and which had been built with all the latest improvements. (22)
The tender for the Pakenham State School in Main Street
The original building on the Toomuc Creek was moved to Lardner in 1892 and was totally destroyed by fire in May 1912. (23)
The original Pakenham School building moves to Lardner.
Photographs from the Public Records Office of Victoria
The 1891 Pakenham State School building, which was relocated towards the back of the block in 1948 to became the Infants School (Preps to Grade 2)
Exterior of old school, PROV VPRS 14517/P0001/10, F225
The 1891 Pakenham State School building during the construction phase.
Construction scenes and exterior shots VPRS 14517/P0001/55, C148
Opening Ceremony, November 18, 1953. The Office was where the flagpole is, the building on the left is the Cafeteria.
Opening ceremony at Pakenham Consolidated, VPRS 14517/P0001/54, B996
Opening Ceremony, November 18, 1953
Opening ceremony at Pakenham Consolidated, PROV VPRS 14517/P0001/54, B997
Opening Day, November 18, 1953. I wonder who this girl is?
Opening of Pakenham Consoldiated School 1953 by the Honorable A.E. Shepherd, M.L.A., Minister of Education, PROV VPRS 14517/P0001/54, C86
The muddy yard before asphalting and lawns
Construction views, PROV VPRS 14517/P0001/55, C176
View towards the original Pakenham School, love the little girl looking through the window of a class room in the junior wing.
Construction views, PROV VPRS 14517/P0001/55, C173
The classroom wing, the junior wing, on the west side, against Dame Patty Avenue; this is the front of the buildings shown in the photograph, above
Front exterior, Pakenham Consolidated, PROV VPRS 14517/P0001/19, H740
These are all the new buildings. On the far left are the senior classrooms, the next wing was the Art room and Library, then the Cafeteria wing and the Offices.
Exterior of playground, Pakenham Consolidated, PROV VPRS 14517/P0001/19, H739
Playground
Exterior of playground, Pakenham Consolidated, PROV VPRS 14517/P0001/19, H738
The houses for the teacher. The building on the right is the corner of the Cafeteria.
Teachers' residences, PROV VPRS 14517/P0001/54, B975
The existing Pakenham State School building was used as the Infant School (Preps to Grade 2) and new buildings to house the rest of the school population were constructed at a cost of £100,000.
As well, some of the closed school buildings were transported onto the site, and some are shown below.
Nar Nar Goon North No. 2914.
Construction scenes and exterior shots, PROV VPRS 14517/P0001/55, C146
Other school buildings, the little one in the middle is Nar Nar Goon South, No. 4554.
View of old building, PROV VPRS 14517/P0001/55, C259
Some of the old schools, the one on the left is Toomuc Valley School, No. 3034.
Old classrooms, PROV VPRS 14517/P0001/54, B986
Children wait for buses, this was a bit before my time, but how well I remember waiting for School buses.
PROV VPRS 14517/P0001/54, C85
Footnotes
(1) Vision and Realisation: a centenary history of State Education in Victoria, edited by L.J. Blake (Education Department of Victoria, 1973), v. 1, pp. 403-408. Some of the information in this paragraph comes from the paper written by Ron Smith, in 1974, Consolidation, with particular reference to Pakenham Consolidated School.
(2) Country Children to Get Better Education in the Weekly Times, March 6, 1946 see here - a good overview; Vision and Realisation, v. 1, op. cit., p. 407. I was actually a bit unsure whether the Consolidated school went to Form 3 or Form, but the photo below shows a Form 4 student.
Form Captains in 1964, the year I started at Pakenham Consolidated School, pictured are some from From 1 to Form 4.
Pakenham Gazette, June 26, 1964, p. 8
(3) The Age, September 6, 1946, see here. (4) The Age, May 15, 1947, see here. (5) Bunyip & Garfield Express, May 16, 1947, see here; Dandenong Journal, June 28, 1950, see here; Dandenong Journal, February 26, 1947, see here. (6) Dandenong Journal, June 28, 1950, see here. (8)
Dandenong Journal, May 7, 1947, see
here;
The Argus, November 7, 1947, see here.(9) Pakenham Gazette, January 23, 1948, p.9
(10) Pakenham Gazette, January 30, 1948, p.1
(11)
Dandenong Journal, September 15, 1948, see
here.
(12)
Dandenong Journal, January 11, 1950, see
here.
(13)
The Sun News-Pictorial, April 29, 1950, see here. (14)
Dandenong Journal, May 23, 1951, see here. (15) Pakenham Gazette, June 8, 1951, p. 1.
(16) Pakenham Gazette, November 13, 1953. p. 1 and Pakenham Gazette, November 20, 1953. p.1.
(17) Vision and Realisation: a centenary history of State Education in Victoria, edited by L.J. Blake (Education Department of Victoria, 1973), v. 3, p. 1191.
(18) Vision and Realisation: a centenary history of State Education in Victoria, edited by L.J. Blake (Education Department of Victoria, 1973), v. 3.
(19) Vision and Realisation, v. 3, op. cit., p. 1352.
(21)
The Argus, February 28, 1890, see here; one report has his name as A. Good, but I believe Goad is correct.
(22)
The Argus, September 25, 1908, see
here (23)
Warragul Guardian, October 18, 1892, see
here;
Vision and Realisation, v. 3, op. cit., pp. 1197-1198. The
Vision & Realisation entry on Lardner doesn't mention that the school was moved from Pakenham, they note that Lardner No. 1711, acquired a new school building in 1886. It is possible that the
Warragul Gazette report is incorrect and I can find no information about a tender. Around the same time the school known as Pakenham East was relocated to Harkaway. This was School No. 1279, it opened in 1874 and was then called Nar Nar Goon, renamed Pakenham East in 1889 and closed August 1891, with the building being moved to Harkaway, No 1697.
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