Showing posts with label Pakenham Consolidated School. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pakenham Consolidated School. Show all posts

Monday, December 13, 2021

Pakenham - who is it named after?

Pakenham is a town on the outskirts of Melbourne, it used to be a country town, but is now really an outer suburb. I went to Pakenham Consolidated School (1) in the 1960s, so I have an interest in the town. I  have seen four possible suggestions for the source of the name Pakenham.

In the Wake of the Pack Tracks: a history of the Shire of Berwick (2) suggests Pakenham is named after Major General Sir Edward Michael Pakenham (1778 - 1815) who served with the Duke of Wellington in the Peninsula War and was killed in 1815 at the Battle of New Orleans (3)


Major General Sir Edward Michael Pakenham (1778-1815)

Les Blake, in his book, Place Names of Victoria (4) suggests that Pakenham was named for “General Pakenham who served in the Crimean War”. This is Lieutenant-Colonel Edward William Pakenham (1819 -1854) who was killed at Inkerman during the Crimean War (5). The Lieutenant Colonel was the son of Sir Hercules Pakenham who was the brother of Major General Sir Edward Michael Pakenham.


Lieutenant-Colonel Edward William Pakenham (1819-1854)
Image: Hampshire Country Council

The third suggestion is from Place Names of Australia by A.W. Reed (5).  Mr Reed suggests that the town was named for Catherine Pakenham, who was the wife of the Duke of Wellington. Catherine (1773 - 1831) married the Duke of Wellington in 1806. They had two sons, Arthur born in 1807 and Charles in 1808 (6).


Catherine Pakenham, the Duchess of Wellington (1773-1831)
Catherine ('Kitty') Pakenham, Duchess of Wellington by Sir Thomas Lawrence 1814
Wellington Collection, Stratfield Saye House

From Bullock Tracks to Bitumen: a brief history of the Shire of Berwick (7)  has this to say about the origin of the name – when Captain Clark was surveying the area, his cousin, a Naval officer named Pakenham, visited him. The two men agreed that the place should be named Pakenham, after their grandfather, Rev. Pakenham a Dublin minister. This is the Very Reverend Henry Pakenham (1787 - 1863)  who was Dean of St Patrick’s Cathedral, Dublin from 1843-1863.


Very Reverend Henry Pakenham (1878-1863)
Henry Pakenham's image on St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin.


Henry Pakenham's obituary 

The Duchess of Wellington  and the Very Reverend Henry Pakenham were siblings of Major General Sir Edward Pakenham and Sir Hercules Pakenham. Their father was the second Baron Longford and their nephew was Lieutenant-Colonel Edward William Pakenham.  Blake also suggests that the area was once called Longford. Pakenham was originally based around the Princes Highway and Toomuc Creek and the town that developed around the Railway Station from 1877 was known as Pakenham East. It was still referred to as Pakenham East until the early 1970s.

Here's a partial family tree to help explain the relationships:
Edward Michael Pakenham - 2nd Baron Longford, succeeded to the Title in 1776, a Peerage of Ireland. He had the following children, that are of interest to us - 
-Catherine, Duchess of Wellington (1773-1831)
-Major General Sir Edward Michael (1778-1815)
-Sir Hercules (1781-1850) - the father of Lieutenant Colonel Edward William (1819-1854)
-Very Reverend Henry (1787-1863).

A 1964 edition of the Victorian Historical journal had an article by J.S. Ryan, Memorials of Ireland: Place names in Victoria (8) Under names connected to the county of  West Meath, he noted - 


The Pakenham name
Victorian Historical journal  Volume: 35 Issue: 136, May 1964, p. 82.

This seems to confirm my theory on the origin of the Pakenham name, which is that I believe (and some people disagree with me) the most likely candidate is Lieutenant-Colonel Edward William Pakenham who was killed during the Crimean War as Victoria and Melbourne have other place names with a Crimean connection including the towns of St Arnaud and Sebastapol and the suburb of Balaclava. St Kilda has streets with a Crimean War connection - Inkerman Road, Crimea Street, Redan Street, Alma Road and Odessa Street. Clarendon Street, Codrington Street and Lyons Street in Cranbourne are also connected to Crimean War personalities. See here for more on Crimean War connect place names. 


Footnotes
(1) Pakenham Consolidated School - In the 1940s and 1950s there was a movement to consolidate small rural schools into one larger school. This was partly a response to a shortage of teachers, due to many male teachers enlisting during the Second World War. The War also caused a shortage of materials and labour and many Schools fell into disrepair. The Education Department decided that Pakenham would be one of the first six Consolidated Schools to be established and that all schools within 8 kms or 5 miles would be closed and beyond that, the Schools would have an option.

The Pakenham Consolidated School was officially opened on May 29, 1951, on the site of the Pakenham State School, No.1359, in Main Street. The original Pakenham School had opened on a site near the Toomuc Creek in January 1875 and it moved to the Main Street site in 1891. The Pakenham Gazette of June 8, 1951 reported that on May 29th, 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.

The first Head Master was Charles Hicks. The School offered classes up to Year 10 (Form 4). The schools that formed the Consolidated School were Pakenham Upper No. 2155 (closed January 1952),  Pakenham South No. 3755 (closed September 1951), Toomuc Valley No. 3034 (closed September 1951), Army Road No. 3847 (closed April 1947), Mount Burnett No. 4506 (closed October 1949), Tynong No. 2854 (closed April 1951),  Tynong North No.4464 (closed December 1951),  Nar Nar Goon North No. 2914 (closed October 1951),  Nar Nar Goon South No. 4554 (closed May 1951), Rythdale No. 4231 (closed September 1951), Officedale No. 4242 (closed May 1951), Cora Lynn No. 3502 (closed May 1951) and Koo-Wee-Rup North (Five Mile) No. 3198 (closed November 1959). 

This information is from -  Vision and Realisation : a centenary history of State Education in Victoria, edited by L.J. Blake. Published by the Education Department of Victoria, 1973.

(2) In the Wake of the Pack Tracks: a history of the Shire of Berwick (Berwick Pakenham Historical Society, 1982).
(3) More information about Major General Sir Edward Michael Pakenham - Dictionary of Irish Biographyhttps://www.dib.ie/biography/pakenham-sir-edward-michael-a7165
(4) Blake, Les Place Names of Victoria (Rigby 1977). 
(5) Reed, A.W Place Names of Australia (Reed 1973).
(6) More information on Catherine - https://castletown.ie/focus-on-miniatures-catherine-sarah-dorothea-wellesley-duchess-of-wellington/
(7) From Bullock Tracks to Bitumen: a brief history of the Shire of Berwick (Historical Society of Berwick, 1962)
(8) Ryan, J.S. Memorials of Ireland: Place names in Victoria in the  Victorian Historical journal  Volume: 35 Issue: 136,  May 1964, p. 82. http://handle.slv.vic.gov.au/10381/115941


Another version of this post, which I wrote and researched,  has appeared on my work blog, Casey Cardinia Links to our Past and other places.