Presentation by Jim Belshaw to mark the launch of the permanent Hinton exhibition, New England Regional Art Museum, Armidale, Saturday 17 February 2018.
The art gallery we stand in today was constructed on the old
Armidale Teachers’ College playing fields[1]. The art
collection that we celebrate today was donated to the Armidale Teachers’ College
by that remarkable man Howard Hinton, a man that Michael Moignard will talk
about in detail.
The College was the first successful attempt to decentralize
higher education outside the capital cities. It would be ten years before the
next successful move, the establishment of the New England University
College , again in
Armidale. There would then be another long gap before further action was taken.
The College’s story is a remarkable one.
Its establishment required a very particular combination of
forces, people and events to overcome the barriers to establishment. The
College was created with astonishing speed. The State election was on 8 October
1927, lectures began in February 1928. It’s hard to see any Australian Government
managing that today outside wartime.
Construction of the College’s new building, the Parthenon on
the Hill, was driven forward in the face of deepening depression and rising
criticism with a determination that the building should in every way match if
not exceed the facilities offered to students at Sydney Teacher’ College. This
rush would save the College from Depression closure because Drummond’s white
elephant, to use a phrase from the time, was too far advanced to stop.
The College’s establishment was linked to a clash in views
about teacher education, a clash between those focused on the academic and
those on the vocational. The College was established to prove the vocational
case. To this end, the best lecturers were selected, the best supporting
facilities created.
The combination of this with the relative remoteness of the new College made
for an intense student experience. To a degree, this experience and the
College’s overall influence has been over-shadowed by the later establishment
of the university college and the university.
That’s a pity, because the College had a
profound influence on many, one that I have become increasingly aware of as my
research has proceeded. Perhaps this short talk may redress the balance a
little.
I now want to talk briefly about the College’s foundation.
We can think of this in two ways, the broad trends that provided the context
for establishment, the specific events that led to establishment.
Context
What would later be called the drift to the cities was
evident by the 1880s. The non-metropolitan population had grown greatly, but
was thinly spread. With no countervailing forces, booms in city construction
especially in Sydney and Melbourne drew people to the cities from country
areas. Federation strengthened the drift to the cities because it created a
customs union with relatively high tariffs. This redistributed incomes from
primary production to manufacturing, from smaller states to bigger states and
from country to metropolitan areas.
To indicate the scale of the drift,
Country people were aware of this trend, with increasing
calls from the late 1880s for effective decentralisation. Country people also
faced problems in accessing services. These were especially acute in education,
with the Sydney Government struggling to provide schools and teachers to such a
dispersed population.
Concerns about the drift to Sydney , about poor services, played into an
already established narrative of an oppressed country, an oppressing city.
Farmers faced particular problems. The last decades of the
nineteenth and first decade of the twentieth century had seen a rapid increase
in farm production, facilitated by closer settlement measures and the spread of
the railways. Farmers faced rising costs, rising debt levels, but were increasingly
exposed to international markets that determined the prices they received
independent of costs.
The growing sense of discontent led to the emergence of two
new political movements in Northern NSW . The
first was the Progressive, later Country, Party which first entered the State
Parliament in 1920. The second was a reborn new state movement.
The Country
Party encapsulated country grievances about country neglect, including
education. While a state wide party, its heartland was in Northern
New South Wales .
The new
state movement drew from similar grievances, but in pushing for self government
for the North it articulated a common sense of Northerness that did much to
overcome that rigid local parochialism that so impeded regional cooperation.
1915: An apparently minor dispute over the Helen steam ferry re-launches separatist agitation
The twentieth century New State Movement began at Grafton in
1915. Grafton had been the major centre of separatist agitation during the
colonial period. Now a dispute over the Helen, a steam ferry crossing the
Clarence, created a new movement for self government and decentralisation.
Earle Page used the Helen to campaign for decentralisation and new states. Page would became mentor to the younger Drummond
Led
by the Mayor of South Grafton, local doctor Earle Page, the movement spread
rapidly and then declined because of the First World War. Page would later
become Australian Deputy Prime Minister, Prime Minister for a short while, foundation
chair of the University College of New England Advisory Council and then UNE’s
first Chancellor.
Following the War, Page relaunched the movement. This call
was taken up in 1920 by Victor Thompson, editor of the Tamworth Observer, now the Northern
Daily Leader.. With the approval of his Board,
Thompson (photo) launched a
newspaper propaganda campaign in favour of self-government that gathered
support from most newspapers outside the Lower Hunter. It was also supported by
every Progressive/Country Party parliamentarian from the North and by most
business leaders.
By 1927, support for the new state cause had declined. However, ideas, links and beliefs
were well established. In 1920, the first New
State manifesto, Australia Subdivided, put a key problem facing the North in this
way: “In Northern New South Wales , a few high
schools, no technical schools, no universities exist to retain the intelligence
and culture of the area.”[3]
It was time to do something about this.
Establishment
The state elections held on Saturday 8 October 1927 gave the
Country Party the balance of power, resulting in the formation of a
Nationalist/Country Party coalition government. The tightly knit Country Party
team were determined to use this first time in Government to deliver on plans
and policies developed over the eight years since the party’s formation.
Four men would prove critical to the events that followed. The
first was David Drummond, the member for Armidale and now Minister for Public
Instruction. During the complex coalition discussions there had been some
suggestions that Drummond should become speaker. Drummond had reacted strongly.
He was too young to retire and particularly wanted the education portfolio.
Drummond was then 37. Born in Sydney on 11 February 1890, he had been
forced to leave school at twelve, becoming a ward of the state soon after. To
add to the boy’s difficulties, he was almost deaf following a school illness, a
considerable impediment.
David Drummond, 1907, the year he came to Armidale as a farm labourer.
After a time in a boys’ home and various foster arrangements
with farm families, Drummond arrived in Armidale in 1907 as a farm labourer. In
1911, his elder brother arranged for him to become a manager on a share farm
basis (that’s income based on a share of the crop) on a new block outside
Inverell. This allowed Drummond to marry the following year.
At Inverell, Drummond became actively involved in the
Farmers’ and Settlers’ Association and in the Methodist Church ,
becoming a lay preacher. An inveterate reader, he taught himself preaching and
public speaking from how to do books while riding round the paddocks.
In 1919, Drummond was approached by a delegation from his
immediate area asking him to run as a Progressive Party candidate for the
multi-member Northern Tablelands electorate. Drummond agreed.
Drummond was not expected to win. He was young, deaf, lacked
formal education and relatively unknown outside his immediate area. Indeed,
some party officials placed great pressure on him to force his withdrawal.
Drummond resisted this and to the surprise of most was elected as the third
member after Labor’s Alfred McClelland and the Progressive’s Mick Bruxner.
An older Michael Bruxner, 1951. The more experienced Bruxner who shared Drummond's dreams did much to help and support the younger Drummond,
By 1927 Drummond had established himself as a senior and
respected figure in both the Country Party and the New State Movement. He had
developed a particular interest in country education and had been involved in
early moves to establish a university college in Armidale.
Drummond wanted to establish a country college for country
kids. A Northern College
would also provide a key building block in the infrastructure required to
support a Northern
State .
Just nine
days after being sworn in, Drummond asked for an urgent report from our second
key figure, his new Under-Secretary S H (Stephen Henry) Smith, on the possible
establishment of country teachers’ colleges, suggesting Wagga Wagga and
Armidale as possible sites.
Smith welcomed the request. The Department was struggling to
find country teachers. Too many were refusing country postings after their Sydney training. The new
college was also a chance to put his own ideas on teacher education into
practice.
Smith with Drummond, Parliament House Sydney. The two men bonded in part because Drummond understood
and respected the older Smith.
Smith was then in his early sixties [4} Handsome
and intelligent, with a commanding presence and a beautiful speaking voice, he
was also shy, fussy, sensitive and vulnerable to personal attack. Starting as a
pupil teacher, Smith had worked his way though the ranks, becoming Under-Secretary
in 1922 upon the retirement of the famous Peter Board. Smith knew that there
were those who affected to despise him because of his lack of formal education and
was deeply wounded by it.
Alexander Mackie at his desk, Sydney Teachers’ College. His clashes with S H Smith were critical to the establishment of the College
Smith had clashed with Professor Alexander Mackie, the head
of Sydney Teachers, College.[5]. Mackie,
a brilliant Scottish-born academic, had come to Sydney
in 1906 to head the newly established Sydney College .
He was a man of strong views who believed that that the main emphasis in
teacher training should be academic, that the independence of Sydney Teachers’ College
must be preserved, and who had little time for financial or other constraints
on his activities.
Smith took a different view. Bound up in the day-to-day
problems of State education, he regarded the College’s job as training those
teachers the Department required in the way the Department required. Smith also
disagreed with Mackie as to the most desirable form of teacher training: While
not opposed to academic training, Smith thought that Mackie’s academic bias
meant ill-trained teachers, and instead supported a more vocationally-oriented
training. This would become important in forming the character of the new
College.
These differences in approach were compounded by their
differing personalities. After Smith made a surprise inspection of Sydney Teachers’
College in 1927, Mackie wrote to him that such
inspections could ‘only be done competently by a person with the necessary
qualifications.’ He went on: ‘The inspection of highly qualified specialists on
the College staff should be entrusted to men and women with similarly high
academic qualifications and with extensive experience of College work.’[6] Not
surprisingly, Smith found this letter ‘offensive’[7]. Mackie,
he later commented sarcastically to Drummond, had ‘that type of mind which is
usually associated with the Scottish metaphysician.’[8] Drummond
understood Smith, and the two men would become close.
Smith
immediately recommended Armidale, a move that obviously appealed to Drummond,
but was not without logic. Armidale was already a major education centre. It
also had available land.
The old gaol in operation. Locals were determined to see it gone.
The best
building site in the city consisted of eight acres of crown land on South Hill
with commanding views over the city. This was occupied by an old gaol set in
gardens gone to wilderness.
Adjoining
the goal site to the south were 100 acres of crown land previously used as
agistment paddocks for the horses of the Gold Commissioner and District
Surveyor. Diagonally opposite was another reserve, the Police Paddock, with
another 44 acres of crown land. In all, up to 152 acres (60.7 hectares) were
available for use at no cost to the Government, providing a magnificent site
for a new college. However, this would take time to build. Other accommodation
had to be found in the meantime if a college was to be opened in Armidale.
At this
point our next key figures enters the scene, A W Hicks, the very able local
school inspector. Hicks knew the city well and was close to Drummond and Smith.
At Smith’s request, he began negotiations early in November 1927 about the
possible purchase or rental of suitable sites in the city. This included
“Girrahween”, a boarding house that had been on the market for some time and
which would make an ideal hall of residence for women students. Strict secrecy
was required – Drummond, Smith and Hicks were the only ones who knew what was
being proposed - on both commercial and political grounds.
On 17
November, Hicks wrote to Smith outlining what was possible; “Girrahween” and
“The Elms” could be purchased for £5,150; “Arran House” for £1,500; while
“Whare-Koa” could be leased for £3 per week and its furniture purchased for
£725. Smith now visited Armidale unofficially as a prospective buyer. By 9 December,
Smith had prepared a Cabinet submission seeking approval for the establishment
of the College and the purchase or lease of necessary buildings. By 12 December
2017, Cabinet had approved the proposal.
On that day
Cecil Bede (CB) Newling, our forth key player, was summonsed to Sydney by telegram[9]. Presenting
himself to Smith next morning, Newling was sworn to secrecy and taken to see
Drummond. Drummond offered him the post of Principal, but .said that he would
like Newling to go to Armidale for three days to see the place and consult his
wife before agreeing.
That night,
Tuesday 13 December, Newling left for Armidale on the night train. Hicks met
him at the station the next day, giving Newling every assistance including full
information on conditions, possibilities and potentialities.
Newling was
then 44 and had had a distinguished career as teacher and inspector. While
teaching, he had also completed both a BA and MA in history with first class
honours and a university medal from Sydney
University . Newling was
known to and trusted by both Smith and Drummond. Both had promised him that
academic standards were a matter for him, that they would always back his
decisions, a promise both kept. Excited by the concept, attracted by the idea
of developing his own curriculum, Newling accepted the offer after discussing
it with his wife.
Newling's involvement with the College's establishment and development is outlined in his autobiography. His approach seems paternalistic today, but he was the right man for the time.
With
lectures due to begin in March 1928, just two months away, the pace was
frantic. This included developing arrangements that would allow the College to
at least begin operations in the absence of facilities. The modifications
required to turn newly purchased Girrahween
into the women’s’ residence could not begin until an existing lease on the
building expired, while construction of the main college building was some time
off.
During this
frantic period, Hicks continued to handle all the on-ground arrangements.
Newling initially split his time between Yass, Sydney and Armidale before his
permanent move to Armidale, working on all the myriad practical and educational
details associated with creating a new institution from scratch. Smith had to
find the best possible staff for both the College and the newly constituted Armidale Demonstration School
while ensuring the whole operation meshed with Departmental and public service requirements.
For his
part, Drummond monitored every aspect of the project to ensure that his new
baby would be health with every chance in life.. An activist minister, his
ministerial letter books are full of instructions, suggestions and requests as
he looked for resources for the new College.
Strict
secrecy had been maintained for practical and political reasons in a way that
would not be possible today.
The first
break in secrecy came on 12 December when the Tenterfield Star reported that the Armidale goal was to be
demolished and that rumour had it that the site was likely to be used for a
technical college or teachers’ college that would serve the northern districts
and not Armidale alone. This was followed by a well informed article in the Armidale Chronicle which effectively
broke the story. On 7 January 1928, the papers carried a short announcement from Drummond
providing details of the proposal including the purchase of “Girrahween” and
“The Elms”[10].
The publicity
drew a mixture of praise and criticism. Drummond knew the country well and was
well aware of the way that sometimes fierce Northern local parochialism had
destroyed cooperative efforts. In both private and public he was persistent in
emphasizing that this was a college for the north. This College, he told
Armidale Mayor Morgan Stephens, must be seen as the College of the North, not
just Armidale. The new state campaigns of the early 1920s had been led by key
Northern pressmen. Drummond knew the editors and proprietors; he was now a newspaper
man himself, so gaining friendly newspaper coverage was not hard.
There was
criticism from the Labor opposition, from some country towns elsewhere in the
state who felt that they had a better claim, but the country press in general
saw this as an early delivery of an election promise, while the Northern press
all mentioned that this was a college for the North.
Perhaps the
strongest criticisms came from prospective students and their parents who saw
Armidale and the new College as second class compared to Sydney
and the Sydney Teachers’ College . This was a
significant problem because it might affect enrollments. Smith and Drummond
were unmoved
The first class of 1928-29,. There were 33 women, 30 men in the group
The
official inauguration ceremony for the new college took place on Friday 9 March
1928. The last students did not arrive until late the night before.
It was a
gala affair, including a complimentary dinner in the Armidale Town Hall
in honour of David Drummond and S H Smith attended by upwards of 230 people. It
was, the Armidale Chronicle said
happily, “the largest aggregation of political and educational personages in
the history of the city.”[11]. Sadly,
S H Smith could not attend because of illness.
“We are
gathered here today”, Drummond said, “for the purpose of celebrating the
opening of the first Teachers Training College in Australia to be established
outside of the capital cities…..this is a historic occasion because it marks a
departure in educational history ….fraught with the greatest possibilities for
good, if the work …..is carried to its logical conclusion.”
Building the Parthenon on
the Hill
Meantime,
work continued on the nuts and bolts issues associated with the establishment
of the new institution. “Girrahween” may have been purchased, but it would be
some time before it was ready. Lectures began for the initial enrollment of 63
(30 men and 33 women) in Siberia, a new two room building used for manual arts
training at the renamed Armidale
Demonstration School .
“Whare-Koa” provided accommodation for 24 women under the supervision of Matron
Bell, while the men students and the remaining nine women had to find private
board. As would happen ten years later with the University College ,
everything was in short supply. Again as would happen ten years later, the
standard of the new staff and their teaching made the difference.
“Girrahween”
was finally ready for occupation by the beginning of 1929, with the female
students moving in in February. This allowed the male students to occupy
“Whare-Koa”, a use that continued until the lease expired in 1931. Lectures for
the second year students could now be given in “Girrahween’s” west wing.
While the new College was settling into its temporary accommodation, work was underway on permanent premises that would come to be called the parthenon on the hill.
In December
1927, Smith had obtained approval for the transfer of the goal site to his
Department once the buildings had been demolished. At first, the Government
Architect proposed to utilise the old goal buildings, something that was
vehemently opposed by the College’s protagonists. Drummond set out the case
quite clearly in words that guided his overall approach throughout the project:
“if the Armidale Teachers’
College were to be a Country
College for Country Students then the
Government should provide the amenities both architectural and cultural that
the students would have if they were trained in Sydney .”[12]
On 10
February 1928, the decision was taken to demolish the goal and sell the
materials. Drummond wanted the new buildings constructed as soon as possible. He
called for sketch plans early in 1928, then on 5 April he wrote to the
Departmental architect asking him to arrange for the Chief Architect to take
the plans of Sydney Teachers” College to Armidale for personal discussions with
Mr Newling to see what changes might need to be made to accommodate 250
students, taking local conditions into account.
With plans
complete, tenders for the new building were called. On 1 March 1929, a contract
was let to the Public Works Department. It provided for completion within
eighteen months at a cost of £81,200. Drummond had wanted an iconic building
and the plans provided for that. Externally, the style was free treatment of
Italian Renaissance with meticulous attention to detail. Internally, there was
the same attention to detail.
Construction
began on 8 April 1929, with Drummond closely monitoring the whole project. In
October 1929, for example, Smith recorded that the Minister had decided to
proceed with the whole central section of the building comprising the gymnasium
and Assembly Hall as originally envisaged. The gymnasium was constructed with
special care, based on the then best models. It featured a floor specially
mounted on elliptical springs to cushion impacts.
Drummond lays one of the foundation stones for the new building
On Saturday
29 November 1929 foundation stones were formally laid in a scene marked by
flags and bunting thoughtfully provided by Drummond[13]. Two
foundation stones were laid, one by Drummond, the other by the Premier.
A large
crowd had gathered to watch events and the assembled dignitaries, including
Premier Thomas Bavin, the Chief Secretary, the Director of Education, the Vice
Chancellor of the University of Sydney, the Director of the Tourist Bureau and
mayors and shire presidents from across the North. The Armidale City Band
played to entertain the gathering.
The
Government, Drummond, told the crowd, was determined on the decentralisation of
higher educational facilities and, in addition to providing the Armidale College , had purchased a fine site at
Wagga to erect a college to serve the southern parts of the State. “Some people
might cavil at the expenditure”, the Minister said, “but if they did it was due
to ignorance. Actually, the cost of the college being erected was
proportionately cheaper to that of the Sydney College .”
For his
part, the Premier said that the tendency to concentrate public activities in
the capital city had done an enormous amount of harm and the Government was
determined to stop it as far as possible. The decentralisation of higher
education was only one phase, but was proof of the Government’s commitment.
Sydney University Vice Chancellor Professor Wallace said that he was amazed at
the excellence of Armidale’s educational institutions. He could not commit the
Sydney University Senate. However, he was sure that the Senate would view with
the greatest sympathy any move made to have the College affiliated with the
University. As the stones were laid, the Armidale City Band broke into a
rousing rendition of “For he’s a jolly good fellow”.
As the work
proceeded, dark clouds were gathering. Few realised just how vulnerable the
Australian economy had become to any international downturn[14]. In November, Australia was
in the grip of recession, although the scale was still not clear. By early
1930, the expected State deficit for 1929-30 had risen to over three million
pounds.
Drummond lost office at the elections of 25 October 1930
with the return of the Lang Labor Government. With student numbers cut heavily
because of the Depression, Drummond e faced a withering storm of criticism over
what was now called Drummond’s white elephant., but was unrepentant. At first,
it looked as though the College might be closed. However, Labor Minister
William Davies visited Armidale in March 1931 to inspect the situation for
himself. “You are very fortunate to be in such a nice institution”, he is
reported to have told students. It is one of the finest buildings in New South Wales ”[15].
The completed Parthenon on the Hill before the full development of the trees and gardens
The building itself was finally completed in September 1931,
although students had begun using it from February 1930 when the southern wing
was opened. The playing fields were not developed, nor would the new building
ever be officially opened. However, the College would survive as an entity, as
would its iconic Parthenon on the Hill.
By the time Drummond returned to office in June 1932,
student numbers had begun to recover. Within a few years, the College was full
to overflowing.
The Student Experience
Scrub school south west of Tenterfield 1923. While earlier, this is an example of the type of schools the 19 year old graduates went to
The
students who came to the College in the decades after its foundation found it
an intense experience. They were all young, seventeen or in some cases sixteen,
most came from Northern families that had no experience of post-secondary
education. They were being trained for a career that would place many of them
at nineteen or even a little younger as sole teachers in country schools, often
boarding with local families, their actions under constant scrutiny.
Getting to Armidale was not always easy. Kempsey road 1920s, Caling family collectionJust getting to Armidale could be a battle because of poor transport linkages. For North Coast students, it could require a train trip to Maitland and then a further train north, Others took a bus onto the Tablelands and then caught the train. A few travelled to Sydney and then caught the steamer. The students who arrive late in Armidale on the night before the College’s opening came from the North Coast.
Woolgoolga Wharf. Some students went to Sydney by train and then north by steamer
The students in that first intake, the class of 1928-29, faced particular difficulties. Many had not wanted to come to Armidale. Some hadn’t even heard of the new College until they received a telegram offering them a place there. Many parents were outraged. The initial facilities were primitive.
At the end of 1929, Smith and Newling with the agreement of
Drummond decided the make that class a one-off special offer, one that would
never happen again. In recognition of their work, they could choose which
school they would be sent to following graduation. Newling records that 52 of
54 students chose a country school. To Drummond, Smith, Newling and the others
involved, this was a vindication of their work. Country kids going to a country
college choosing a country school.
Today, we would think of Pop Newling’s approach as outlined
in his biography The Long day Wanes,
the nickname pop reflected the way that students saw him, as paternalistic. It
was. He aimed to create a secure environment with rules. His aim, in his own
words, was to “prepare students to be teachers and to glorify their “calling’
rather than to transform the college into a small university.”
In considering his approach, it is
helpful to remember that today those student would be in upper secondary school
with four years of professional training before them before they were allowed
in the classroom. By then, many of the class of 1928-29 had been teaching for
four years, many were married with children, many had been promoted and were
engaged in further study.
Our attitudes today are arguably far
more paternalistic!
I will finish this talk with a few
slides dedicated to the student experience over the first decades:
Howard Hinton. The paintings he donated formed an integral element of College life and were used in teaching
ATC swimming Carnival 1937. Sport was an integral part of College life along with cultural activities.
Keith Bain, Wauchope, dancer and choreographer, inspiration for Strictly Ballroom, dux 1945
For writer Shirley Walker, the College was a way of leaving the claustrophobia of home and community.
Edwin Wilson, Mullumbimby, writer, teacher and artist, attributed his love of art to the Hinton Collection
This is just a tiny sample!
Footnotes
[1] Public lecture delivered at the New
England Regional Art Museum . Saturday 17 February 2018,
to mark the opening of the permanent exhibition of the Hinton Collection. Unless otherwise cited, material in
this chapter is drawn from Elwyn S Elphick and Lionel A Gilbert, Forty-Three and Seven: A Short Illustrated
History of the First Fifty Years of Teacher Education in Armidale, Armidale
College of Advanced Education, Armidale 1978: James
Belshaw , “A university for the north”, pp14- 34, “The
Parthenon on the Hill”, pp287-292, in J S Ryan and Warren Newman (eds), Came to New England, University of New
England, Armidale 2014; C B Newling, The
Long Day Wanes, L F Keller, Hunters Hill, 1973. Further supporting material including material
on economics and politics including the country party and new state movements
is drawn from Jim Belshaw , Decentralisation, Development and Decent
Government: the life and times of David Drummond 1890-1941, PhD thesis,
University of New England, 1983.
[2] The statistical material is taken
from W A Sinclair, The Process of
Economic Development in Australia, Cheshire ,
Melbourne ,
1976, pp108 and 140; and Russell Ward, A
Nation for a Continent, pp446-447
[3] E Page and others (eds), Australia
Subdivided, The First New State, Examiner Printing Works, Glen
Innes, 1920, p10.
[4] The description of Smith is largely drawn from a letter
Drummond wrote to Elizabeth Campbell on 1 March 1965. Copy in Drummond Papers, University of New England Archives, A248/1087/6.
A brief biography of Smith is provided in Alan
Barcan, 'Smith, Stephen Henry (1865–1943)',
Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography,
Australian National University,
http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/smith-stephen-henry-8483/text14921, published
first in hardcopy 1988, accessed online 10 March 2018. I think that Barcan
underestimates Smith’s influence.
[5] Material on the relations between Smith and Mackie is drawn
from E S Elphick, Armidale Teachers’ College :
Its Background, Foundation and Early Years, Litt.B thesis, University of New England ,
1972, pp70-94. Smith’s views of the clash between himself and Mackie are set
out in his minutes to Drummond of 17 November 1927 and 18 September 1928. These
minutes (contained in Drummond’s Ministerial Letter Book, Drummond papers, University of New England Archives , A248/Vol.2133, p6
and pp 44-47) give a clear picture of Smith’s attitudes and personality.
Mackie’s life is summarised in
A. Mandelson, 'Mackie, Alexander (1876–1955)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography,
Australian National University,
http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/mackie-alexander-7396/text12859, published
first in hardcopy 1986, accessed online 10 March 2018.
[6] Mackie to Smith, 4 November 1927. Cited Elphick, op cit,
p82
[7] Smith to Drummond, 17 November 1927.
Ministerial Letter Book, op cit.
[8] Smith to Drummond, 18 September 1928. Ministerial Letter
Book, op cit
[9] Newling pp63ff. Additional details of Newling’s life
can be found in L. A. Gilbert, 'Newling, Cecil Bede (1883–1975)', Australian Dictionary of Biography,
National Centre of Biography, Australian
National University ,
http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/newling-cecil-bede-7830/text13595, published
first in hardcopy 1988, accessed online 5 March 2018.
[10] The
Manning River
Times and Advocate for the Northern Coast Districts of New South Wales , 7 January 1928
[11] Both the Chronicle quote and the references to Drummond’s speech are drawn from
Elphick and Gilbert, op cit, p31.
[12] Cited Elphick and Gilbert, op cit,
p17
[13] Sydney Morning Herald, p12.
[14] Material on the onset of the Great
Depression is drawn from Belshaw Decentralisation
, Development and Decent Government, pp 258-264.
[15] Cited Elphick and Gilbert, op cit, p37.
6 comments:
Beautiful writing, and illustrated (!), Jim. Bravo!
Thank you, Noric. Really appreciated
Oh, Jim
So well done and interesting. You are writing from the heart and that makes it really moving - I loved this post.
Sue
Thanks, Sue. :) I was trying to get a story across that, as you know, I really care about.
Thank you Jim.
If I’d been aware of the dedication and drive that delivered ATC I believe my two year’s training there would have been better appreciated and received more dedication on my part.
Celebrating 60 years since graduation this year along with some of my cohort has been a joy and also a reminder of how fortunate we were to be given a free vocational education and a formative and fun residential experience. 😍
Thank you for the comment, anon last. You must have been at the College at the same time I was an undergraduate at UNE. Are you a member of the Alumni FB group? https://www.facebook.com/groups/426730658234710
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