Page 18 - Potted History 2017
P. 18

Headmaster Matthew Wilson’s son Frank
            (born 1916), who attended High School,
            between 1924 and 1928, and lived with his
            parents at the George Street site before
            the new boarding house was completed
            in 1926, wrote the following regarding the
            School in the 20s:
                                                                                                                                                                                                                   Havelock Street - July 1927
                                              Havelock Street Laboratory with ‘Dil Newbery, 1920s


                  I believe that the site and some of the buildings,   perhaps two pound and the senior cook Edith, who                  There were few motor cars or trucks; buses had just   diagonal path flanked by big oleander bushes, along the
                  including our family quarters, were originally a military   was on top of the pecking order, got an enviable three     started a Perth-Fremantle service and the successful   side of Parliament House, then across Harvest Terrace and
                  hospital, conveniently situated across the road from the   pounds.                                                     ascent of Malcolm Street by them when fully loaded was   up through ‘the sandhills’ and the area where the new
                  Barracks (the Public Works offices in the 1920s) and that                                                              sometimes in doubt.                               boarding house was to built in 1926, and finally to the
                  an underground passage joining the two sites passed   The maids got a half day off each week on which, if lucky,                                                         main classroom buildings on Havelock Street, to merger
                  under George street, through which patients and staff   they were taken to ‘the pictures’ (the Price of Wales or       Trams ran along Hay street from the ‘Car Barn’ terminal in   with the ‘dagoes’, the despised but envied day boys with
                  could be evacuated should someone (one wonders who   Grand in Murray Street, the Palladium or Pavilion, Hay            East Perth (alongside Queen’s Gardens and the W.A.C.A.   homes in West Perth, Subiaco and South Perth.
                  … Aborigines? Germans? Things from outer space?)   Street) by their boy friends to see Douglas Fairbanks               ground) through West Perth to far-off places like Subiaco;
                  ever attack. Certainly in the 20s there were still extensive   and Mary Pickford, Rudolph Valentino (in ‘The Sheik’ or   the Nedlands swimming baths, even in time as far away   Scrub covered the ‘sandhills’ area; hovea, leschenaultia,
                  cellars under the Headmaster’s quarters, but I was a timid   ‘Blood and Sand’), Charlie Chaplin (‘The Kid’ with Jackie   as Claremont, to the Showgrounds and down by Bay View   smoke bush, banksia and other wildflowers were quite
                  child and too impressed by the blood-curdling accounts   Coogan) and, of course, Garbo. It was more or less an         Terrace to the river.                             profuse, and the sandy slopes falling away to Harvest
                  of my brother Ron and other ‘big kids’ about convict   obligation for their escorts to buy them a small box of                                                           Terrace and Wilson Street (now Parliament Place) gave
                  skeletons still chained to the walls and the like to venture   MacRobertson’s excellent chocolates (‘Old Gold’, ‘Dolly   The dormitory … was basically a ‘sleep-over’, open on   splendid scope for toboggan runways for boys seated on
                  down and see for myself (almost surely there was nothing   Vardin’ or ‘Vanity Fair’) costing perhaps 2/6d, the empty   the inward side, of wooden construction with a roof of   the polished lids of kerosene tins.
                  down there other than mice and cockroaches, of which,   boxes being displayed thereafter as trophies on top of         corrugated iron. It was airy and comfortable but had one
                  understandably for such old buildings, there were quite a   their wardrobes.                                           serious defect, in that it was situated right alongside the   The school day began at 9.00am with all classes lined
                  few around).                                                                                                           George Street picket fence, and therefore hopelessly   up in ranks on the floor of the main assembly hall and
                                                                    Catering for the appetites of 50 or 60 hungry boys must              vulnerable to stones thrown on its tine roof by larrikins in   the Headmaster, masters and prefects facing them from
                    There were many fine old trees around the perimeter   have been quite a challenge for these girls. Mutton,           the dead of night, usually accompanied by derisive shouts   the raised dais. My father, Matt Wilson, would stand at a
                  fences: I recall Cape Lilac, Pine, Moreton Bay Fig,   potatoes and cabbage were predominant, I think, and I            of ‘water melons’ (an unkind reference to the rather   lectern and intone the Lord’s Prayer at a brisk pace, after
                  Mexican Pepper and two fine fig trees bearing excellent   recall enormous, tubular shaped ‘steamed roly-poly’ and      distinctive design of the school cap of that period, with   which we would file over to our respective classrooms,
                  fruit, somewhere near the main buildings.         ‘spotted dog’ puddings, larded over with IXL plum and                its alternative segments of light and dark blue). From my   the youngest in the care of the cool and elegant Miss
                                                                    raspberry jam from Tasmania. And, of course, endless                 own ‘sleep-over’ a short distance away, I could hear the   Doris Green (‘Greeneyes’) and others to such notables as
                    …The domestic staff were mainly young girls recruited   boring custards of rice, sago and tapioca (ugh, not frogs    enraged cries of ‘larries’ from pyjama clad boys in hot but   ‘Fuzzy’ Rankin, ‘Jerry’ Polan, ‘Billy’ Whitton and on to the
                  from the goldfields where mining was suffering from a   eyes again?!), with plenty of golden syrup to mix in.          generally hopeless pursuit down George to Hay Street   new wing … with its Olympian rulers, ‘Dil’ Newbery and
                  recession at that period. They were a cheerful lot and in                                                              and beyond.                                       E.P. Clarke.
                  my pre-school years I spent most of my days with them   Food supplies and laundry were delivered by horse and
                  in the kitchen, laundry and dormitory… They sang rude   cart; and now and then dray carts carrying barrels from        Twice daily on weekdays and once on Saturday mornings,   P.T., known as ‘drill’, was supervised by ‘Buckety’ Wells,
                  songs of the day about “Kaiser Bill”, or “Germany You’re   the Swan and Emu Breweries down on the river’s edge         the boarders would walk to and from the main school   an old soldier of rather forceful mien, bristling hair and
                  Up the Tree!” or “Mademoiselle from Armientieres   would role by from the direction of Mill or Spring Streets,         and classrooms at Havelock Street.  The route crossed   moustache, whose annual ‘tour de force’ was the Drill
                  (parlez-vous)”. They lived on the premises, getting food   pulled by teams of superb, brawny Clydesdales and           George Street, through the main gate of the Barracks   Display on the school lawn on Speech Night before and
                  and keep plus the princely wage of one pound, two   bound for pubs nearby.                                             (the arch still stands), up a wooden stairway and along a   assembly of admiring parents and families, culminating
                  shillings and sixpence a week.  More senior girls got
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