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Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph, Clare Gervasoni, Brookside Homestead, 21/01/2021
The Brookside Private Reformatory for Protestant Girls was established on 29 December 1887 by Mrs W. T. Rowe. It was initially established at Glenfine, and soon moved to more extensive premises in the town of Cape Clear, near Scarsdale. The establishement of private reformatories had been made possible by The Juvenile Offenders' Act 1887 , which was assented to only weeks before the opening of Brookside. The Mintaro Reformatory Home for Girls at Monegeetta, Lancefield was established in 1903 by the Methodist Home Mission Department to take the girls from the Brookside Reformatory at Cape Clear when it closed in 1903. Brookside Homestead taken from the public roadway.brookside, farm, homestead -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph, Clare Gervasoni, Brookside, 21/01/2021
The farm known as Brookside.brookside, farm -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph, Clare Gervasoni, Stable Complex at Brookside, 21/01/2021
Brookside Homestead taken from the public roadway.brookside, farm, stable -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph, Clare Gervasoni, Brookside Farm Looking Towards the Creek, 21/01/2021
A video of Brookside Homestead looking towards the Creek, taken from the public roadway.brookside, farm, homestead -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Photograph, Clare Gervasoni, Gates into Brookside Farm, 21/01/2021
A photograph and two videos showing the gates into Brookside Homestead taken from the public roadway.brookside, farm, stable -
Bright & District Historical Society operating the Bright Museum
Shield, Trophy
Wooden shield with three inscribed metal plaques. Typed identification label attached to the shieldThe William Henley \ Challenge Shield \ Bright District \ School Life Saving \ Championships \ Brookside School 1924 & 1925; Students' names engraved.shield, trophy, william henley, challenge shield, bright, schools, life saving, championships, simmons, sport, recreation -
Melton City Libraries
Newspaper, Mowbray Funding, Unknown
" Designed by architect Norman Day, the school was built in an innovative postmodern style. Day’s vision was for the school’s students to feel as comfortable and familiar at school as in their own homes. He based the design on the local suburban typology. The buildings consisted of individual self-contained classrooms, each with a front door, back door and garden. Each class retained the same homeroom for the duration of their schooling. Norman Day won the inaugural Lustig & Moar Architectural Prize in 1988 for his Mowbray College design, and the Australian Library Promotion Council/RAIA Library Design Award for the school’s library building. The school officially opened on 7 February 1983 with an enrolment of 93 students from Prep to Year 7. Mark Fergus was a Prep student in the school’s inaugural year. He later remembered: It was good then because everyone knew each other. Our first few weeks at school we had classes in the Guide Hall because the Mill wasn’t finished. The rest of the school where the Labs and Coppin Court are now was only a big paddock. Another Prep student, Brooke Harrison, recalled: The only recreation we had was the rough playground which consisted of monkey bars, old tractor tyres and a sandpit and high bars. Accidents were a frequent occurrence in those days! It was a friendly atmosphere, you know everyone and their business ... During some classes we used to do horticultural work and planted trees out the front of the school. In 2003, Mowbray College celebrated two decades of educating students in Melton. By that stage, the school had expanded to two campuses with over 1,450 students and 120 staff. It was estimated that over the twenty years since its establishment, 13,000 students passed through the gates. By the mid-2000s, the school offered an International Baccalaureate program and operated across three campuses: the original campus, named Patterson after the first principal, and the Brookside and Town Centre campuses, both located in Caroline Springs. Unfortunately, in 2012 Mowbray College found itself in an unmanageable situation. The community had lost faith in the school’s financial security and as a result some parents withheld their school fees, fearing the school would collapse. It had been in financial difficulty since the mid-2000s and by 2012 was $28 million in debt. 84 In June 2012, all three campuses closed and within four months, each of the campuses of the former Mowbray College had been purchased by other education institutes. Heathdale Christian College bought the original Mowbray campus and established its own campus there and Grace Children’s Services bought the Brookside campus. The Town Centre campus was purchased by Intaj Khan from the Western Institute of Technology but remained vacant after some failed attempts at re-establishing a school. In 2017 the Australian International Academy established an Islamic school on the site".The Express article about a grant for Mowbray Collegeeducation