Showing 5 items
matching leawarra hostel
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Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Article, Historic hostel bulldozed for development, 1994
... Leawarra Hostel...Historical Leawarra Hostel on the former Winlaton site has... Leawarra Hostel Tweddle Joseph Historical Leawarra Hostel ...Historical Leawarra Hostel on the former Winlaton site has been bulldozed for proposed residential subdivision in two lots.Historical Leawarra Hostel on the former Winlaton site has been bulldozed for proposed residential subdivision in two lots. The building was once the home of Joseph Tweedle[Tweddle] who financed the Tweedle Hospital in Footscray.Historical Leawarra Hostel on the former Winlaton site has been bulldozed for proposed residential subdivision in two lots. winlaton, leawarra hostel, tweddle, joseph -
Department of Health and Human Services
Photograph, Photo of front of Leawarra Girls Hostel at Winlaton - The hostel was originally a farmhouse and was converted into a hostel - Established by the Health Department in 1956
... Photo of front of Leawarra Girls Hostel at Winlaton - The... Melbourne melbourne Photo of front of Leawarra Girls Hostel ... -
Department of Health and Human Services
Photograph, Photo of side of Leawarra Girls Hostel at Winlaton - The hostel was originally a farmhouse and was converted into a hostel - Established by the Health Department in 1956
... Photo of side of Leawarra Girls Hostel at Winlaton - The... Melbourne melbourne Photo of side of Leawarra Girls Hostel ... -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Document, Winlaton
... Leawarra Hostel... Training Centre Leawarra Hostel Nunawading residential Youth Centre ...History of Winlaton established by Joseph Thornton TweddleHistory of Winlaton established by Joseph Thornton Tweddle in 1909non-fictionHistory of Winlaton established by Joseph Thornton Tweddlewinlaton, tweddle joseph, mount pleasant methodist church, winlaton youth training centre, leawarra hostel, nunawading residential youth centre -
Department of Health and Human Services
Photograph, Winlaton
... sentenced offenders and wards of state together. A 4th hostel... sentenced offenders and wards of state together. A 4th hostel ...WINLATON 1956 - 1993 • Established in 1951 with the name “Winlaton” the property was a children’s home run by the Mission of St James & St John. • By 1953 it was acquired and ran as a state facility under the same name (Winlaton), for female offenders and for girls under protection orders - otherwise known as ‘wards of the state’. • By the time of its closure in 1993, it was operating under the name “Nunawading Youth Residential Centre”, housing both males and females. WINLATON YOUTH TRAINING CENTRE By 1956, the state had constructed a purpose-built facility at Winlaton which would cater for both girls, and young women, who were under either a protection order/ward or who were female juvenile offenders. Some of the juvenile offenders were transferred to Winlaton from other facilities such as Turana, originally called the Royal Park Depot, due to overcrowding, or from convents. With the new facilities Winlaton, supposedly, could offer a separate training, education and treatment regime for those girls or young women who had been admitted under protection orders separately to those who had been committed under a custodial order. With this focus on training and rehabilitation the facility had 3 residential sections, or cottages. A Winlaton “trainee”, showing signs of good behaviour and progress, could be promoted up through any of the 3 cottages and likewise demoted down with bad behaviour. However, by 1957 one of the 3 cottages at Winlaton housed sentenced offenders and wards of state together. A 4th hostel – named ‘Leawarra’ - was added in 1959 which functioned as a reward, or privilege, for residents deemed worthy. Of note, this hostel kept offenders segregated from wards of the state. Juvenile offenders were termed as “trainees” through the Social Welfare Act 1960. By 1985 Winlaton was restricted to only providing programs for young offenders. CLOSURE OF WINLATON The population of Winlaton peaked in the mid-1970s with approximately 100 “trainees” and this population then declined to approximately 25 by 1991 when it closed under the name “Winlaton”. https://www.findingrecords.dhhs.vic.gov.au/collectionresultspage/Winlaton https://www.findandconnect.gov.au/ref/vic/biogs/E000192b.htm