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Katherine Mary Clutterbuck

Katherine Mary Clutterbuck CSC MBE (October 1860 in Wiltshire, England – 31 July 1946[1] in Nedlands, Western Australia), usually known as Sister Kate, was an Anglican nun who pioneered a cottage home system for looking after orphan babies and children in Western Australia.[2] She later became well known for her work with Indigenous Australian children who were selected according to a criterion of skin colour and sent to her homes to groom the young "nearly white" children for absorption into the white community. These children would later be described as part of the Stolen Generation.

Sister Kate

Clutterbuck was the daughter of well-off parents, Captain Clutterbuck and his wife. She was awarded an Order of the British Empire (Member of the Civil Division), on 1 January 1934, for her services to disadvantaged children.

In December 2006, the West Australian newspaper published a list entitled the "100 Most Influential Western Australians" which included Clutterbuck. The list was developed by a committee including several eminent Western Australian historians.

Orphanage career edit

In 1881 Clutterbuck joined the Community of the Sisters of the Church, a Church of England order founded in London in 1870 by Mother Emily Ayckbowm. Now referred to as "Sister Kate", Clutterbuck worked with orphans in the London slums for 17 years until 1901 when she and several other sisters were sent to Western Australia to establish a girls' school and orphanage. She arrived in Western Australia in December 1901 with Sister Sarah and 22 orphaned English children aged between 6 and 10 in her care.[3]

 
Parkerville Children and Youth Care is situated approximately 27.6 km (17.1 mi) east-northeast of the central business district of Perth, Western Australia.

Other sisters of her order set about the establishment of founding a church school (now Perth College), Clutterbuck and Sister Sarah set out to establish a home for orphaned babies. Sisters Rosalie, Vera and Susanna had a prime mission of establishing a school but they were meant to go on to assist Clutterbuck.[4]

Temporary premises in William Street, Perth were used while a permanent children's home in the country was located. The nuns purchased a 20-acre (8.1 ha) block at Parkerville in the Darling Range. Clutterbuck took up residence in 1903 with eight children in an old hut and bark roofed barn which she named The League of Charity Homes for Waifs and Stray Babies and which was later expanded to become Parkerville Children's Home. Forty-five children were being fostered by 1905 and, thanks to a benefactor, Walter Padbury, a large stone nursery was built. Other improvements included a 27,000-litre (6,000-imperial-gallon) water tank and 49 hectares (120 acres) of land partially planted with fruit trees as well as a carriage and horse. The state government provided some funding and by 1911, 100 children were living there. Another two sisters were recruited from England and the building were extended to include a dining-room, schoolhouse and kitchen.

For nearly 30 years Clutterbuck ran the home where over 800 disadvantaged children passed through her care. In 1927 the home was taken over by the Diocese of Perth and in 1930 she retired at the age of 70. She was awarded an MBE the following year.

Parkerville continues to operate today as Parkerville Children and Youth Care, providing "a range of primary, secondary and tertiary services."[5] The goals of these services are to "protect, care, advocate and promote recovery for children and young people who have experienced trauma from abuse, to support families and to work with the community to prevent child abuse."[5]

A small river in the vicinity of the home is named Clutterbuck Creek.

Return from retirement and the Stolen Generations edit

Friend and associate Ruth Lefroy shared an interest in the welfare of Aboriginal children. In 1932, Lefroy purchased a property in Neville Street, Bayswater called the Children's Cottage Home which was run by Clutterbuck. Another house used as a holiday home was acquired in Beach Street, Mosman Park. The home was funded by government subsidies from the Native Welfare and Child Welfare Departments, as well as fêtes, jumble sales, donations and street collections.

At this time A. O. Neville, the government Chief Protector of Aboriginals, was the architect of an official scheme which oversaw the care, custody and education of Aboriginal and half-caste children under 16 years in the state. The scheme's purpose was to integrate young and part Aboriginal children into white society by separating them from their families. The process by which the separation was done has been widely condemned since a report entitled Bringing Them Home was published in 1997 following a federal government inquiry. These people are now known as the Stolen Generations.

As part of the scheme, Neville directed young Aboriginal children and babies into the Children's Cottage Home run by Clutterbuck.

In June 1934, Clutterbuck and Ruth Lefroy relocated the home with ten school-aged children to a new site on Railway Street (now Treasure Road), Queens Park. The new six-roomed home was named "Myola" and had been purpose built with the help of private sponsorship. Due to a measles epidemic, the cottage was soon extended to create a ward where sick children could be isolated and nursed. In 1935 a kitchen and a second cottage, "Friendly Cottage", were built on the site to accommodate younger children. At this time Queens Park was a relatively undeveloped suburb although the cottage was well located with a school and train station nearby. Towards the end of 1936, Neville began negotiations on behalf of Clutterbuck for the purchase of land immediately adjacent to the home. An adjoining 5.25 acres (2 hectares) was acquired at a cost of £85 in January 1937 using funds donated by a benefactor. The same person also donated funds to extend the second cottage and to build a third cottage and a chapel. This third cottage was known as "Nursery Cottage" and the chapel was named the "Chapel of the Guardian Angel".

Neville supposedly reproached Sister Kate for building the chapel, suggesting that the funds should have been spent on the children.

Church services, Sunday School and daily prayers were conducted in the new chapel on a regular basis. A morning service conducted by Sister Kate was conducted each morning. The chapel was very important to Sister Kate: according to Vera Whittington

Even in her last years, when she no longer took the services, it was her delight to walk to the chapel for private devotions. The chapel stood as a symbol for the centre of Sister Kate's life and that of the Home.[6]

She refused to have the building dedicated, believing that its non-denominational status would encourage patronage by the children, and it was not until after her death in February 1948 that Anglican Archbishop Moline dedicated the chapel. In 1937, fund-raising by a group known as the "Virgillians", led by Mary Durack, enabled further development of the site and in 1938–41 a kindergarten and another cottage were constructed.

With the onset of World War 2 most of the children were evacuated to the Duke of York Hotel at Greenbushes. Some children required specialised medical attention and attendance at Perth hospitals however, and so Ruth Lefroy purchased a cottage at Roleystone. After the war, the Roleystone property was sold and the proceeds used to pay for the construction of "Memorial cottage".

In 1946, funds from the Lotteries Commission helped build "Gran's Cottage" (as she was then known) as a private residence for Sister Kate. Soon after however, she died suddenly at Tresillian Hospital in Nedlands at the age of 86.

Posthumous events edit

A committee then administered the home, with the position of Superintendent Matron taken over by Ruth Lefroy. The Queens Park complex, which by this time comprised seven cottages as well as the chapel and kindergarten, became known as "Sister Kate's Children's Cottages" in recognition of her work. Ruth Lefroy died in 1953 and her will made provision for the ownership of the property to be donated to the Presbyterian Church, now part of the Uniting Church in Australia.

Dean Collard was appointed Director of the Cottages in August 1987.

In 1988, the cottages were renamed as "Manguri". The organisation continues today to provide Aboriginal child-care services.

Clutterbuck Crescent in the Canberra suburb of Macquarie is named in her honour.[7]

Notable residents edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Sister Kate Dies At 85". The Daily News. Vol. LXIV, no. 22, 249. Western Australia. 31 July 1946. p. 1. Retrieved 15 August 2019 – via National Library of Australia.
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 22 March 2007. Retrieved 11 April 2007.
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 22 August 2007. Retrieved 9 April 2007.
  4. ^ Birman, Wendy, "Mabel Nicholas (1866–1958)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, retrieved 31 December 2023
  5. ^ a b "What we do and Why". Parkerville Children and Youth Care. Parkerville Children and Youth Care Inc. 2015. from the original on 10 March 2020. Retrieved 30 June 2020.
  6. ^ Whittington, Vera, Sister Kate: a life dedicated to children in need of care, Nedlands, University of WA Press, 1999, p. 337.
  7. ^ "Australian Capital Territory National Memorials Ordinance 1928 Determination — Commonwealth of Australia Gazette. Periodic (National : 1977–2011), p.19". Trove. 31 August 1988. Retrieved 16 February 2020.

References edit

  • Sister Rosalie, Record of the Work of the Sisters of the Church (Perth, 1958)
  • Parliamentary Papers (Western Australia), 1947, 2 (16)
  • Australian Women's Digest, Oct 1946
  • West Australian (newspaper), 1 January 1934, 20 October 1937, 19 August 1969
  • Swan Express (Midland Junction, Western Australia), 8 July 1976
  • Carden, F. G., Along the Canning, City of Canning, Second edition, 1991, p. 138.
  • Whittington, Vera, Sister Kate: a life dedicated to children in need of care, Nedlands, University of WA Press, 1999, p. 337.
  • Handwritten notes, Sr Kate's Archives file, MN 957 Acc 3179A/141, Battye Library.
  • Perth College: A Record of the work of the Sisters of the Church in Western Australia, UWA Press, Nedlands, 1958, p. 1.
  • Maloney, B., The Life and Work of Sister Kate, Churchlands Teachers' College, Perth, 1964,p. 4.
  • HCWA assessment for Parkerville Children's Home and Cemetery, HCWA Ref: 8546.
  • Morgan, S.J. Echoes of the Past: Sister Kate's Home Revisited, Perth, Western Australia, Centre for Indigenous History and the Arts (2002)
  • Morgan, S.J. An Historical Overview: Places of Internment of Aboriginal Children, Echoes of the Past: Sister Kate's Home Revisited, ed Morgan, S, Perth, Western Australia, Centre for Indigenous History & the Arts, pp 5–13 (2002)

External links edit

  • Journey of Healing: Rabbit Proof Fence[dead link]
  • Clutterbuck, Katherine Mary at The Encyclopedia of Women and Leadership in Twentieth-Century Australia

31°52′20″S 116°8′10″E / 31.87222°S 116.13611°E / -31.87222; 116.13611 (Parkerville Children's Home)

katherine, mary, clutterbuck, this, article, includes, biographical, information, relating, anglican, known, sister, kate, well, institution, that, established, which, known, sister, kate, october, 1860, wiltshire, england, july, 1946, nedlands, western, austr. This article includes biographical information relating to the Anglican nun known as Sister Kate as well as the institution that she established which was known as Sister Kate s Katherine Mary Clutterbuck CSC MBE October 1860 in Wiltshire England 31 July 1946 1 in Nedlands Western Australia usually known as Sister Kate was an Anglican nun who pioneered a cottage home system for looking after orphan babies and children in Western Australia 2 She later became well known for her work with Indigenous Australian children who were selected according to a criterion of skin colour and sent to her homes to groom the young nearly white children for absorption into the white community These children would later be described as part of the Stolen Generation Sister Kate Clutterbuck was the daughter of well off parents Captain Clutterbuck and his wife She was awarded an Order of the British Empire Member of the Civil Division on 1 January 1934 for her services to disadvantaged children In December 2006 the West Australian newspaper published a list entitled the 100 Most Influential Western Australians which included Clutterbuck The list was developed by a committee including several eminent Western Australian historians Contents 1 Orphanage career 2 Return from retirement and the Stolen Generations 3 Posthumous events 4 Notable residents 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksOrphanage career editIn 1881 Clutterbuck joined the Community of the Sisters of the Church a Church of England order founded in London in 1870 by Mother Emily Ayckbowm Now referred to as Sister Kate Clutterbuck worked with orphans in the London slums for 17 years until 1901 when she and several other sisters were sent to Western Australia to establish a girls school and orphanage She arrived in Western Australia in December 1901 with Sister Sarah and 22 orphaned English children aged between 6 and 10 in her care 3 nbsp Parkerville Children and Youth Care is situated approximately 27 6 km 17 1 mi east northeast of the central business district of Perth Western Australia Other sisters of her order set about the establishment of founding a church school now Perth College Clutterbuck and Sister Sarah set out to establish a home for orphaned babies Sisters Rosalie Vera and Susanna had a prime mission of establishing a school but they were meant to go on to assist Clutterbuck 4 Temporary premises in William Street Perth were used while a permanent children s home in the country was located The nuns purchased a 20 acre 8 1 ha block at Parkerville in the Darling Range Clutterbuck took up residence in 1903 with eight children in an old hut and bark roofed barn which she named The League of Charity Homes for Waifs and Stray Babies and which was later expanded to become Parkerville Children s Home Forty five children were being fostered by 1905 and thanks to a benefactor Walter Padbury a large stone nursery was built Other improvements included a 27 000 litre 6 000 imperial gallon water tank and 49 hectares 120 acres of land partially planted with fruit trees as well as a carriage and horse The state government provided some funding and by 1911 100 children were living there Another two sisters were recruited from England and the building were extended to include a dining room schoolhouse and kitchen For nearly 30 years Clutterbuck ran the home where over 800 disadvantaged children passed through her care In 1927 the home was taken over by the Diocese of Perth and in 1930 she retired at the age of 70 She was awarded an MBE the following year Parkerville continues to operate today as Parkerville Children and Youth Care providing a range of primary secondary and tertiary services 5 The goals of these services are to protect care advocate and promote recovery for children and young people who have experienced trauma from abuse to support families and to work with the community to prevent child abuse 5 A small river in the vicinity of the home is named Clutterbuck Creek Return from retirement and the Stolen Generations editFriend and associate Ruth Lefroy shared an interest in the welfare of Aboriginal children In 1932 Lefroy purchased a property in Neville Street Bayswater called the Children s Cottage Home which was run by Clutterbuck Another house used as a holiday home was acquired in Beach Street Mosman Park The home was funded by government subsidies from the Native Welfare and Child Welfare Departments as well as fetes jumble sales donations and street collections At this time A O Neville the government Chief Protector of Aboriginals was the architect of an official scheme which oversaw the care custody and education of Aboriginal and half caste children under 16 years in the state The scheme s purpose was to integrate young and part Aboriginal children into white society by separating them from their families The process by which the separation was done has been widely condemned since a report entitled Bringing Them Home was published in 1997 following a federal government inquiry These people are now known as the Stolen Generations As part of the scheme Neville directed young Aboriginal children and babies into the Children s Cottage Home run by Clutterbuck In June 1934 Clutterbuck and Ruth Lefroy relocated the home with ten school aged children to a new site on Railway Street now Treasure Road Queens Park The new six roomed home was named Myola and had been purpose built with the help of private sponsorship Due to a measles epidemic the cottage was soon extended to create a ward where sick children could be isolated and nursed In 1935 a kitchen and a second cottage Friendly Cottage were built on the site to accommodate younger children At this time Queens Park was a relatively undeveloped suburb although the cottage was well located with a school and train station nearby Towards the end of 1936 Neville began negotiations on behalf of Clutterbuck for the purchase of land immediately adjacent to the home An adjoining 5 25 acres 2 hectares was acquired at a cost of 85 in January 1937 using funds donated by a benefactor The same person also donated funds to extend the second cottage and to build a third cottage and a chapel This third cottage was known as Nursery Cottage and the chapel was named the Chapel of the Guardian Angel Neville supposedly reproached Sister Kate for building the chapel suggesting that the funds should have been spent on the children Church services Sunday School and daily prayers were conducted in the new chapel on a regular basis A morning service conducted by Sister Kate was conducted each morning The chapel was very important to Sister Kate according to Vera Whittington Even in her last years when she no longer took the services it was her delight to walk to the chapel for private devotions The chapel stood as a symbol for the centre of Sister Kate s life and that of the Home 6 She refused to have the building dedicated believing that its non denominational status would encourage patronage by the children and it was not until after her death in February 1948 that Anglican Archbishop Moline dedicated the chapel In 1937 fund raising by a group known as the Virgillians led by Mary Durack enabled further development of the site and in 1938 41 a kindergarten and another cottage were constructed With the onset of World War 2 most of the children were evacuated to the Duke of York Hotel at Greenbushes Some children required specialised medical attention and attendance at Perth hospitals however and so Ruth Lefroy purchased a cottage at Roleystone After the war the Roleystone property was sold and the proceeds used to pay for the construction of Memorial cottage In 1946 funds from the Lotteries Commission helped build Gran s Cottage as she was then known as a private residence for Sister Kate Soon after however she died suddenly at Tresillian Hospital in Nedlands at the age of 86 Posthumous events editA committee then administered the home with the position of Superintendent Matron taken over by Ruth Lefroy The Queens Park complex which by this time comprised seven cottages as well as the chapel and kindergarten became known as Sister Kate s Children s Cottages in recognition of her work Ruth Lefroy died in 1953 and her will made provision for the ownership of the property to be donated to the Presbyterian Church now part of the Uniting Church in Australia Dean Collard was appointed Director of the Cottages in August 1987 In 1988 the cottages were renamed as Manguri The organisation continues today to provide Aboriginal child care services Clutterbuck Crescent in the Canberra suburb of Macquarie is named in her honour 7 Notable residents editKen Colbung indigenous leader Polly Farmer Australian rules footballer Sue Gordon Perth Children s Court magistrate Hannah McGlade academic human rights advocate and lawyer Rob Riley director of the Aboriginal Legal ServiceNotes edit Sister Kate Dies At 85 The Daily News Vol LXIV no 22 249 Western Australia 31 July 1946 p 1 Retrieved 15 August 2019 via National Library of Australia Biographical Entry The Australian Dictionary of Biography Online Archived from the original on 22 March 2007 Retrieved 11 April 2007 Fremantle Arts Centre Press My Place by Sally Morgan Archived from the original on 22 August 2007 Retrieved 9 April 2007 Birman Wendy Mabel Nicholas 1866 1958 Australian Dictionary of Biography Canberra National Centre of Biography Australian National University retrieved 31 December 2023 a b What we do and Why Parkerville Children and Youth Care Parkerville Children and Youth Care Inc 2015 Archived from the original on 10 March 2020 Retrieved 30 June 2020 Whittington Vera Sister Kate a life dedicated to children in need of care Nedlands University of WA Press 1999 p 337 Australian Capital Territory National Memorials Ordinance 1928 Determination Commonwealth of Australia Gazette Periodic National 1977 2011 p 19 Trove 31 August 1988 Retrieved 16 February 2020 References editSister Rosalie Record of the Work of the Sisters of the Church Perth 1958 Parliamentary Papers Western Australia 1947 2 16 Australian Women s Digest Oct 1946 West Australian newspaper 1 January 1934 20 October 1937 19 August 1969 Swan Express Midland Junction Western Australia 8 July 1976 Carden F G Along the Canning City of Canning Second edition 1991 p 138 Whittington Vera Sister Kate a life dedicated to children in need of care Nedlands University of WA Press 1999 p 337 Handwritten notes Sr Kate s Archives file MN 957 Acc 3179A 141 Battye Library Perth College A Record of the work of the Sisters of the Church in Western Australia UWA Press Nedlands 1958 p 1 Maloney B The Life and Work of Sister Kate Churchlands Teachers College Perth 1964 p 4 HCWA assessment for Parkerville Children s Home and Cemetery HCWA Ref 8546 Morgan S J Echoes of the Past Sister Kate s Home Revisited Perth Western Australia Centre for Indigenous History and the Arts 2002 Morgan S J An Historical Overview Places of Internment of Aboriginal Children Echoes of the Past Sister Kate s Home Revisited ed Morgan S Perth Western Australia Centre for Indigenous History amp the Arts pp 5 13 2002 External links editSister Kate s on the WA Government Heritage Register Sue Gordon becomes a force for her people History News Network article on Rabbit Proof Fence and Sister Kates Genocide In Australia Colin Tatz AIATSIS Research Discussion Papers No 8 WA s Black Chapter Journey of Healing Rabbit Proof Fence dead link Clutterbuck Katherine Mary at The Encyclopedia of Women and Leadership in Twentieth Century Australia 31 52 20 S 116 8 10 E 31 87222 S 116 13611 E 31 87222 116 13611 Parkerville Children s Home Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Katherine Mary Clutterbuck amp oldid 1192797461, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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