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At a time when the combined
population of Field of Mars Common and Castle Hill numbered less than 3,000
people, Henry Parkes approved in 1850, on behalf of the Board of National
Education in New South Wales , the appointment of local patrons for the
commencement of Pennant Hills Public School . Botany, Fort Street,
Smithfield and Pennant Hills were the first metropolitan schools under the
control of the newly constituted Board.
When Sydney was first established, ‘Pennant Hills’ applied to the range of
hills stretching north from Parramatta . The school first opened under the
name of Pennant Hills Public School when the township of Pennant Hills was
later centred on the ridge at the intersection of Pennant Hills and Castle
Hill Roads, which was a trading point on the way north. The school name
changed to include ‘West’ in 1925 when a new school was built closer to the
railway line and was to be known as ‘Pennant Hills East’ and our original
school, ‘Pennant Hills West’.
A single teacher in a one room classroom for 87 pupils grew to a school of
over 1,200 students in the 1960-70’s. In the days before portables; the
weather shed, cloak rooms and even the Bethleham Church hall, on the other
side of Castle Hill Road , were used for lessons. It has taken 40 years to
decrease in size to its forecasted optimum capacity of just over 650
students.
West Pennant Hills Public School
has long been recognised as a popular and well regarded centre for education
and has attained many academic, sport and arts achievements.
The district now known as West
Pennant Hills was originally known as Pennant Hills, and the first name of
our school was Pennant Hills Public School . It was built in the same
grounds that we now use as a playground.
Twice since then the school
building has been demolished, and a new school has been built.
A gentleman named Mr Bond sold
or gave the land to the Board of National Education in 1850, and that same
year the first school was built at a cost of about £150 of which the Board
paid £50 and the local people paid the rest. Only 20 years later the
building was found to be 'injurious to the health of teacher and scholars,
and the business of teaching cannot be carried on with any degree of
comfort'.
The first teacher was Mr Charles
Tuke who commenced teaching on 1 October 1850 at a salary of £40 per year.
Mr Tuke stayed for eight years, teaching at first 87 pupils as best he
could, but by 1852 the number of pupils had sunk to 56, and it remained
round this figure for the next 15 years.
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An early building

Watercolour of the Schoolhouse

Original Schoolhouse |
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Many of the children seemed to
have left to enrol at the Church of England Denominational School at Pennant
Hills South (now called Carlingford where the old church may still be seen).
The school at 'Pennant Hills South' was actually held in the Carlingford
Church, and many local people sent their children there by horse and buggy,
long before the days of bicycles as we know them now. Many other children
probably rode on horseback. The church school had more pupils than the '
Pennant Hills School ' for many years, and we can easily understand the
reason for this by reading the Inspector's reports. In 1858 the Inspector
reported 'the children are very backward', and the next year he said much
more: 'The pupils are irregular, and the boys disorderly and not
sufficiently clean.'
We can imagine boys, and girls
too, staying at home very often to help plough, or to pick oranges or lemons
in the orchards, or to find the cow that had strayed, or to clean the
hen-houses, and even to help to mind the smaller children in the family, for
in those days of a century ago most families had six or eight, or even nine
or ten children. The original gift of land by Mr Bond was the north-west
corner of the present site, stretching from a spot near the Castle Hill Road
gate to the present Baby Health Centre. the piece of land on which the
Infants' buildings now stand was given by Mr Bond to the Presbyterian Church
to build a church school there.
The Church, however, never used
it, so the teacher quietly used it as a paddock to keep his horse in, and
for many years the horses of teacher and pupils cropped the grass where Mrs
Thame's office now stands. Around 1880 it seems to have been fenced and made
part of the school grounds.
Another teacher whose name is
unknown followed Mr Tuke in 1858, and another in 1861 who, by some
mysterious means, managed to get the scholars to learn more than their big
brothers and sisters had learnt. The school population rose to 70, and now
the old building was too small. |
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By 1871 the building was pulled
down and 'new and suitable buildings' were erected in that year. The date
was cut into a large block of stone and placed at the front of the residence
with great pride. There were still very few public schools in all New South
Wales at that time.
When the second school building
was erected in 1871 the teacher was Mr Thomas Mossman who had come in
September, 1869.
Mr Mossman lived on the job. The
new school was joined onto the residence which had five rooms: a parlour and
a front bedroom measuring 11 ft x 10 ft, a dining room rather smaller, a
second bedroom measuring 8 ft x 10 ft, and kitchen at the back which was 12
ft x 10 ft. The ceiling was 8 feet high.
The whole building was made of
bricks, but these were of poor quality, and no dampcourse had been laid.
Within six years many complaints came from the teacher that the whole
building was damp. Mr Joseph Shields, a local farmer, cleaned and painted
the walls for £50, so for some time the place at least looked good to live
in.
In those days a Church of
England clergyman came all the way from Ryde to give the children religious
instruction. While he was teaching in the schoolroom, the teacher was giving
lessons to the Methodists, Presbyterians and others in the same room. One
parent objected to this arrangement, so later the clergyman taught his
Scripture in the teacher's residence.
Mr Mossman and his family must
have had an unhappy and unhealthy life in the badly built schoolhouse. When
he left (and soon died) in 1882, the next teacher, Mr Beuben Hayter refused
to live in the house. By this time the school had about 90 pupils, and Mr
Hayter left his wife and five children in Sydney while he boarded at a farm
in Pennant Hills. He complained bitterly about it and asked to be moved
immediately to another district, but he was left there until February of the
next year when Pennant Hills School saw no more of him.
In one letter Mr Hayter
described our school and the dwelling as it then was: 'The water in wet
weather oozes over the walls, and the paper half way up the wall is nothing
but wet muck; the roof, too, is leaky and wants seeing to. There is also an
old well in the paddock the covering of which was rotted away and is very
dangerous for children: the oven in the kitchen is worn out, the fences are
rotten and dilapidated, and there is no check against boys and others
roaming at will about the remises, and my predecessors used to be constantly
having things stolen.'
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Class
of 1918

Class
of 1938

Class of 1968
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The indignant My Hayter was
moved to another school, but it was decided to improve the residence. A room
was added on the south side, a nice large room measuring 16ft x 13ft, which
was later divided into two rooms. Perhaps it was because of the poor quality
of the local bricks that this room was built of wood. Its great disadvantage
was that this room only opened onto the outside of the house.
So to enter this room from the rest of the house it was necessary to walk
outside, possibly in the rain. There was no verandah.
This was 1884. So now the big
single schoolroom has six or seven classes, all taught by one man. The
children sat on long forms, five or six to a form. there were high windows
at both ends of the schoolroom but only small ones in the long sides. Six
brick chimneys soared into the air, five of them from the residence. We can
imagine the schoolboys of those far-off days taking turns at the
wood-chopping near the schoolroom and also near the teacher's kitchen. The
tall gums of the surrounding hills grew fats in the good heavy soil, and
firewood must have been cheap.
Few teaching aids covered the
walls of that old classroom. The chief teaching aid in those days in most
schools was the large thick cane (bought usually at city stores, a doze at a
time, for they wore out quickly). It was not that the teacher was a bully.
Almost everyone in those days believed that children needed harsh
punishments.
'Spare the rod and spoil the
child' was the rule at home as well as at school. Many parents kept whips,
thick walking-sticks, fat solid buckled belts, and even a handful of
birch-rids. Many children were caned for every day of their school lives,
and went home to the same, or worse.
The Infants' classroom had been
added to the school building on the request of Mr Charles Schowe, the
headmaster who arrived in 1885, and the local residents. Earlier headmasters
were:
1850 (October) Mr Charles Tuke
1858 unknown
1861 (June) unknown
1869 (September) Mr Thomas Mossman
1882 (September) Mr Reuben Hayter
1883 (February) Mr James Buckland
Mr Schowe was very interested in
everything in the district. He is the earliest headmaster who can still be
remembered by local residents who are still living.
In August 1890 he wrote to the
Chief Inspector in Sydney telling him that the population was growing and
would continue to grow. The Hills district was increasing in importance.
There was greater farm production. There were better roads. The railway line
at Carlingford was expected to be extended to Dural at any time now. Mr
Schowe advised the Chief Inspector to buy more land for the school
playground to accommodate the great numbers of children who must surely
enrol soon. |
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The land on the north side of
the Church Street could not be acquired because the playground must be in
one large block. The creek which is now contained in 21" pipes under the
basketball fields was then almost impassable thicket, so the land where the
present cricket pitch stands was difficult to reach. However, it would have
to do. The children must have greater playing space. Mr Schowe had ideas for
other activities, too. 'This land will be used,' he said, 'for future
extensions to the buildings, greater playground space, a girl's flower
garden, a boys' spade farm, and a bee farm.'
Mr Schowe must have been a very persuasive gentleman for in November 1890
the 'bottom half' of our present playground, on the eastern side of the
creek, was bought by the Department of Public Instruction from the estate
agents, Mills and Pile, for the sum of £341.
Meanwhile Mr Schowe and the local residents were beautifying the grounds. He
suggested in 1890 that trees be planted, school gardens be planted, and that
pupils should be taught bee-keeping.
The District Inspector supported Mr Schowe. So did Mr Purchase of Parramatta
and Pennant Hills. In August 1890 Mr Purchase gave the school 45 trees;11
Aleppo pine, 11 pinus insignis, 12 Moreton Bay figs and 11 Norfolk Island
she-oaks. The Department provided each tree with a wire enclosure to protect
if from rabbits, for this was the time of great rabbit infestation in
Australia . The children planted and tended the trees which soon became a
feature of the district. Several of those children are still alive today. Mr
Shields planted the great gum tree which still stands near the 'milk gate'.
As always, some of the best work in improving the school has resulted from
the co-operation of local citizens and Department, pupils and teachers.
It was in 1890 also that the roof of school and residence was again
repaired, the window-sills caulked and the entire outside walls painted. But
the roof still leaked and the house was still damp. After this facelift the
school remained untouched till the end of the century.
Although the railway line was not built to Dural, part of Mr Schowe's
prediction came true. Between 1890 and 1900 many new cottages appeared in
the bushland between Eastwood and Hornsby. New centres of population began
at Beecroft, Thornleigh and Epping. Thornleigh Public School opened its
doors in 1891. Beecroft Public School followed in 1897. These schools took
many pupils who previously had travelled daily on horseback or 'Shank's
pony' from those districts. Once again our school went into the doldrums. By
1898 the enrolment had fallen from 122 to 65 children. |

A Local
Sawmill


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For some time the school near Thompson's Corner lay like Rip Van Winkle,
snoozing and forgotten, while the suburbs nearer the railway line changed
the balance of population.
After the year 1900, while other
schools near the railway line grew year by year, Pennant Hills Public School
at Thompson's Corner remained small, isolated and almost forgotten. A school
was built nearer to the railway line, taking the name of ' Pennant Hills
East Public School '. For the first fifty years of the twentieth century the
district around Thompson's Corner remained a rural area, producing and
sending to market large consignments of oranges which were stacked high on
Thornleigh and Pennant Hills railway stations early most mornings. Steam
trains took them to Sydney as fast as the modern electric trains travel.
As time went by the advantages of living near a railway station coaxed new
residents to build their houses at Beecroft, Pennant Hills and Thornleigh,
so the schools at those centres grew larger and larger. Only the foundation
stone and a rather ramshackle school building remained to remind travellers
that the school at Thompson's Corner was by far the oldest in the district.
The final indignity was heaped upon our school in 1924 when it lost its
name. Pennant Hills East School became Pennant Hills Public School , while
our school changed its name to Pennant Hills West Public School .
Our district became the outer
suburb of an outer suburb. The 6 acres of it was secretly used as a rubbish
tip. Orchardists driving horse and cart and load of oranges to the station
took short cuts across the playground and wore deep ruts in the clay soil.
The fences leaned drunkenly to right and left. When in the early sixties,
the time came to build a cricket pitch and use the lower playground,
thousands of broken bottles, bits of wire and rusting tins had to be
removed.
For many years the smaller classroom was not needed, so it was used as a
store room. The 50 or 60 pupils used the larger, older classroom. Sometimes,
however, the new classroom was used for craft work or for Scripture classes.
In 1898, not long before he left the district, Mr Schowe was still hoping
against hope. He wrote in despair to the Chief Inspector.
The Rosehill railway line must certainly pass very near our school. The
terminus will never be allowed to remain idle at Carlingford. The line must
be put to some use, it must go onward to Dural. Then this school will become
one of the largest in the district. Even at present it should re remembered
that the road between this school and Pennant Hills station will be the
favourite locality for residence sites, not Beecroft.
The Chief Inspector did not agree with him. Neither did the homebuilders.
They continued to settle at Beecroft and Pennant Hills. The great
opportunity to build a loop railway line in the Hills district was lost,
however. Later, land became too expensive. Mr Schowe's disappointment
reacted badly on the efficiency of the school and on his relations with the
parents of the district. Some friction resulted, embittering his last years
here. Like many teachers of his day (and many parents too) Mr Schowe was
feared, avoided, and even hated by many. Yet he had done his best for the
school and the district in his own heavy way. But he had failed.
In April 1899 Mr Samuel Pike
took the place of Mr Schowe as Headmaster. Repairs worth £117 were
immediately carried out on the school building.
The roof was re-shingled, and windows were made larger for better lighting.
A ceiling was built into the main classroom. 'This will abate the bird
nuisance,' wrote Mr Pike.
Undoubtedly, also, it made life
in school a little less interesting for the pupils. Nature study left the
classroom, and the children could no longer watch the swifts and starlings,
and sparrows building their nests and feeding their chicks as they stole a
glance upward from their sum books.
An additional bedroom, 15 ft by 12 ft was added to the residence. This was
the 'wooden room' on the plan. Those days were more spacious than today. How
many modern homes can add a bedroom of that size? But then families were
large enough to need them.
As
the new century dawned there was a great upsurge of interest in education in
Australia . The free public school system instituted by Henry Parkes had
been followed by his Schools of Arts which, he hoped, would become centres
of culture in every town and village. They were before their time.
William Lane (and, later, Mary
Gilmore) despairing of true democracy in Australia had sailed off eight
years before to form 'Cosme' a Utopian brotherhood, in Paraguay, but those
who remained behind contributed more enduringly to human happiness. With the
new century the last small school fees were abolished. Ninety-five percent
of all children now attended school till at least the age of ten. Peter
Board's new syllabus brought new ideas. Evening courses for young men and
women were formed in many schools.
The new teacher, Mr Samuel Pike, was energetic and modern. In May 1901 he
started an evening school which continued for many years. it was Mr Pike,
too, who gave the school and residence its last great change, for in March
1906 the shingles on the roof were replaced with galvanised iron which was
to remain until the building was demolished fifty years later. In June 1909
repairs costing £143 were carried out. This was the old school's last major
face-life.
In February 1907 the local Fruitgrowers' Union asked for permission to hold
their meetings in the school. No other hall was available in the district,
but permission was declined because 'other local bodies might want a similar
concession' and 'a political tone often enters into the discussions of these
meetings.'
For many years the Headmaster,
Mr Pike, and his assistant teacher taught in the same big classroom.
Although 50 to 60 children were usually on the roll the attendance was often
no more than 40. Much time was spent in gardening, both flowers and
vegetables, and the school was now widely known for the beauty of its
surroundings. Mr Pike also owned a museum of natural and historical objects,
which he apparently left at the school.
In 1912 the new Headmaster Mr Robert Smith replaced Mr Pike. Immediately the
Parent & Citizens' Association was formed, and the first Secretary was Mr L
G Smith.
At once the Association asked the Department for help in making the school
and grounds one of the best in the district. Mr Smith wrote asking:
a) that the eastern part of the playground be fenced (declined);
b) that wire netting be supplied for the children's gardening plots to keep
out rabbits and straying stock (this was done);
c) that glass showcases be provided for the museum (declined); and
d) that more furniture be provided for the small room to separate the
Infants from the Primary children (declined).
The infants remained with the primary children, sitting, one row above
another, on their terraced forms and dual desks. Sometimes the small room
was used for manual work.
Two concerts were now given each year, with the school overflowing with
parents, pupils and babies. At least one concert was held in the open air,
using the teacher's verandah for a stage. The P & C asked the Department for
a new school building. The old school might be used as a School of Arts ,
they argued. But money was short. Australia was building its first Navy and
training a new militia. The new year the First World War broke out. The old
school had over forty years yet.
The Inspector agreed. The tender
for £115 of Mr F Walker was accepted, the Lands Department resurveyed the
grounds, and by the end of the year a new timber fence was erected.
The last 50 years of our history
can be only briefly summarised here. Settlement was still slow throughout
the twenties and thirties. Tar-sealed roads were followed by a concrete road
in the Great Depression, built by Unemployment Relief Labour. Transport
before those days was different.
For instance; In 1912 Mr Smith build at his own expense a shed to house his
horse and buggy. It consisted of partly new and partly secondhand galvanised
iron, round timber, old weatherboards and slabs, solidly put together. When
he was transferred he sold the shed to his successor, Mr Frazer, who offered
it later to his own successor, Mr Hayes. Mr Hayes did not want it , so Mr
Fraser sold it to a local resident, Mr Oxley, for £6. Mr Oxley left the
district, so he offered it to the Department for £5/10/-. The Department
agreed, paid the money, and the shed remained.
The first big influx of children occurred after the Second World War. An
aluminium building of four classrooms, office and staffroom was followed by
a beautiful two-room Kindergarten building, and the old school and residence
were demolished. The shed had vanished, and the well was filled.
In a few years the P & C Association supplied much fine equipment to the
school; a silent projector, a sound projector, a piano, a typewriter, a hand
duplicator, several radio receivers and record players and much sporting
material. But the district was now expanding quickly. Many children who
lived close to the school were attending Beecroft Public School .
In July 1919 the P & C asked for
repairs to the fence. 'At present,' they said, 'it is in a disgraceful
condition. The portion facing the main road is almost flat on the ground.
Nearly all the posts have rotted away. They playground is being used as a
rubbish dump. The present teacher and pupils have beautified the grounds
with very ornamental flower and vegetable gardens, but these are destroyed
by roaming dogs and straying stock'.
The crisis came in 1959. To ease the strain on Beecroft's accommodation, the
Department directed 85 children to re-enrol at Pennant Hills West. This
precipitated the 'Wilkes' case, but a more lasting effect was a great surge
of new buildings here. Two more Infants buildings and three more Primary
buildings followed one after another.
The Infants Department (first
Mistress Mrs J Perrett, later Mrs J Thame) was separated, with its own
energetic Mothers' Club. Yet so great was the building boom that the
Presbyterian Hall was hired as a classroom and another class was housed in a
hatroom for six years, 1959-65.
The Grounds Committee planted
over 200 hakeas and other trees to a plan designed by Mr Watson of the Royal
Botanic Gardens, being careful to retain the giant pines and gums that had
graced the area for three-quarters of a century. The steel fence encircled
the playground in 1963, and in 1964 the Department placed the creek in
concrete drains underground and provided two bitumen basketball courts. The
Grounds Committee planted great areas of lawns and soon made every inch of
the playground available for play.
The Association, the Ladies' Auxiliary and the Mothers' Club raised, for
several years between three and four thousand pounds annually, making the
school one of the best endowed in the state. Each department developed an
excellent library (Infants Mrs James; Primary Mrs McMahon).
Records of staffing throughout the years are incomplete. The first Deputy
Principal was Mr M Purser, 1960; the first Deputy Mistress of the Infants
Department was Mrs B Nay; the first Deputy Mistress of the Primary
Department Mrs E Westwood.
West Pennant Hills Public School
celebrated it's 150th Anniversary, its Sesquicentenary, in 2000 with plenty
of activities held during that year. At that time the headmaster was
Terence Malone who had commenced in 1996 and continued through to 2007.
In October 2007 Mr Malone retired and Ms Kerri Brickley was appointed
principal.
A book, written and researched by Philippa
Smith, detailing the School's history from its early origins was published
and is still available from the School.
© Copyright 2008 by West Pennant Hills Public School
Designed by Barry Sumpton Updated
09/04/09
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