Friday, August 30, 2019

#52 Ancestors Week 35 - At Work


52 Ancestors  Week 35 – At work



I come from a long line of illiterate peasants.  For hundreds of years, my forebears on both sides were agricultural labourers.  They worked hard from an early age and had little or no formal education.  Until the second half of the 19th century, most of them could not read or write.

Had they all stayed where they were – in Ireland and England – this would inevitably have improved with industrialisation and the move to city life, but it was changed more quickly by migration to Australia.

The sons of my maternal great grandfather, Anthony Whitten (who arrived in 1862) were all landowners and two sons became Methodist clergymen.

In my father’s family, it was Robert White, his grandfather, who effected the real change.  Like most country children of the time, he left school at 12, but he never stopped educating himself, and he instilled in his children and grandchildren an appreciation of the value of education.  His daughter Alice, my grandmother, was determined that her children would have an education and she sacrificed much to make sure it happened.

My father (Bill) was the first member of his entire extended family to finish High School and the first to go to University.  He was fortunate that Australian Governments, for much of the 20th century, had a scholarship program for the training of teachers.  The scholarship paid University fees and a small living allowance and the student was “bonded” to teach with the Department of Education for a period of five years.  He wrote in his memoir that he hadn’t really wanted to be a teacher (he would rather have studied Law) but that as a country boy from a poor family it was his only chance of higher education.

Thus we became a family of teachers.  First my father and one of his sisters, then my two sisters, my brother and I, and numerous cousins in the next generation all benefitted from the Teachers’ College Scholarship.

Bill graduated from University with a B.A Dip Ed (Bachelor of Arts and Diploma of Education) in 1934.  NSW was in the depths of the Great Depression, and the Department of Education had been forced to make staffing cuts.  Despite his “Bond” there was no job to go to.  He returned home to Lismore and tried to earn some money.  First he painted his grandmother’s house and fence, then he went to his uncle’s dairy farm – a job that gave him a lifetime loathing of cows and milk.

Then the Dept found him a teaching job.  With a BA Dip Ed with majors in English and History with a bit of Philosophy and Latin, he would have expected to teach High School.  Instead, he was appointed to teach at The Channon, a small school in the hills about 12 miles from Lismore.  He was one of two teachers, responsible for about 60 children, divided into two age groups.  He taught the 6,7 and 8 year olds.

These were the children of dairy farmers and farm labourers.  Most of them came to school having already risen at 4.00 am to muster cows for milking, then doing the milking before catching the bus or riding their bicycles or horses to school.  He recalled that they sometimes fell asleep at their desks, and having so recently done those jobs himself, he was understanding.

It is an irony that Bill, with his University education, relied heavily during his two years at The Channon on his great aunt Liddie, who was reaching the end of a long teaching career.  She had commenced teaching under the old “pupil teacher” system and by this stage was mistress in charge of Bill’s old primary school at South Lismore.  She had no formal Teachers’ College training but was extremely experienced, and generous, and Bill survived two years at The Channon with her help.

Bill’s career took him next to Woodburn, also not far from Lismore, and then to Quirindi in the North West of NSW where he met Mum.  He moved back to the city – to Sutherland High School – to help with the wartime teacher shortage, and then from there he and Mum went to Young, in the south west.  Somehow during the next nine years, during which they had four children, he managed to complete a Masters’ degree in History as a part-time student.

Like bank employees, teachers were expected to move regularly if they wanted promotion.  The whole family moved to Glen Innes in the north of NSW in 1954.  Here Bill would meet perhaps his greatest mentor, Frank Moroney, who was his boss as Headmaster of the High School.  Years later, when he became a Principal himself, he often approached an issue by asking himself, “What would Frank do?”

Country schoolteachers were expected to be involved in their community.  In Glen Innes Bill became part of a major civic exercise – the building of a Children’s Library.  The physical building was done by the Apex Club; Bill’s role was to chose and buy the books, and then prepare them for borrowing by adding them to the catalogue and assigning a Dewey decimal number.  For my elder sister and me, then aged about 12 and 9 and both avid readers, this was heaven.  We got first access to the books, painted the numbers on the spines, and worked in the library when it opened after school each day.

In 1960, Bill made his last move – to Dubbo in the Central West.  This was to become home for the rest of his life as he was first Deputy, then Principal, of Dubbo High School and chose to stay in the city after his retirement in 1973.

Because we lived in country towns with only one school, both my older sister and I were in classes taught by our father.  We were lucky – he was a great classroom teacher.  He also became a wise and thoughtful administrator who was much loved and admired by students and colleagues.  The boy who hadn’t really wanted to become a teacher enriched the profession by his 39 years of commitment.

Bill Gleeson - about 1962


No comments:

Post a Comment