Saturday, 25 January 2014

3 years, 9 months and 1 day in a Reformatory School

 Frank Vetter, Pushbikes and the Magill Reformatory School

When Frank Vetter finished school in December 1929 he was 13 years old.  He had obtained his Qualifying Certificate[i] at Norwood Central School, in the suburbs of Adelaide.  The certificate was given to all children who had completed 7 years of schooling.   It was now going to be a life of work, most likely with his father Theodore, who was a contractor builder, doing odd pieces of work where he could during this time of the Great Depression.  Frank lived with his family in Queen Street, Norwood, about 10 mins walk from school, which he had attended with both his older and younger sisters.

As the summer period of early 1930 ended Frank decided to leave home.  The family had now moved to Kirkcaldy Road in the western suburbs of Adelaide.  He did not get on well with his father, and most certainly did not want to work with him or for him, and he knew he could not stay there any longer. On March 11th Frank was in Norwood and as he was walking through the school grounds he saw a pushbike that belonged to a Kenneth Usher.  Here was an opportunity to get away.  Frank took the bike and peddled 15 kilometres to the sand hills near Glenelg, and here Frank lived for the next 6 weeks.

How Frank survived in the sand hills we do not know but in the third week of April Frank was met by Constables Shipway and Trotman who promptly took Frank and Mr. Usher’s bike to Brighton Police station.  Frank was fined 10 shillings, but as he had no money, and there appeared to be no interest from his parents, Frank was sent to the Boy’s Reformatory School at Magill on April 24th, 1930 for 3 days.


Magill Reformatory School [ii]


On Monday the 28th Frank left the reformatory school and returned to his parents place on Kirkcaldy road. But the urge to be on the move was too strong, and by the following Friday, Frank found himself in the yard of Millie Priscilla Host, who lived in East Avenue, Forrestville, a suburb nearer the city centre, than Kirkcaldy.  Here Frank decided to take another pushbike.  Millie’s bike was of better quality than Kenneth Usher’s.  It was of black enamel, though worn, with “Major Taylor” handlebars, rat-trap pedals, a Bates tyre on the front, and an ordinary grey tyre on the rear, steel rims, an Onward saddle, and mudguards on both wheels.  It was valued at £4.

On the night of Wednesday the 7th of May 1930, Sergeant Kroemer and Constable Walker of the Brighton Police station came across Frank and a new mate, 18 year old Charlie Lockyer in the sand hills.  Unfortunately for Charlie he was not aware that the pushbike lying beside their campfire was not Frank’s and was probably bit surprised when the two policemen arrested him and Frank for larceny.   The next day both Frank and Charlie appeared before Magistrates Fisk and Paterson at the local Courthouse at Glenelg.  Here Sergeant Kroemer detailed how the pushbike had been taken from washhouse of Mrs. Host’s home, and also how this was young Frank’s second time of removing bikes that did not belong to him.  Charlie was released and all charges against him were dismissed.   Sergeant Kroemer’s prosecution was good and Frank was ordered to be sent back to the Magill Reformatory until he obtained the age of 18 years.  

He was 13 years and 6 months old.

Frank’s time at the school had seemed to be going on okay.  In June 1931 he had been granted a probationary vacation to visit his parents but he decided that he would be better making his own way.  So on the 11th of that month while under the care of one of the attendants, he decided he would go off for a month but not to visit his parents.  He dually returned to the school the following month, having spent time living on the streets.


In July 1932 Frank was given another opportunity to go home to his parents, but again he informed the School that he would rather stay there than go home as he said his father was bad tempered.


In December 1932 another opportunity happened.  Frank along with a few other boys were required to do daily chores in the washhouse under the supervision of Mr. Gore.  The work had all been completed on the afternoon of the 6th, and Mr. Gore told the boys to move into the playroom as he led the way.  Unfortunately Frank saw an opportunity to leave Magill, and he quickly did so.  Before Mr. Gore realized that he should have followed the boys than lead them Frank was no longer anywhere to be seen.  Mr. Gore’s actions were reported to the head of the Children’s Welfare Dept. in Adelaide.

Frank quickly made his way towards the one area he knew best, Glenelg sand hills. And how does one do this? By pushbike!  Frank had made his way through the city onto Torrensville where in Ashley street he came across Gordon Black’s dark-green enameled bike with it’s nice new Dunlop red tyres, though not as valuable as Mrs. Host’s.  The Christmas of 1932 was spent in the sand hills, Frank had a new pushbike, he may still be wearing the clothes he had on when he left Magill, moleskin trousers, a blue shirt and sandshoes, but what else did he need?

On the morning of January 7th, 1933 Frank met 4 more members of the Police force.  Detectives Walters and Miller, and Constables Curtis and Leare came across Frank in the sand hills and promptly arrested him.  He was taken straight to the Children’s Court in the city, and there held for two days before facing Magistrate W. Hall.  Frank admitted to the judge that he had taken the bike, but after all it was just sitting in the street by itself when Frank came across it.  Mr. Hall sent Frank back to Magill for another 2 years, and the bike back to Mr. Black.

Charles Arnold who was the Superintendent at Magill, had made many notes about Frank suffering from flat feet, and how this affected his inclusion in work details and also in participating in sport activities.  Mr. Arnold asked the Children’s Welfare department if Frank could go to see Dr. Betts at his offices in North Terrace in the city, who would be able to make a judgment if an operation on Frank’s feet would be of any benefit.  Frank visited the doctor on May 12th and the doctor suggested an operation be conducted.  Frank was asked if he wanted to have the operation and he agreed, in fact he was anxious for it to happen.   On the 28th of May Frank entered the Royal Adelaide hospital and an operation for Spasmodic flat feet was performed.  However when Frank was released on one of the hospital visits he did not want to use the public transport to return to the Reformatory, so he again borrowed a pushbike to make the trip.  Mr. Arnold was not very happy with this and again spoke with Frank how this type of conduct was not helping Frank’s opportunities when leaving Magill.

In June 1933 there was a fire at the Magill Reformatory.  It was the afternoon and the boys had been on the football oval in the grounds of the school.  One of the boys who had not attended was a Alfred Del Grandie.  Del Grandie was 17, and was due for release soon but he had fallen foul a number of times with the staff, and had been confined to the detention cells for a month.  He decided that he wanted out and the way to do this was to light a fire in his cell.  The first person to become aware of the fire was Frank.  Frank quickly ran to one of the windows and yelled out to Mr. Threadgrill, a temporary attendant, that Del Grandie’s cell was on fire.  Del Grandie was quickly released and the fire extinguished by the boys performing a bucket chain from the water pump.

The fire was to be investigated by an internal department investigation, but Del Grandie now accused a number of the staff at the Reformatory of plotting against him, and an official inquest was now required to be held by Magistrates in Adelaide court.  The inquest would go on for over two months, with Del Grandie attending along with a number of other boys who were to give evidence.

Frank was one of these boys, but the most important as his warning had saved the Reformatory school from extensive damage.  He was named and described in the Adelaide newspapers as he entered court, “a lame lad called Frank Vetter.” [iii]  Obviously Frank’s operation for his flat feet had not been entirely successful.  Frank was asked a number of questions about his time at the Reformatory.  He was asked about the meals, whether the boys were allowed second helpings.  Then there were a couple of questions, which highlighted more about Frank’s family than his life at the Reformatory.
“Were you allowed to go home on probation in June 1931? – Yes, but I did not go.”
“You preferred to stay at the Reformatory? – Yes, I do not get on very well with my father.”
The Magistrate then asked Frank if he wrote to anyone, “No, but most of the other boys do.”
“Do your people visit you? – No. Del Grandie is not visited either, but most of the other boys are.”
Del Grandie was found guilty, and sent to an adult prison.  Frank returned to Magill.

By late 1933 Frank was now a “Trust” boy in the school, and was taking on tasks and jobs that required some responsibility.   At the beginning of December, the Secretary of the Children’s Welfare Dept., in Adelaide asked for a report on him so that Frank’s case could be discussed at the next Board meeting.  Frank still did not want to return to the home of his parents, and Mr. Arnold stated that finding him a home and work was not going to be easy.  Mr. Arnold stated that although now a senior, Frank was reluctant to join classes “designed for moral improvement.”  Mr. Arnold also believed that Frank was aware of “certain untoward plotting” within the school, but that he did not want to give any details to Mr. Arnold.  Frank was not going to inform on his mates.  Frank also told Mr. Arnold he wanted to be a hairdresser.

On the night of January 25th, 1934 Frank was sent out to move the sprinklers in the garden.  He never came back.  Mr. Evans, who was in charge that night, informed the police.  No pushbikes were reported stolen that night.

Frank was 17 years and 3 months old.




[i]The Qualifying Certificate marked the completion of primary school. Students were examined in English, Mathematics, History and Geography up to Grade VII standard. Centre for Studies in Literacy, Policy and Learning Cultures University of South Australia.
[ii] http://images.slsa.sa.gov.au/mpcimg/72250/B72111_79.htm
[iii] News (Adelaide Newspaper) August 9, 1933

Friday, 10 January 2014

A Cerebral Haemorrhage - The Death of William Bewes 1934

On the 28th of April 1934 William Bewes died in Newcastle Hospital from a “cerebral haemorrhage, the effects of injuries accidently received through being knocked down by a bicycle.”  He was 77 years old.

On the afternoon of April 19th William was returning home to his house in Bruce Street, where he had lived since the age of two.  As he went to cross the road at the intersection of Porcher (now National Park Street) and Parry streets, he was knocked down by a cyclist.  He was taken to Newcastle Hospital straight away, with a cut above one eye. Nine days later William died.


On April 30 his family buried him alongside his wife, who had predeceased him 29 years before, at Sandgate cemetery.  All of his seven children were there, along with his 18 grandchildren, and extended family.

On May 9th at the Newcastle Courthouse the District Coroner, Mr. A.G. Chiplin, held an Inquest into the death.  A number of witnesses were called, along with members of William’s family.

Sergeant W.A. Stubbs was the first to give evidence, where he stated that on the afternoon of April 19th,  Aubrey Bowie had approached him and told him that he (Mr. Bowie) had just knocked a man over in Parry street as he was riding his bicycle home, and that the man had been taking to hospital.

The next to present evidence was Arthur Brown, who had been riding alongside Mr. Bowie when the incident happened.  Mr. Brown stated that they had been riding east along Parry Street and came to a stop at the intersection of Porcher and Parry.  They were on the left hand side of the street and had slowed to allow them to see any traffic coming from Porcher Street.  They had proceeded to cross Porcher when only about 8 feet across Bowie had collided William Bewes. 

Mr. Bowie, who actually lived only three doors up from William Bewes in Bruce Street, told the Coroner that he had not seen Bewes, before he had walked in front of him.  That as soon as he had collided Bewes had fallen to the ground and had hit the roadway.  The traffic that day on Parry street was considered only medium.

The Coroner then heard that while in hospital William Bewes had made no reference to being hit by a bicycle.  Dr. J.L. Leslie, the Government Medical Officer, stated that William Bewes had died from a Cerebral Haemorrhage.

The Coroner took a full day to review the evidence, and the next day he made his judgment.  It was an accident.  William Bewes while crossing Parry Street at the Porcher Street intersection had walked in front of Mr. Bowie, as he was riding.  Mr. Bewes had fallen over and had hit his head above the eye.  This had resulted in the cerebral haemorrhage that took Mr. Bewes’s life 9 days later.


William Bewes 1857 – 1934
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Bessie Bewes 1896 – 1983
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Lorna Bessie Powell 1922 – 2009
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Kevin Reginald Brady 1961 –





References: Newcastle Morning Herald - May 9, 1935 and May 10, 1934

Saturday, 4 January 2014

Emma Powell - Dressmaker

Emma Powell was the first child born to John Powell and Susan Bendall.  She was born at Westbury-on-Trym, a small town (now a suburb) to the north of Bristol.  On the 2nd of April 1815, Emma was christened in the Holy Trinity church.
Holy Trinity Church, Westbury-on-Trym

The family was to grow and move, and over the next 10 years 2 brothers and 3 sisters were born to the family. John Powell was a milkman and moved around Bristol during this time looking for work.
In August 1831 the family started to break up.  Emma’s brother James, was charged with pick pocketing in neighouring Herefordshire, and by the following April he was on a convict transport for Australia.  Emma was never to see him again.
By late 1837, Emma’s father had died and her mother married a John Hember in December of that year.  John Hember had previously been married to a Mary Bendall, possibly an aunt or cousin of Emma’s mother.  Like Emma, his children had been born in Westbury-on-Trym. Emma’s mother and her youngest sister Jane moved back to Westbury to live on Southmead farm where John Hember lived.
Emma and her sister Elizabeth were out working as dressmakers at an early age, and in the 1841 census, they and 18 other young women, were living at Belmont House, in Clifton, just outside of Bristol.  All were describes as dressmakers, working for a local milliner, Miss Kerslake, who advertised in Bristol Mercury, “an Elegant variety of WINTER FASHIONS” for the ladies of Bristol.
Bristol Mercury November 1842

But on the morning of February 22, 1842 there was a fire at Belmont House, and the fire brigade was quickly on the scene.  The local policemen on the beat were commended in the newspaper for their “active and judicious exertions on the occasion.”
By 1851, Emma was back living with her mother and step-father on the Southmead farm at Westbury-on-Trym.  John Hember now employed 12 labourers on the farm, and Emma and her mother, besides caring and feeding the farm workers, also looked after one of John Hember’s grandchildren, 6 year old Louisa.
By this time two of Emma’s sisters had married, Elizabeth to John Watkins in 1845, and Jane to Edwin Jefferies in 1849.  Both had married at the church of St. Paul’s in Portland Square, Bristol, an area where some of Emma’s sibling had been born in the 1820s, and she was to return to many times.
In 1860 Emma’s sister, Jane Jefferies, died on May 19th from phthisis, a form of pulmonary tuberculosis.  Emma, her mother and step-father, and young Louisa Hember had come to stay with her brother-in-law, and in the 1861 they were still living with Edwin Jefferies at Stokes Croft in Bristol.
In 1856, Emma’s sister Elizabeth’s husband, John Watkins had died in Westbury-on-Trym, leaving her with two small children.  Like Emma, she was a dressmaker, and had to work to support her young family.
In 1871 Emma was running a boarding house 31 Picton Street, Bristol, and Elizabeth and her son Alfred, were living there, along with 3 young male boarders. The house was the same place where Emma’s mother and stepfather had died in 1862.
By 1881 Emma had lost more of her family.  Her sister Elizabeth had died in 1877, as had Elizabeth’s adult children, Alfred at 30, and Emma Jane, 24.  Like Emma’s mother, all were buried back in Westbury-on-Trym.
In that year’s census Emma was back in Westbury-on-Trym looking after a house for two retired brothers, Hugh and Thomas Boone, who had invested in Land and were now living off the benefits.
Sometime in the late 1880s Emma moved again, this time to look after a younger family.  Borwell Wiles, was a Coal agent for the Bedminster Coal Company, and he and his wife had returned from living in Nebraska, U.S.A., to raise their family at 49 St. Michael’s Hill in Bristol, and Emma again had the role of housekeeper.
49 St. Michael’s Hill, Bristol where Emma died

It was here that Emma died aged 75 on the 28th of September 1890.  She was suffering from scrofulous abscesses. These are usually acquired through drinking un-pasteurized milk and develop on the neck.  Her death certificate describes her as a former dressmaker.
On the 1st October 1890 Emma’s body was taken back to Holy Trinity Church in Westbury-on-Trym.  Here she is buried amongst most her family who all predeceased her.


JOHN POWELL married SUSAN BENDALL 1779-1862
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ELIZABETH POWELL 1815-1890                        JAMES POWELL 1817-1885
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JOSEPH HENRY POWELL 1849-1927
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       REGINALD JOSEPH POWELL 1894-1977
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LORNA BESSIE POWELL 1922-2009
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KEVIN REGINALD BRADY 1961-