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Image Not Available for Follow the Founder, Old Fairbridgians Association 50th Anniversary Reunion, 26 March 1988
Follow the Founder, Old Fairbridgians Association 50th Anniversary Reunion, 26 March 1988
Image Not Available for Follow the Founder, Old Fairbridgians Association 50th Anniversary Reunion, 26 March 1988

Follow the Founder, Old Fairbridgians Association 50th Anniversary Reunion, 26 March 1988

Date1988
Object number00054494
NameProgram
MediumInk on paper
DimensionsOverall: 310 × 215 mm, 36 g
ClassificationsEphemera
Credit LineAustralian National Maritime Museum Collection Gift from Robert Stephens
DescriptionRobert Stephens travelled to Australia with the Fairbridge child migration scheme in 1952 as a nine year old. Robert spent eight years undertaking farm training at the Fairbridge Farm School in Molong, near Orange, New South Wales before graduating around 1960. In 1988 he attended the 50th Anniversary Reunion.HistoryBetween 1913 and 1967, more than 7,000 British children were sent to Australia by charities such as Fairbridge, Barnardo's, and the Salvation Army. The Fairbridge Farm School in Molong NSW (opened 1937) was one of three farm training schools established under Fairbridge principles in Australia. South African philanthropist Kingsley Fairbridge aimed to alleviate the plight of British slum children by sending them to farm schools in the colonies. The idea was to remove children from impoverishment, while simultaneously developing remote rural areas of the British empire with young white labour. Supported by the Western Australian government, Kingsley and his wife Ruby established the first Fairbridge Farm School at Pinjarra, south east of Perth in 1913. Fairbridge died in 1924, but the scheme continued. Children lived in cottages under a cottage mother, attended local state schools until they were 14, and then spent 12-18 months training in farm work on the property.SignificanceThis folder reflects the ideals of the Fairbridge scheme as well as those of other child migration schemes, which was to develop rural areas with young labour. These schemes reflected Australia's broader immigration policies in the early 20th century, namely the government's desire to bolster the population with 'good British stock' and the building of a White Australia.