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Dunlea Centre

Coordinates: 34°3′53.65″S 151°0′27.50″E / 34.0649028°S 151.0076389°E / -34.0649028; 151.0076389
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Dunlea Centre
Boys' Town Engadine
Location
Map
Engadine, Sydney
,
Australia
Coordinates34°3′53.65″S 151°0′27.50″E / 34.0649028°S 151.0076389°E / -34.0649028; 151.0076389
Information
School typeNon-denominational special school, selective, secondary school
Religious affiliation(s)Roman Catholic
Established1 August 1939
PrincipalSamantha Dennis & Joel Hamill (executive director)
Grades3-12
Enrolment~55
Websitewww.dunleacentre.org.au

Dunlea Centre, prior to 2010 known as Boys' Town Engadine,[1] is an Australian residential secondary school for adolescent young people and their families; the centre is focused on working with young people where there are identified behavioural issues. Boys' Town Engadine – Dunlea Centre helps children, young people and their families to overcome the most severe disadvantages – problems such as abuse, homelessness, long term unemployment, mental health issues and the challenges of disability.[2] The school is located in the Sydney suburb of Engadine, New South Wales and is run by the Roman Catholic Salesians, a religious order of priests, in conjunction with specialist teachers and social workers.

Boys' Town Engadine – Dunlea Centre provides a voluntary service for families at risk of family breakdown, who are committed to improving their relationships. Boys' Town Engadine – Dunlea Centre provides intensive life skills, therapeutic and educational services in an out of home care setting.[2]

History

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In 1934, Thomas Dunlea, a parish priest of Sutherland, was requested by a dying woman to look after her son, Eric Green. After the woman's death, Dunlea took the boy to the parish presbytery.[3] Over the ensuing years, a number of young boys were entrusted to his care during the Great Depression.

On 1 August 1939, Dunlea formally opened the school with seven boys in his care.[3] The purpose of the school was to help disadvantaged young males.[4] His inspiration was the Boys' Town of the 1938 movie which was based on the original Boystown in Nebraska, United States, founded by Edward J. Flanagan.[5] Dunlea described the school as:[3]

"Boys’ Town is for homeless and friendless boys — it is the hometown; the fair-dinkum town; the town of charity, unity and kindness; it is a smooth landing ground."

The boys were moved to a bigger house at the corner of Glencoe and Flora Streets, Sutherland but Sutherland Shire Council forced them out over a minor nuisance notice. On 17 July 1940, Father Dunlea led 21 boys in procession through Sutherland carrying banners and chanting. The boys pitched tents in the Royal National Park near Loftus and there they lived for 9 weeks.[5]

Publicity led to hundreds of people coming to visit the boys camped in the bush at ‘Canvastown.’ Telegrams and cablegrams of compassion and support poured in. Representatives from government institutions and various churches sent notes of sympathy and encouragement and newspapers across Australia informed readers of the boys’ plight. More importantly, financial assistance was forthcoming. £14,000 was donated by the Australian Meat Industry Association, £12,000 was raised to build poultry facilities. Amongst those who made donations was bookmaker George Nathan who organised the Sunday Carnivals with car races at the Sydney Showgrounds and raised £100,000 to erect a new Boys’ Town. Dunlea's Boys' Town received a gift of 2.8 ha (7 acres) at Engadine where Boys' Town started in August 1940. On 4 May 1941, then Premier of New South Wales, Mr Alexander Mair, laid the foundation stone of a new building at Engadine.

Boys' Town was to be partly self-supporting and to be run by the boys themselves with the priest's oversight.[4] Boys' Town came to have school rooms and a chapel but also a small farm with livestock, stables, water supply, vegetable gardens and orchard groves maintained and worked by the boys. The boys operated a butchery, leather works, metalwork blacksmiths and foundry, carpentry and woodworks, small brickworks, bakery and shops as well as the dormitory, kitchen dining room and laundry and, later, a hospital and swimming pool. As a "town" the boys constituted their own council and conducted their own elections for the positions of mayor, aldermen, health inspectors and other officers. In 1942, at Archbishop Cardinal Sir Norman Gilroy's request, the De La Salle Brothers came to Boys' Town. In 1944, Boys' Town received a grant of 40 acres in nearby East Heathcote in Wilson Parade on which it was hoped to develop a farm. By 1945, Boys' Town had 110 boys – mostly orphans aged between 8 and 18 years. The Heathcote farm was not a success and was sold. Dunlea resigned his parish, roamed and moved to the United States in 1947,[4] returning to Australia later in the 1940s.[4] Boys' Town's soon included many troubled and "at risk" boys, referred by courts, police, social service and education authorities as well as orphans, abandoned and other disadvantaged boys. As a residential community, Boys' Town effected banishment, disassociation from former influences and substitution of parents and provided boys with alternatives and training. Boys' Town boys participated in organised sports and fielded teams in local competitions, notably Australian rules football, in an era when the sport was rare in much of New South Wales. Some of its grounds became playing fields.

Boys' Town lost its funding from the Sydney Carnival when the New South Wales Rugby League wanted the show grounds for games. From the 1960s, as suburbia rapidly encroached and the nearby Engadine retail centre grew, Boys' Town increasingly ceased to be a self-supporting community and became just a residential school for disadvantaged boys. In 1978, there was a total of 135 students at Boys' Town (mostly 'boarders' with a small percentage of 'day' students). By 1989 the number of boys at Boys' Town had dropped to 40 with each boy having his own room. Many of the older Boys' Town buildings had not complied with newer fire and other regulations and government funding conditions and required major renovations completed in 1992.

In 2010 the trading name of Boys' Town Engadine was changed to Dunlea Centre as the agency ran residential programs for adolescent girls as well as boys.

Today, there are many services the Dunlea Centre offer such as the Men's Shed, which offers retired men with some time on their hands to make things inside a locked off area during school hours.

Another service the school offers is a room within the school dedicated to the Civic Kitchen and Catering service. This service hires people with disabilities and helps them get employment and other experience to ensure they can have careers in the future.

In the 2nd term of 2024, the school introduced a primary school program, which helps troubled children below the age of 12 years to have proper life experiences and help them be ready for high school as they finalize that transition into their secondary schooling life.

Notable alumni and former staff

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Alumni

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Former staff

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  • Chris Riley, AM – founder of Youth Off the Streets
  • Dennis Halliday – awarded a PhD posthumously by the Australian Catholic University for his thesis The strategic use of the wellness model in adolescent residential centres : implications for partnership between parents and the centres in relation to his work with Boys' Town.

References

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  1. ^ "About Dunlea Centre". Dunlea Centre. Retrieved 7 November 2016.
  2. ^ a b "Boys' Town". National Education Directory of Australia Pty Limited. 2012. Retrieved 9 January 2012.
  3. ^ a b c Delaney, Ron, ed. (March 2010). "Good Ol' Town" (PDF). An online newsletter for the Old Boys of Boys’ Town Engadine NSW. Boys’ Town Engadine NSW. Retrieved 9 January 2012.
  4. ^ a b c d Campion, Edmund. "Dunlea, Thomas Vincent (1894–1970)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. Retrieved 10 January 2012.
  5. ^ a b Coleman, Dorothy (1973). "Priest of the highway : a memoir of Father T.V. Dunlea". Sutherland Shire Libraries Catalogue. Retrieved 7 November 2016.
  6. ^ Barbeliuk, Mark (24 August 2009). "70 years of boys to men". theleader.com.au. Retrieved 17 April 2012.[permanent dead link]
  7. ^ "Life never a picnic for the dirt-poor, troubled Milat clan". The Sydney Morning Herald. 24 November 2010. Retrieved 17 April 2012.
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Further reading

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