Chapter 3 - Why children were in homes
I am one of the blessed
ones. But what about the scars of my fellow brothers and sisters of state wards
who didn't get a better start? All I am asking in closing is to take a good
look at your neighbour, your workmate, the postman, your paymaster. Are they
ex-state wards? What are their pains and dark thoughts that need to be
expressed to need help in?[185]
3.1
Children have been placed in institutions for many reasons,
including: family poverty; being orphaned; being born to a single mother; family
dislocation from domestic violence, divorce or mental illness; lack of
assistance to single parents and parents' inability to cope with their children.
Child sex abuse by a parent or step-parent was frequently cited in submissions
to the Committee as the reason for welfare authorities placing a child in care.
Often, a combination of these factors resulted in children being removed from a
family and placed in a home.
3.2
In most cases where children have been placed in homes,
the reality has been that some sort of crisis or hardship affected a family's
ability to care for their children. More often than not it occurred in a milieu
of hardship where parents were not given enough support to help them to rear
their children in their own homes. At the heart of the issue is the children were
often the main victims.
3.3
A Commonwealth study in the late 1970s identified a
general pattern of reasons regarding the admission of children to homes in Australia,
including those relating to family finances, parental abuse or neglect of
children, and children's behavioural problems. These reasons were shown to be strongly
interwoven however the lack of finances often led to problems and fragile
situations which in many cases, contributed to a child or children being
admitted to residential care.[186]
3.4
Prior to placement in care, the children may have been taken
through various procedures whereby they were classified as wards of the state
(discussed below in this chapter). However, even if children were not taken
through the official wardship process, the result would be the same: that is,
the child was placed in some form of institution or out-of-home care.
3.5
Often, situations regarding children being placed in
care were complex:
A child might have been placed voluntarily and then gone home,
and then a year later whatever the department of community services was at that
time requested placement. It is not always black and white.[187]
3.6
Significantly, many people who themselves were given up
to some form of out-of-home care as children, have expressed concerns about
losing their own children, as the following experience of a mother from Western
Australia illustrates:
Once she got bacterial meningitis and had to go to hospital,
well I never left her side for one minute the whole time she was there because
I thought if I did, they would take her away. (Sub 172)
State wards
It is generally recognised that there is an inherent tension in
all child welfare codes between the State's responsibility for providing
positive welfare services for families and its authority to intervene legally
in children's affairs and to remove them from their normal way of life under
sanction.[188]
3.7
As mentioned, in being placed in homes, children were
often made wards of the state, a process entailing a court appearance (often
the Children's Court or magistrate's court) where an order would be made for
wardship, usually until a child turned 18 years, though in Victoria the
wardship age was raised in 1960 to 21 years. It is noteworthy that when
legislative definitions of children who could be made state wards were
broadened, the number of children coming into institutions increased.[189]
3.8
For many years, under particular States' child welfare
legislation, children could be classed as state wards on various grounds including
any variation on 'being uncontrollable', 'neglected' or 'in moral danger'. In
other words, children were often declared 'uncontrollable', 'neglected' or
'exposed to moral danger' and deemed to be wards of the state, not because they
had done anything wrong, but because the circumstances in which they found
themselves resulted in them being status offenders and often they were
institutionalised. 'Status offender' is a term used to describe a person who
has committed a status not a criminal offence. These offences are so designated
because of the offender's status as a juvenile.
3.9
Whether taken into care because of a juvenile offence,
as a state ward or via some form of private placement, in most States, children
were first admitted to a State reception centre from where they were
'processed' and sent to a children's home.
3.10
The Committee received many care leaver descriptions
about being 'processed' in State receiving homes such as Bidura in Sydney, or
Winlaton, Allambie or Turana in Melbourne, before being charged in court with
'crimes' over which they had no control. For many care leavers, this has meant carrying
what they consider to be the stigma of 'having a record' throughout their
lives.
3.11
The sad irony which has not been lost on care leavers, is
that 'being neglected' such as in relation to inadequate food, clothing,
accommodation or personal care of a child, related to parental behaviour, not
that of the child. Similarly, a child's behaviour was tied to a parent's
ability to control their child. In the case of uncontrollable children,
certainly, much of the information received by the Committee shows that any bad
behaviour which resulted in placement in a home, is likely to have been the
product of extreme deprivation and hardships of the children's life experiences.
As noted in chapter 2, the legislation underpinning the children's court
actions punished children for being neglected rather than the parents for being
unfit guardians, and it did not make provisions to assist the child-family
situation.
3.12
In 1976, the Norgard Committee inquiring into child
care services in Victoria
made the following criticism of the wardship process:
Most children are admitted to State guardianship through
procedures starting with Police contact and adjudicated in the Children's
Court. These procedures and the legal grounds on which they are based date
largely from the last century and in many ways have strong similarities with
those used in actions against adult offenders.[190]
3.13
By all accounts, the administrative power of the State
to have children declared wards was largely unquestioned and rarely scrutinised
until relatively recently.[191]
Legislative provisions of wardship
3.14
As noted, children could be charged under relevant
State legislation and after going through the court processes, a decision could
be taken to place them in a children's institution. Persons who had power under
State Acts to take children before the courts included government welfare officials,
the police or a child's parents or family members. Examples of legislation governing
such actions are provided in sections of New South Wales
and Victorian Acts cited below.
New South
Wales
3.15
Under the New South Wales Child Welfare Act 1939, children who were regarded as 'neglected'
and/or 'uncontrollable', could be made wards of the state and subsequently sent
to institutions, as the following legislative provisions show. For example, the
terms 'uncontrollable' and 'ward' are defined in s.4:
'Uncontrollable' where used in reference to a child or young
person means child or young person who is not being or cannot be controlled by
his parent or by any person having his care.
'Ward' means any child or young
person who has been -
(a) admitted to State
control;
(b) committed to an
institution;
(c) admitted into a
hostel for expectant and nursing homes;
(d) admitted into a
home for mentally defective children.
3.16
Section 72 of the Child
Welfare Act 1939, provided a wide range of definitions of what constituted
a 'neglected' child or young person, including one who:
(b) has no visible lawful means of support or
has no fixed place of abode;
(d) without reasonable excuse, is not provided
with sufficient and proper food, nursing, clothing, medical aid or lodging, or
who is ill-treated or exposed;
(g) whose parents are drunkards, or, if one be
dead, insane, unknown, undergoing imprisonment, or not exercising proper care
of the child or young person, whose other parent is a drunkard;
(k) is destitute;
(l) whose parents are unfit to retain the child
or young person in his care in their care, or, if one parent be dead, insane,
unknown, undergoing imprisonment, or not exercising proper care of the child or
young person, whose other parent is unfit to retain the child or young person
in his care;
(n) is falling into
bad associations or is exposed to moral danger.
3.17
Sections 73 and 74 contained provisions where officers
authorised by the Minister or police officers could apprehend a neglected child
or young person who would then be summoned to appear before court.
3.18
Under s.78 of the New South Wales Act:
78. Any child or young person apprehended as a neglected or
uncontrollable child or young person or juvenile offender shall be taken to a
shelter and as soon as practicable thereafter shall be brought before a court.
3.19
Given that s.80 provided that 'any person having the
care of a child or young person may apply to a court to deal with such child or
young person as an uncontrollable child or young person', a child or young
person could be taken before a court and charged with being neglected,
uncontrollable or in moral danger by a range of people including their parents
or relatives.
3.20
Under s.82, if a child or young person was found to be
neglected or uncontrollable a range of options were available for the court,
including that it could:
(d) commit the child or young person to the
care of the Minister to be dealt with as a ward admitted to State control; or
(e) commit the child or young person to an
institution, either generally or for some specified term (whether expiring
before or after the date upon which the child or young person attains the age
of eighteen years) not exceeding three years.
3.21
Similarly, where charges for a summary
offence were proved, a range of options were available to the court under the s.83(1)
of the Act, including that the child or young person could be committed to an
institution - s.83(1)(c); or committed to the Minister's care to be dealt with
as a ward admitted to State control - s.83(1)(d).
Victoria
3.22
In Victoria,
applications to the Children's Court were often made by a police officer or a
child's parent(s) or relatives where a child could be made a ward of the state
on the grounds of being 'uncontrollable'.[192]
3.23
Under the Victorian Children's
Welfare Act 1954, a ward of the state was defined:
s.3(1)(b) 'Ward of the Children's Welfare Department' and 'ward
of the Department' means one of whose person and estate the Director is
guardian under the provisions of this Act.
3.24
As well, under s.16 of the Children's Welfare Act 1954 a range of definitions were outlined
where a child could be deemed to be in need of care and protection including
children or young persons who:
(c) has no visible
means of support or no settled place of abode;
(f) is not provided with sufficient or proper
food nursing clothing medical aid or lodging or who is ill-treated or exposed;
(h) is in the care and custody of any person
unfit by reason of his conduct or habits to have the care and custody of the
child or young person;
(i) is living under such conditions as
indicate that the child or young person is lapsing or likely to lapse into a
career of vice or crime;
(j) is exposed to
moral danger.
Section 17 of that Act
contained provisions where any member of the police force or other person
authorised by the Minister could apply to the Children's Court regarding any
children found in circumstances as outlined in s.16 to have them deemed to be
in need of care and protection of the Children's Welfare Department. Section 19
provided for other people with the 'care and custody of a child or young
person' to apply to a Children's Court to have him deemed to be uncontrollable
and admitted to the care of the Children's Welfare Department.
3.25
Section 25 of the Act provided for the Director of the Department
to deal with a child or young person who had been committed to the care of the
Children's Welfare Department in a number of ways including placement in a
home:
25. Subject to the regulations the Director may from time to
time deal with any child or young person admitted or committed to the care of
the Children's Welfare Department in one or other of the following ways:
(a) Place him in a reception centre or
children's home or other establishment conducted and managed by the Department;
(b) Place him in an approved children's home;
(c) Place him in a juvenile school conducted
and managed by the Department or an approved juvenile school but no child shall
be placed in a juvenile school without the approval of the Minister;
3.26
Other States had similar legislative provisions
regarding state ward processes. Section 4 of the Western Australian Child Welfare Act 1947 defines a state
ward as:
'ward' means a child who, under the provisions of this or any
other Act, is received into an institution, or apprenticed, boarded out, or
placed out.[193]
Care leavers' experiences of
wardship processes
3.27
Many care leavers have described the harsh realities of
appearing before a court. Waiting for the courts to determine a child's fate
was not pleasant as the experience of Glebe or Albion Street Children's Court
shows:
Albion Street Children's Court was a very hard place. If you
have read "LORD OF THE FLIES" think of that society of kids on
steroids with a black sense of humour and always in a bad mood, you will have
some idea of life in Albion Street. (Sub 321)
3.28
As well, a court appearance could be frightening for
families and children:
After suffering the early morning trauma of being dragged away
from my family, I was taken before the court, standing beside my brothers with
the escort of police. We were charged with what? I can remember thinking what
have we done wrong? I looked at my mother who was in tears, my grandfather with
his head in his hands. I was then separated from [them all]. (Sub 24)
3.29
Regardless of the era or the location, care leavers'
recollections of how they came to be deemed to be neglected, were often remarkably
similar:
In December 1936 when I was 19 months old I was forcibly removed
from my parents and charged with being a neglected child. It was during the
depression and my father was very poor. I was institutionalised at Royal Park
Girls' Depot. In 1938 I was fostered inappropriately and later removed due to
reports of abuse. (Sub 17)
I was born in Queensland
on 27th February, 1941.
At the age of seven I was termed 'a neglected child in need of proper care and
protection' and made a Ward of the State of Queensland.
I was removed from my mother, brothers and sisters, and placed into St
Vincent's Orphanage in Nudgee, Brisbane. (Sub
141)
On the 28th
of April 1967 I along with my other siblings were removed from the
care of my parents and committed to state wardship as a result of being charged
with neglect. I was 6 years old at the time I was placed at Bidura with my
sisters Maryanne and Debra-Ann. My brother Kenneth
was placed at Royleston Home, Glebe. (Sub 142)
3.30
Another care leaver outlined her experience of being on
charges of being exposed to moral danger:
I began to run away again. I was arrested by the police and
taken to the children's court many times, until I was sixteen and placed in
Parramatta Girls Home for 'being in moral danger'. (Sub 238)
3.31
Significantly, one person who had been charged with
neglect as a child, nowadays makes the point:
As if a child can neglect itself and was a criminal, even today
I feel that I have to declare that I have been charged when documents ask for
criminal records'. (Sub 352)
3.32
It is not surprising that the Norgard Committee
criticised the Victorian Social Welfare
Act 1970, regarding its grounds on which children could be made state
wards:
Exposure to moral danger...reflects the nineteenth century's
preoccupation with prostitution and should be considered for repeal...
Present procedures for the admission of 'uncontrolled' children
under Section 34 of the Social Welfare
Act date almost unchanged from the 1864 legislation. They have aptly been
described as 'barbaric' and should be replaced in such a way that parents can
receive help with child management problems by less distressing methods.[194]
Other children in care
3.33
As mentioned, not all children in institutional care
have been state wards and not all state wards have been under the direct
control of the state. The category of state ward is reasonably restricted and
does not account for all children in institutions.[195] Some
children could have been voluntarily relinquished to an institution by a parent
or a relative usually because of hardship. As well, many children in orphanages
were not orphans. Wesley-Dalmar noted that in 1967 only four of the 130
children in care were orphans.[196] Further, indigenous
children have often been placed in care merely because of the colour of their
skin.[197]
3.34
Witnesses noted that many individuals who were non
wards in non-approved institutions were largely invisible to government
authorities.[198]
The procedures which applied to state wards did not apply to other children.
This difference is seen today in one important area: record keeping. Many
non-wards have found few records about their time in care. This issue is
discussed in chapter 9.
Reasons for children being place in homes
3.35
While some care leavers do not know why they were
placed in care, others advised the Committee of their removal from their
families. In the time period covered in this report, the 1930s-1970s, a major
reason related to lack of help, especially financial support, for families in
crisis arising from various events such as the death or illness of a parent,
desertion of a spouse or an inability to cope with children.
3.36
It is true that hardships are exacerbated by parents'
lack of finances. As evidence to the Committee's inquiry into poverty and
financial hardship overwhelmingly showed, a strong correlation exists between
poverty and children living in abusive situations. Not surprisingly, poverty
was shown to undermine parenting abilities because economic and social stress
can lead parents to become less nurturing and more rejecting of their children;
children living in poverty have been shown to have a higher incidence of child
abuse and neglect.[199]
As noted earlier, a parent's lack of finances often underlies the reasons for
children being admitted to residential care.[200]
3.37
As mentioned in chapter 2, schemes were introduced at
times by State governments to help mothers to keep their children at home. Generally
though, very little government financial support was available to families in
crisis. The Widows Pension, introduced in 1942, assisted women who had lost a
partner and could not be expected to work due to child care responsibilities or
age. Not all women in this category were eligible. De facto widows, deserted wives, divorced women and women whose
husbands were in institutions for the insane, were included. Single mothers,
wives of prisoners, women deserted by their de
facto husbands and women who had
deserted their husbands or agreed to separate, were excluded.
3.38
Widows who were ineligible for the Widow Pension, received
varying amounts of State government assistance. In 1968, the Commonwealth began
to partially fund that assistance. In 1973 the Supporting Mothers Benefit was
introduced to provide support for single mothers who were not adequately
catered for by existing arrangements.[201] Divorcees and
women whose husbands did not pay maintenance had to pursue the matter through
legal channels including via prison orders.[202]
3.39
Irrespective of the crisis, very few family support
services existed. Single parents who had to work had few child-care options and
it was generally accepted that fathers were not appropriate as single care
givers. Often the only place to turn to was the church. Some parents tried
valiantly to keep families together, but often the solution to family crises
was to move the children into care. As noted by Dr
Penglase, these children would otherwise
have been charged by the welfare authorities with neglect, had they come to the
attention of the relevant department. Dr
Penglase stated:
This may also be significant as a background to parental
decision around placing children in Homes, in that it was less likely in such a
legal context that parents would risk intervention by the Department [of Child
Welfare].[203]
Single parents (usually mother)
3.40
The Committee received stories from people about how
they came to be placed in care because of lack of support for their mothers.
This occurred mainly in times when government or other financial support to
unmarried mothers was clearly lacking and when being a mother out of marriage
carried a stigma, which for many women, would have been too much to endure:
My story begins on 6
September 1932 when I was born to an unmarried 19 year old. My
mother had no support from her family, so when I was born at Crown Street
Women's Hospital, I stayed there till I was one month old. I was then taken to
Myee Children's Home at Arncliffe and made a State Ward...I
remained at Myee till I was 18 months old and was then fostered by the Newman
family of Campsie. (Sub 179)
3.41
And:
I was born out of wedlock on the 21st August 1931, at the Lady
Bowen Hospital,
in Brisbane, Queensland.
My mother's name was Helena Corkery. Still to
this day I do not know who my father was. I have never ventured onto that. My
early recollection was that up until the age of three years, I was placed in
and out of the Holy Cross
Church in Wooloowin, which was a
home for babies. (Sub 237)
3.42
As well:
At the stroke of the pen on the 10th of December 1946 I was officially
deemed a 'ward of the state' (nearly 3 months old), signed by mother Mary
Bernice Harrison.
When I read the Adoption Order the words are so harsh...I'm sure society does not
understand the anguish and the heartbreak the mother has to go through, to make
a decision regarding adoption, yet the written word is not precise in the way,
it was meant to be said...the document was signed by a GP. (Sub 3)
Death of a parent or parents
3.43
A parent's death was pivotal to children's futures.
Often the father could not cope with caring for the children after his wife's
death, whereas if a father died, the mother often could not financially support
her children.
3.44
Many care leavers described their mother's death as the
reason for being placed in a home:
When I was 7 (1940) my mother died of cancer. I had had a very
happy start - with 2 older brothers and a little sister - in a happy family.
This however broke up my family (a war on). I was never to know happiness again
or to overcome the stress of life (as my father said he put me), 'in a good
Church home', from these 10 and a half years I have survived - it was
the best I could do. (Sub 230)
I was put into the 'Sutherland Homes for Children' at the age of
8 years in 1945. My brother was 2 years older than me, our mother had died and
father was unable to cope. (Sub 183)
3.45
As noted, men were not considered to be appropriate
care givers. The following describes the impact of this view on one witness:
Dalmar became my home from approximately late 1946 to November
1955...My mother died when I was aged 5 years & 8 months & I needed care
that only women were then considered able to give & so, after due
consideration my father & I had to live apart. (Sub 343)
3.46
Unsurprisingly the death of a mother had devastating
effects for children in homes:
She left six children ranging from 21 to 5 years of age. Her
death was a tragedy. She was the nucleus of the family and with her death the
family disintegrated. My father couldn't cope and turned to alcohol and was
overwhelmed by his loss...Within weeks of my mother's death, I found myself at
Murray Dwyer Orphanage in Mayfield...I quickly had to learn all about the rules
of the orphanage, quite different from my family life I had experienced for the
first 9 years of my life. (Sub 360)
3.47
When both parents died, often very few alternatives
were available. While in some instances grandparents and other relatives tried
to care for children, the lack of support often resulted in the children being
placed in homes:
December the 11th
1969. I am taken to St Vincent's Hospital,
to see my mum. My mum looks different to the other times that I have been in
the hospital, she smells, her stomach is swollen... I know I will never see my
mum again, she knows too. My mum takes my hand and tells me 'everything will be
alright', and that she knows why I am crying...on December the 12th
1969 at approximately 0600hrs, my mother gives into death...The police arrive
that afternoon...I remember Aunty Gwen telling me to run and keep running, hide
in the paddocks, don't let them take you...December 30th 1969, I went
to the children's court...it is decided that I have no means of support, or suitable
caregivers...I am an orphan, and a Ward of the State, and so was my mum a Ward,
No. 53822...I remember being taken to Allambie, by van...I was scared, I felt like
an impounded dog, trapped and alienated. (Sub 239)
3.48
This person's future and institutionalisation was
affected, firstly by the death of her mother, and then, her grandmother:
I became a state ward in 1968 after my mother died. My
grandmother raised us till her death in 1970 then we went into foster care.
(Sub 17)
3.49
Another care leaver recounted being placed in care when
her mother died and her father's new partner had the children made wards of the
state:
I was born on 8 May 1931.
My brother, Edward John,
was born 20 months later. When I was 6, my mother died in childbirth leaving
behind my father, brother and me...I remember one day at school, some people came
to question Edward and me. I now know they must
have been welfare officers. They asked us questions about what we had for
breakfast and what other food we had. We had obviously been reported to welfare
as being neglected kids. Not long after we went to court with our
stepmother...she said because we had been misbehaving and she was going to
explain why. Dad left thinking we would be there as usual when he got home from
work. I was 8 then. In court I clearly recall her telling awful lies about us
and I was thinking why don't they ask us questions. I was too scared to talk.
We were made wards of the state. My brother and I were separated, he went to a
boys' home and I went to the Bidura Girls' Home at Glebe. (Sub 185)
3.50
The World War II (1939-1945) era had an effect on
people's capacity to care for children. Care leavers cite examples of being
placed in institutions when their father went to war and their mother had died
or where the authorities considered that mothers could not cope with children
while the men were at war:
WR Black Presbyterian Girls Home was situated in Chelmer, Brisbane.
During World War II the girls and staff were relocated to Killarney. My sister
and I went to the home whils't in Killarney. We were put there because our
father was away at war. Our mother died 2 years earlier when I was 5 years old.
Our Grandparents cared for us before going to the home. When our Grandmother
left us there I cried, the matron made me blow my nose on a piece of rag. She
screwed my nose around saying 'we don't have cry babies in this place'. She
made my nose bleed. (Sub 101)
Can you imagine what all those mothers, the pain and suffering
all those mothers went through to have their children taken off them by the
Western Australian Government...Taken from our mother between 1939 November or
March 1940. I, my four brothers and two sisters, we were the sons and daughters
of our (Dad) who served his country in World War 2. Any mother who asked for
assistance from the Western Australian Government during the war years...was put
down unfit to look after her children. (Sub 41)
Parents' divorce or separation
3.51
Some care leavers have described being placed in homes
when their parents' marriage ended. For example, the children from this large
family were dispersed to orphanages around Victoria:
I became a State Ward of Victoria on the 4th July 1957 at the age of 3, until I
was discharged at 18 on the 31st
of January 1972...I was placed into the care of the Sisters of Mercy
at St Catherine's Children's
home in Geelong where I would spend
the next 13 years. I remember my arrival there, my two sisters and I wore the
same matching coats, black wool with red corduroy on the collars. I was placed
into care because of the usual dysfunctional background, too many children, too
much alcohol, not enough money, and neglect. (Sub 33)
3.52
A marriage breakdown combined with factors such as the
custodial parent's inability to care for the children, or financial strains for
parents, particularly women, after a divorce, could result in the children
being institutionalised:
He won the divorce case and was given custody of the four
children Joyce, John,
Myself and Keith. Grandmother made an attempt to
look after us but it was too much for her...[Dad] was...called up into military
service. He decided to put the four of us into children's homes. Joyce
disappeared and we learned later that she had been placed in a girls' home
called St Saviour's home for girls in Goulburn...Dad finally put us into the care
of the Salvation Army in Goulburn. Dad took us and left us with a promise that
he would visit us often but he did not keep this promise. (Sub 292)
My young brother and I were placed in St John's Home for Boys at
Goulburn, NSW...it would have been about mid 1940s to 1949-50, my mother had just
been divorced and could not afford to look after us. We had a good home life
before the divorce, growing up in Annandale and Balmain, never went without
anything, my mother never had to work...Now at the time there were no childcare
centres, so that's how we ended up in Goulburn. (Sub 297)
3.53
Many submissions outlined stories where young people
were faced with adverse situations with which they were not equipped to handle.
For example, a nine-year-old girl 'caught in the middle' of her parents' divorce
was despatched by plane from Perth
to Adelaide, only to have her
mother refuse to take her. The police then intervened and she was made a ward
of the state and institutionalised in Adelaide:
...I moved to Windana. When Windana became a 'boys only' home, my
Social Worker, Mrs. Scott
asked me if I would like to go to Vaughan House. I was unaware that Vaughan
House was a remand centre for delinquent girls...I was eleven years of age at
this time and I had not committed any offence...I was the youngest inmate,
several years younger than all the other inmates were. I felt intimidated by
them and was often scared. No family members came to visit me. (Sub 273)
Parent(s) unable to care for
children
3.54
Some care leavers have described situations where circumstances
converged, resulting in their institutionalisation. One care leaver attributed
his placement in a home to his truancy from school which had resulted from his
limited understanding of English. To some extent he considered that his fate
was preordained, because his mother, who was new to Australia
and unfamiliar with the country's rules, was powerless in the system:
I was incarcerated in St Vincent de Paul's Boys' Orphanage in
South Melbourne, Victoria, from 1957 to 1962 inclusive, before my transfer to
St Vincent de Paul Boys' Hostel in 1963...I am of ethnic origin, born of
Hungarian parents in Germany on 17/7/1949...As a result of my mother constantly
changing addresses after leaving the Bonegilla Migrant Camp, I did not attend
school on a regular basis and only had a limited understanding of the English
language. The Authorities deemed me to be in 'Moral Danger' and an
'Uncontrollable' child and as I now understand it, coerced my mother into
placing me into an institution of her choosing; Failure [to do so] by my mother
would have meant that, The Authorities would have arbitrarily removed me from
my mother's care and enabled them to place me into a State run Institution.
(Sub 38)
3.55
Similarly, another witness outlined details of factors
in his life in a large family in the 1930s where poverty, parental unemployment
and sexual and physical abuse were 'part and parcel of life', leading to his
institutionalisation:
At about the age of ten, because of neglect, truancy and
behavioural problems I was, with my parents consent removed from their care and
placed in care at Burwood Boys' Home, Burwood Victoria,
where I remained until their care and supervision until I was about age
sixteen. (Sub 133)
3.56
Situations also occurred where children were classified
as a 'juvenile delinquent' where their parent felt unable to care for them:
I was sent to Riverview in January 1958 at the age of 11, after
being deemed a 'Juvenile Delinquent' and my single mother was no longer able to
cope with me. I remained at Riverview until December 1959, when I was
transferred to Alkira, in order to be able to go to school. (Sub 75)
3.57
Various care leavers recalled how the 'crime' of
truancy had led to their institutionalisation:
In 1959 my crime was truancy...I was arrested by two plain Clothed
policemen, along with my mother as I was holding onto her belt and dress. So
they just forcibly dragged us to the car and drove to Bankstown Police
Station...From the police station they drove me around to about four homes which
would not accept me, so I was taken to Glebe Shelter...To be strip searched and
examined and treated like a common criminal...Then I went to court and judge
McCreedy sentenced me to the care of the Good Shepherd Convent until I attain
the age of 15 (his words). (Sub 236)
3.58
The examples above highlight the concern of welfare
authorities to ensure the proper supervision of children and the attitude that
children were neglected if their parents had no control over them. It was
viewed that some children were better off in homes where they could be provided
with stability, routine, care, and training in manners and morals.[204]
3.59
A parent's mental illness could result in children
being placed in homes:
I entered the Gill Memorial Home for Boys with my two brothers, Peter
aged 4 and David aged 13, self aged 6, on the 8th March 1966. Our
presence in the home was due to our mother's mental illness; hence admitted
into mental hospital at Kenmore, Goulburn. My sister at
this time entered St Saviour's home for girls, run by the Church of England in
Goulburn. (Sub 326)
3.60
As well, this care leaver described a situation where when
her father died the burden of caring for eight children was left to a mother
and children were placed in a home:
I was only 7 years old when my dad died on the 7th
January 1953 he was 56 years old. My mother was 29 years old and was left with
us 8 children the youngest 2 months old and the eldest 10 years old. A week
after my dad had died we were sent to St Joseph's
Home, Neerkol, near Rockhampton. A few weeks there our abuse began. (Sub 361)
3.61
When a young mother in the 1940s was having her fifth
baby, no family support and a spouse with mental health issues resulted in
children being put in care:
I remember being in Darly Baby Home when I was about 4 years
old...When I was 6 years old we became State Wards, for a period, less than 12
mths...My father died when I was 9 years old...We went into the Burwood Church of
England Children's Home. (Sub 192)
3.62
Certainly, the arrival of a new baby could affect
parents' ability to cope:
I was 2 years, 9 months when together with 4 of my siblings we
were handed to the Baptist City Mission by my father while my mother was in
hospital waiting to give birth to child no. 6. We had nowhere to live and food
was scarce so my parents had no option but to find shelter for the children...My
parents, although promising to bring money for our keep, neglected to do so,
this is when the woman we were with called the welfare. We, the children, were
charged by police with being neglected, destitute and were made 'Wards of the
State of NSW'. This is when the
nightmare begins. (Sub 206)
Economic stress and social
disadvantage
3.63
Some care leavers have outlined extremely abusive
situations where family poverty, alcoholism and sexual abuse, led to them being
institutionalised:
My father was in and out of Long Bay Prison for various
offences...we lived on pumpkin, tripe and had an open fire, which we would toast
the bread and put dripping on it. We hardly had any electricity...The conditions
we lived in were not hygienic at all! I forever had LICE and my scalp would
burn from MUM putting Kerosene on it to kill them. We didn't have proper beds;
we slept cramped together on mattresses on the floor, with the youngest one
urinating on you...We were eventually evicted from our home. I was 7 at the time.
(Sub 16)
3.64
A care leaver from the 1940s attributed his placement
in a home to his father's unemployment:
I am 55 years old. I was a ward of the state at the tender age
of one. My parents couldn't look after me because my dad wasn't working and
didn't have any money. So the government put me in a home in Ballarat... St Joseph's
Home run by nuns. I was there until I was 9 years old. They were very bad to me
because I didn't have any parents. (Sub 130)
3.65
Another witness described where parental illness, lack
of financial support and the family's unfamiliarity with Australia
led to children being placed in care:
My mother was only 20 years old, a mere child herself who ended
up with five children in Australia
who went to institutional care. My mother had no support from anyone. My father
got to stay in our house. No one helped my Mother. I don't blame my parents
because my Father had a mental illness, which was made worse no doubt by being
away from the extended family in Ireland.
In the 1960s I don't think people were very readily diagnosed for a mental
illness...My mother got custody of the five children but she could not support
us, she knew nothing of the welfare system. She had never been away from her
family in her life; she had never been more than 10 miles from her home...A big
black car pulled up in front of our house in 1966 and took the five of us away.
(Sub 37)
3.66
The 1930s Depression and other issues affected people's
capacity to care for their children:
I was placed in St Vincent's Home, Nudgee
in 1937. I know the country was in a depression and war was about to eventuate.
I know more than that as my Father was not a responsible father, so my mother
and eldest sister (17) left home to find work in a caf. (Sub 23)
Children abandoned
3.67
Various forms of abandonment of children have not been
uncommon, perhaps avoidable or not, by the parents concerned:
In 1945 my mother took me to the Salvation Army girls' home in Newtown,
Hobart, with the
promise of retrieving me in a couple of months. At the age of 7 and she didn't
return I got upset and started bed wetting. (Sub 208)
3.68
A care leaver told of wandering Wangaratta's streets
prior to being in care:
I was born in 1943, the police found my younger brother and I
neglected, wandering the streets of Wangaratta, we were then made State Wards,
then we went to Royal Park Depot in Melbourne.
(Sub 103)
3.69
A man cited his father's desertion from the family as
to why he became a state ward:
I was born on the 19.8.30 at Granville NSW...My father deserted
the family and I became a ward of the state on 9.3.31. I was fostered...I grew up
believing those I lived with were my family. (Sub 233)
3.70
Some stories of children's abandonment are
heartbreaking, albeit unusual, even bizarre:
John Franklin
was born on 28th October
1928. He is the oldest of 4 children, they all ended up in various
orphanages in Victoria.
His mother took him to the Melbourne Zoo when he was about 10 years old and
left him alone. (Sub 380)
3.71
Another person described her abandonment as a
four-year-old, with no adults in the family house in mid-1960s Liverpool,
Sydney,
and where she and her brother would find bags of biscuits taped to the walls,
presumably left by adults for them:
I have learned since that my father banished our mother from our
home & she was forbidden to have us. My last memory of my mother was
waiting at our front gate for her, as I did ritually for her to get off her
bus...I waited and watched every single bus pass by, but my mother never got off
any of them. I even waited into the darkness. I resigned myself with despair &
returned to our house...Next thing the courts ordered that we be made wards of
the state & placed in care. I don't even know if my mother had been
contacted. I assume not...This is when our family became completely fragmented.
My older brother was placed in Buena Vista, Orange.
I went to St Michael's Girls'
Home in Bathurst. My younger
brother & sister went back to Parramatta
to be re-allocated to wherever & my youngest sister, who would not have
even been a year old, well I don't know how she fitted into this picture. (Sub
196)
Sexual abuse by a parent
3.72
The Committee heard that sexual abuse by fathers often
led to children being taken into care, though in some cases, the state or the
'system' did not necessarily protect children from such parents:
I was put into care on the 6/7/59 with my brother...the Melbourne Orphanage at
Brighton Sands Vic. We were placed there because the conditions we were living
in were not fit for a dog and I had a Father also that was not fit to be a
parent as he was charged with indecent assault on me. I was only two or three
or so we were taken away and placed in care as state wards. While I was in
state care my Father would come and take us out for a visit unsupervised with
only him...my father used these conditions to sexually abuse me again while he
was under a three-year good behaviour bond and the state home would know of
this because it was covered in my ward file...This makes me very angry that they
would let a girl go out with such a sick man. Where was the duty of care, there
were no such systems. (Sub 345)
3.73
Similarly, another care leaver from a large family
outlined her appalling home life conditions including details of her father's
behaviour, prior to her placement in a home:
My Father was also a deviate. He used my sister and I to fulfil
his sexual needs. I used to be awoken at night by my sister, to be told that
Dad wants you: 'It's your turn now'... I was 7 at the time. Most of us were taken
to Bidura Home at Glebe and separated. (Sub 16)
Children escaping domestic violence
and parental alcoholism
3.74
Often poverty, alcoholism and violence in large
families resulted in decisions to place children in an institution. Many care
leavers have described scenarios similar to this story from the 1950s when
departmental officials placed the children into care:
When I was up in my lookout tree I saw a strange black car
driving towards our tent. A lady and a man got out of the car. They looked very
important...I started feeling scared. They started talking to my parents. My
mother called for my two little sisters Patricia
and Doreen and me. My sister Joy
was in hospital at the time. She told us that we had to go with these people.
We were very confused and scared and we started crying and protesting. We told
them that we didn't want to go. My sisters were kicking and screaming as they
tried to put us in the car...We were taken to the police station and charged with
being neglected children. It was very scary and I felt like I really was a
criminal. I thought that I must have done something really bad, only I couldn't
think what it was...We were then taken to court where we were sentenced - we were
made wards of the state...We were committed all right but we certainly were not
cared for - especially by the minister. (Sub 94)
3.75
One care leaver recalled a happy childhood up until he
was seven years old:
Then, one day, when I was 7 my mother just wasn't there
anymore...My next memory is arriving on the steps of St Josephs Orphanage
(Neerkol) Rockhampton, Queensland,
500 miles from my home in Townsville. (Sub 217)
And it was as an adult
that he learnt about why he had been in a home:
It was only years later, after I had left state (care?) that I
was told that my mother had been heavily pregnant, with twins, at the time and
my father had kicked her in the stomach, this had resulted in my mother going
into premature labour and dying after bleeding to death during the birth of
these twins, one of which, also, died at birth. (Sub 217)
3.76
Another person recalled a home life of poverty,
violence, neglect and alcoholism, before she and her siblings were placed in a
government institution. In particular they were escaping from extreme physical
and sexual abuse from their father and their 'uncle' (who was no relation):
Even with the monitoring by the Government our troubles were
getting worse so I started running away again. At one time in particular Carla
and myself stayed away on the run overnight, sleeping on a front door mat
outside a house on a very cold night...The policemen escorted Carla
and myself to a Social Welfare Department children's home named Allambie. I
recall Carla was throwing a tantrum and had to
be carried in to the reception area but I felt it must have been going to be
better than our house. (Sub 278)
Repatriation children
3.77
The Committee received evidence from a care leaver who,
with his sister, believed they were 'Repatriation wards' upon their parents'
death. The care leaver's father had been a member of the Australian Defence
Force and following the death of both parents, he spent considerable time until
18 years of age in institutions and foster care, later describing abuse and
neglect towards him, and questioning the Repatriation Department's role in
ensuring his wellbeing. He has had difficulty in accessing departmental files
and information.[205]
3.78
The case of 'Repatriation Wards' raised a number of
questions regarding the role of the Commonwealth in the care of these children.
The Committee received advice from the Department of Veterans' Affairs[206] that 'the
role and responsibility of the Repatriation Commission and the Department was
set out in the legislation in force at that time'. This role was limited to the
payment of pensions, benefits and other allowances to ex-servicemen and women
and their dependents. The Department also advised that the Commonwealth has
never had a role in the placement of children in care, nor is there any
evidence that the Repatriation Commission ever owned or operated orphanages. It
further noted that 'the care and responsibility for children is a matter of
State law'.
3.79
The Repatriation Commission was linked with Legacy and
Legacy Homes in some evidence received by the Committee. The Department of
Veterans' Affairs also advised that 'while there have been, and continue to be,
close links between Ex-Service Organisations and [the Repatriation Commission
and now Department], as a matter of law they are clearly separate and distinct
organisations...Such volunteer organisations were not regulated by any
Commonwealth laws...but were subject to the relevant States and Territory dealing
with religious and charitable organisations and the care and custody of
children'.
3.80
The inquiry received information from a care leaver who
as a child in Hopewood had been advised that she was a War orphan only to find
out years later that in fact she was not a State ward, raising questions about
her status and who would shoulder duty of care for her:
I am 59, until I was 49 I believed I was a war orphan. I was
born in December 1943, my mother Beryl Mavis Tucker joined the Army in Tasmania
in March 1943 and was sent to Sydney.
In October 1943 the Army discovered my mother was pregnant. Instead of
discharging my mother...she was sent by the Army to a home run by a L O Bailey
who at that time was in the process of collecting a number of infants both boys
and girls to start what was to be a private experiment in what is generally
known as 'Natural Living'...I remained in my mothers care for a grand total of 9
days. My mother was recalled to active service but only for three months, then
the Army discovered they no longer needed her, but 3 months too late for me. So
started my life in LOB private orphanage. LOB eventually acquired 86
babies...from about 1942 to 1949. We were told from an early age that we were
orphans and that we should be glad and grateful for what LOB did for us...We were
lied to all our lives. (Sub 93)
Conclusion
3.81
As mentioned, children were placed in homes for many
reasons: families in crisis; poverty; death of a parent; mental illness; and
family breakdown. Families in these situations had few services to draw on and
little financial assistance from government. The attitudes of the day also
worked against some families staying together as fathers were not seen as
appropriate care givers while single unmarried mothers experienced significant
social stigma. Some families in crisis chose to send children to homes rather
than risk welfare intervention. Other children were placed in care because they
were seen as being out of control and in need of supervision and training. Many
children were not told why they were being placed in care, while for others the
poverty, neglect and violence were all too well remembered.
3.82
Regardless of the reason for being placed in care, for
many the experience was often worse or at least no better than staying with
their family. The following chapter looks at the treatment and care of children
in institutions.