Everything about Matthew Blagden Hale totally explained
The Right Reverend Dr.
Matthew Blagden Hale (
June 18 1811–
April 3 1895) was the first
Bishop of Perth, and later
Bishop of Brisbane.
Born in
Alderley,
Gloucestershire,
England on
June 18 1811, Matthew Hale was the son of Robert and Lady Theodina Bourke (née Bourke). His maternal grandfather was the
Archbishop of Tuam. After completing his education at
Wotton-under-Edge, he attended
Trinity College,
Cambridge, and obtained his
B.A. in
1835 and
M.A. in
1838. He was eventually conferred an Hon.
D. D. as well. He was ordained as a
Church of England Curate in
1836.
In
1840, Hale married Sophia Clode, which whom he'd have three children before her death in
1845. He became
Archdeacon of Adelaide in
1847. The following year he married Sabina, daughter of
John and
Georgiana Molloy. In
1855, Hale returned to England without his family. The following July he arrived in Western Australia on the
Guyon, and in November his family arrived there from South Australia. In March
1857, Hale returned to England with his family, where on
July 25 1857 he was consecrated as the first
Bishop of Perth in a ceremony at the
Lambeth Palace Chapel.
Returning to Western Australia on the
Nile early in
1858, he took office as Bishop of Perth, and that year opened the first Boys' College in the
colony. Modelled after England's
public schools, it remains the oldest boys' school in Western Australia, and has been renamed
Hale School in his honour.
Matthew Hale was Bishop of Perth until
1875, whereupon he became
Bishop of Brisbane until
1885. He eventually returned to England, retiring at
Clifton, Bristol where he died on
April 3 1895.
Anglican diocese of Perth and indigenous issues
Hale was widely seen a social and educational pioneer, noted for advocating the protection of Australia's
Aborigines.
In 1836
James Stirling's cousin,
C. F. Irwin, went to England and Ireland to establish the
Western Australian Missionary Society. The Society then purchased an 866 acre site near Guildford that stretched from the Swan River right into the hills; the 69 acre "Swanleigh" property at
Middle Swan is all that remains today and is now under the control of the Perth Diocesan Trustees.
The Society appointed Rev. Giustiniani as their first missionary and he arrived at the Middle Swan site in 1836. Giustiniani built two houses: his home and an Aboriginal mission; after some controversy involving his advocating on behalf of Aboriginal people Giustiniani left the colony in 1838.
Giustiniani's replacement, Rev.
William Mitchell, his family and a governess named Anne Breeze arrived in 1838. Within a month Mitchell established a mission school on the Middle Swan site for settlers children and Aboriginal children with Breeze assisting.
A second Anglican school was established at Fremantle by George King in 1841, it continued till 1850. In 1841 Abraham Jones re-opened Giustiniani's mission school it also continued until 1850.
Rev.
John Ramsden Wollaston arrived at Fremantle in April 1841 and by May 1842, had proposed a plan to remove Aboriginal children from "the baneful influences of heathen customs", to schools where they'd be educated at the cost of settler families, who would then have the option of employing them as domestic servants.
In 1843 Mitchell established a second Mission School at Middle Swan and at Upper Swan Rev. Postlethwaite established a Mission school for settlers and Aboriginal children which ran until 1848.
In the 1850s the Swan Cottage was built at the Swan site to accommodate young 'native' girls for the Mission School.
Also in the 1850's Wollaston was granted 60 acres in Albany and the children from King's Native School of Fremantle was moved there. Henry Camfield and his wife Anne managed the Albany Institution: Mrs Camfield being Anne Breeze who had worked in Mitchell's Middle Swan School over a decade earlier.
In 1871 the Albany Native Institution was the longest operating educational establishment for Aboriginal children in the colony and the Camfields wanted to retire. The Bishop offered his resignation in order to run the Albany institution. A delegation encouraged him to change his mind, and Hale subsequently purchased a block in Perth adjacent to Bishop's House where he built a house to accommodate and educate Aboriginal children from Albany at his own expense.
This two-storey building was known as Hale House and the "Native and Half Caste Institution" operated there for the next sixteen years under the direction of Hale and his successor, Parry.
Bishop Parry, took over the management of the Institution until 1888 when he moved the children to the newly established the Swan Native & Half Caste Mission on part of the Middle Swan site. The "Hale House" land was eventually absorbed into the Bishop's See.
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