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The Bastion on St Kilda Rd

by
March 2005, no. 269

A Great Australian School: Wesley College examined by Andrew Lemon

Helicon Press, $75 hb, 628 pp

The Bastion on St Kilda Rd

by
March 2005, no. 269

Wesley College, Melbourne, has a long and intriguing history. Established in 1866, Wesley was off to a slow start that left it, for much of its history, trying to foot it with slightly older, considerably wealthier and rather more prestigious rival public schools (as they were then known, distinguishing them from schools run for profit by private individuals). In its first ‘heyday’ in the opening decades of the twentieth century, under the charge of the colourful L.A. Adamson, Wesley epitomised the Australian public school system. It embodied the transfer to Australia of the values of England’s élite schools, preaching conservative social values, and combining a love of sports with a devotion to intellectual pursuits and a commitment to a national agenda that emphasised imperial loyalty and martial willingness.

Martin Crotty reviews ‘A Great Australian School: Wesley College examined’ by Andrew Lemon

A Great Australian School: Wesley College examined

by Andrew Lemon

Helicon Press, $75 hb, 628 pp

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