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Ascot State School

  • 650044
  • Pringle Street, Ascot

General

Classification
State Heritage
Register status
Entered
Date entered
7 April 2017
Type
Education, Research, Scientific Facility: School - state (primary)
Themes
9.1 Educating Queenslanders: Providing primary schooling
2.10 Exploiting, utilising and transforming the land: Responding to climate and climatic events
Architect
Department of Public Works
Construction periods
1919–1939, Urban Brick School Building
1920–1963, Mature trees
1956–1963, Sports Oval
Historical period
1919–1930s Interwar period
1940s–1960s Post-WWII

Location

Address
Pringle Street, Ascot
LGA
Brisbane City Council
Coordinates
-27.43306039, 153.0564609

Map

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Significance

Criterion AThe place is important in demonstrating the evolution or pattern of Queensland’s history.

Ascot State School (established in 1920) is important in demonstrating the evolution of state education and its associated architecture in Queensland. The place retains excellent, representative examples of standard government-designed school buildings, which were architectural responses to prevailing government educational philosophies, set in landscaped grounds with sporting facilities and mature trees.

Three Urban Brick School Buildings (1920, 1923-39, 1928-34) represent the culmination of years of experimentation with natural light, classroom size and elevation by the Department of Public Works (DPW), and also demonstrate the growing preference in the early 20th century for constructing brick school buildings at metropolitan schools in developing suburbs. Additions to Blocks B and C undertaken during the 1930s are the result of the Queensland Government’s building and relief work programmes during the 1930s, which stimulated the economy and provided work for men unemployed as a result of the Great Depression.

The suburban site with mature trees, sporting facilities and other landscaping features demonstrates educational policies that promoted the importance of play and a beautiful environment in the education of children.

Criterion BThe place demonstrates rare, uncommon or endangered aspects of Queensland’s cultural heritage.

The 1930s educational murals, painted on the interior classroom walls of Block B are, and have always been, a rare educational practice. Intact and distinctive, they are the only known murals of this kind in Queensland.

Criterion DThe place is important in demonstrating the principal characteristics of a particular class of cultural places.

Ascot State School is important in demonstrating the principal characteristics of a Queensland state school with later modifications. These include: teaching buildings constructed to individual designs; and generous, landscaped sites, with mature trees, assembly and play areas, and sporting facilities.

The Urban Brick School Buildings are intact, excellent examples of individually designed Urban Brick School Buildings. They demonstrate the principal characteristics of this type through their highset form; linear layout, with classrooms and teachers rooms accessed by verandahs; undercrofts used as open play spaces and understoreys for additional classrooms; loadbearing, masonry construction, with face brick piers to undercroft spaces; and roof fleches. They demonstrate use of the stylistic features of their era, which determined their roof form, decorative treatment and joinery. Typically, Urban Brick School Buildings are configured to create central courtyards, and are located in suburban areas that were growing at the time of their construction.

Criterion EThe place is important because of its aesthetic significance.

The Urban Brick School Buildings at Ascot State School have aesthetic significance due to their beautiful attributes: identifiable by their symmetrical layout; consistent form; scale; materials; elegant composition; finely crafted timber work; and decorative treatment.

These buildings remain intact and demonstrate a continuation of site planning ideals initiated by the placing of the original Urban Brick School Building in a prominent position at the top of the sloping site. The beauty of the school's setting is enhanced by mature trees and formal landscaping elements such as retaining walls and stairs.

The buildings are also significant for their contribution to the Anthony and Pringle Streets’ streetscape.

Criterion GThe place has a strong or special association with a particular community or cultural group for social, cultural or spiritual reasons.

Schools have always played an important part in Queensland communities. They typically retain significant and enduring connections with former pupils, parents, and teachers; provide a venue for social interaction and volunteer work; and are a source of pride, symbolising local progress and aspirations.

Ascot State School has a strong and ongoing association with the surrounding community. It developed from 1920 through the fundraising efforts of the local community and generations of Ascot children have been taught there. The place is important for its contribution to the educational development of its suburban district and is a prominent community focal point and gathering place for social and commemorative events with widespread community support.

History

Ascot State School (established 1920) is located in the Brisbane suburb of Ascot, six kilometres northeast of the CBD. It is important in demonstrating the evolution of state education and its associated architecture. It retains three Urban Brick School Buildings (Block A: 1920, Block B: 1928-34, Block C: 1923-39), which incorporate rare educational murals in Block B; set in landscaped grounds with a playing field, sporting facilities and mature trees. The school has a strong and ongoing association with the Ascot community.

Traditionally the land of the Turrbal and Jagera people, land at Ascot was sold as country lots in the late 1850s and early 1860s, and underwent subdivision from the 1880s after the railway line to the Eagle Farm Racecourse opened in 1882. However, most housing development occurred after the turn of the century, stimulated by the opening of the electrified tram to the racecourse, along the current Kingsford Smith Drive and Racecourse Road, in 1899.[1]

The establishment of schools was considered an essential step in the development of new communities and integral to their success. Schools became a community focus, with the school community contributing to maintenance and development; a symbol of progress; and a source of pride, with enduring connections formed with past pupils, parents, and teachers.[2]

Dramatic reform of the Queensland Education system began around 1909 and continued until the beginning of World War I. During this period a high school system was introduced, technical education was expanded, the University of Queensland was inaugurated, a teachers' training college was established, the requirement for a local contribution of construction costs for new schools was abolished, and the leaving age was increased from 12 to 14 years.[3] Although technically compulsory since 1875, school attendance was not enforced until 1900. Subsequently, student numbers rose across Queensland during the first 15 years of the 20th century.[4]

Actions to establish a state school in Ascot commenced in 1914. The current site, bounded by Pringle, Anthony and Mayfield (now Massey) Streets, was purchased for a future school in May 1914 at a cost of £1400.[5] In December 1915 a public meeting, held to organise a state school at Ascot, established the prerequisite school building committee for that purpose. However, while the country remained at war there were insufficient funds to institute the school.[6]

Approval for the school, comprising an Urban Brick School Building, was given on 13 June 1919.[7] Brick school buildings were far less frequently built than timber ones, only being provided in prosperous urban or suburban areas with stable or rapidly-increasing populations. All brick school buildings were individually designed with variations in style, size, and form, but generally retained similar classroom sizes, layouts and window arrangements to timber schools to facilitate natural light and ventilation. However, compared to contemporary standard education buildings, these buildings had a grander character and greater landmark attributes.[8]

Ascot State School opened on 24 May 1920 with 124 pupils enrolled. Its Urban Brick School Building (now called Block A) was an ‘attractive building of brick, rough-casted externally, plastered internally, ceiled with fibro-cement and roofed with tiles.’[9] Highset, it comprised three classrooms, verandah and attached teachers room. Each classroom featured a bank of windows, which allowed natural light to enter from the left side of the students, and had battened ceilings with a central ceiling vent. A photograph from 1920 shows casement windows, with fanlights, sheltered below window hoods and a tiled, gable roof with a central ventilation roof fleche. Verandah corners were enclosed with dark-coloured weatherboards, centred four-pane windows, and light-coloured, vertically-battened timber balustrades and trim. Costing £3,556, the school building was designed to accommodate 120 pupils.[10]

An important component of Queensland state schools was their grounds. The early and continuing commitment to play-based education, particularly in primary school, resulted in the provision of outdoor play space and sporting facilities, such as ovals and tennis courts. Aesthetically-designed gardens were encouraged by regional inspectors, and educators believed gardening and Arbor Days instilled in young minds the value of hard work and activity, improved classroom discipline, developed aesthetic tastes, and inspired people to stay on the land.[11] From Ascot State School’s inception, there was an emphasis on creating a beautiful environment for the pupils, with the result that the school’s gardens were admired by locals and visitors.[12] However, Arbor Day was not observed during the first Head Teacher’s administration (Thomas Henderson, 1920-39) because ‘every Thursday the children [were]…given a practical lesson on the planting and culture of various plants and shrubs’.[13]

During Ascot State School’s first year, its school committee made enormous improvements to the school grounds. They established gardens, spray lines to water them, an impressive array of playground equipment on a terraced playground, a tennis court (located northeast of the school building on the Pringle Street side) and a swimming pool (60x20ft - 18.3x6m) located to the southeast of the school building and fronting Massey Street. The school’s tree-planting programme ‘strictly followed [a] plan, which allowed for only colourful flowering trees to be planted around the school ground’s perimeter i.e poinciana, jacaranda, silky oak and…South African red tulip tree[s]’.[14] However, the school’s small oval was a rough, at times boggy, site that took years to improve.[15]

In the same year, enrolments at Ascot State School outstripped accommodation as subdivision and residential building in Ascot boosted its population. By April 1921, less than a year after opening, the school population was 310.[16]

Money was allocated by the government for an additional wing in October 1922. This northern wing (now called Block C) was completed in the following year and officially opened on 20 October 1923. It ran perpendicular to the school’s first building, faced Pringle Street and was connected to the original building by a verandah. Similar in design and materials to the first building, it was brick with rough-cast external render. It provided three new classrooms and a teachers room, while the undercroft was divided into play space and a gymnasium.[17]

Enrolments continued to grow as Ascot’s population increased. In 1927 there were 568 pupils at the school and four classes were taught permanently in the undercroft. In response, the Department of Public Works (DPW) drew plans in 1927 for a new, southern block (Block B), which would form a U-shaped complex plan. [18]

On 25 August 1928, Block B was opened by the Minister for Public Instruction, Thomas Wilson. Built of rough-cast render and brick, it provided four extra classrooms on the upper floor level of the existing school and one underneath, each of which was 20x20ft (6x6m). The whole provided extra seating accommodation for 200 pupils. Folding partitions on the upper floor converted the classrooms into one assembly room. The undercroft was concreted. A photograph from 1928 shows the building had tiled window hoods, and banks of casement windows and centre-pivoting sashes with awning fanlights.[19]

Commencement of the Great Depression in 1929 halted fulfilment of further accommodation requests for the next three years at Ascot State School.[20] The Great Depression caused a dramatic reduction in public building work in Queensland and brought private building work to a standstill. The Forgan Smith Labor Government came to power in June 1932 after a campaign that advocated increased government spending to counter the effects of the Depression. It embarked on a large public building programme designed to promote the employment of local skilled workers, the purchase of local building materials and the production of commodious, low maintenance buildings which would be a long-term asset to the state. This building programme included: government offices, schools and colleges; university buildings; hospitals and asylums; courthouses, police stations and gaols.[21]

Extension of Block C was approved and commenced in September 1932. Comprising two classrooms of 22x18ft (6.7x5.5m) with 10ft (3m)-wide verandahs and a hat room on two levels, plus lavatory facilities underneath, it accommodated a further 80 pupils and cost £1033. The design and materials matched existing work. In the same year, lavatories were also constructed under Block B, and a dressing shed added to the swimming pool.[22]

Immediately after the completion of the addition to Block C, more classrooms were required for the 707 pupils enrolled at June 1933, as the school’s 13 classrooms accommodated only 520 pupils. Plans for a major extension to Block B, which would complete that building for approximately £3,388, were approved in December 1933 and construction began early in 1934. The DPW’s Annual Report described it as a three-storied addition with separate entrances to each floor. The middle floor contained a single classroom 40x22ft, [12 x6.7m] designed as a one teacher school with a gallery for 36 trainees and a 10ft [3m] wide verandah. The top floor contained two classrooms, stairs, verandah, hat room and cloakroom. Folding partitions separated these and the existing classrooms. The floor of one of the new classrooms was raised 2ft 6in [0.76m] above the level of the floor of the existing classroom, which enabled it to be used as a stage. The new classroom, together with the four existing rooms, formed a large assembly hall when the folding partitions were opened. The cloakroom served as a dressing room behind the stage.[23]

In 1935, less than a year after the completion of the Block B addition, the Head Teacher requested more accommodation. The disparity between the number of pupils and classrooms worsened, as work on addition did not commence until after May 1939, by which time the school population had risen to 822. With an authorised cost of £4,387, these additions to Block C completed the symmetrical layout of the school buildings. Constructed of brick and concrete with a Marseilles tile roof, the design utilised the fall of the land on the site to provide sub-basement, basement and ground floors. Accommodation comprised four classrooms, teachers room, cloak rooms, seating area and store, together with a concrete staircase at the eastern end of the wing and verandahs to the north. Each classroom had folding partitions to create a single room of approximately 60x22ft (18.3x6m). The extension accommodated 160 pupils.[24]

Changes to the grounds took place in conjunction with this addition. Concrete pathways were laid to all sides of the addition and concrete steps, and park rail fences were set on the banks between the terraces of the upper level. A new tennis court replaced the old one, which was encroached upon by the new extension.[25]

Commencement of the War in the Pacific during World War II impacted on schools. In January 1942, the Queensland Government closed all coastal state schools, and although most schools reopened on 2 March 1942, student attendance was optional until the war ended.[26] Slit trenches, for protecting the students from Japanese air raids, were also dug at Queensland state schools. A photograph of Ascot State School in 1942 shows older male pupils digging slit trenches.[27]

Typically, schools were a focus for civilian duty during wartime. At many, students and staff members grew produce and flowers for donation to local hospitals and organised fundraising and the donation of useful items to Australian soldiers on active service.[28] At Ascot State School, vegetable gardens were a special feature of the garden work performed by pupils. The produce was distributed mainly to Red Cross hostels and canteens, although later in the war it was sold for the benefit of Patriotic Funds.[29]

After World War II, Ascot’s population continued to rise, as did that of the school, which peaked at 1433 in 1959.[30] The Department of Public Instruction was largely unprepared for the enormous demand for state education that began in the late 1940s and continued well into the 1960s. This was a nation-wide occurrence resulting from immigration and the unprecedented population growth now termed the ‘baby boom’. Queensland schools were overcrowded and to cope many new buildings were constructed and existing buildings were extended.[31] A number of new buildings were added at Ascot State School between 1950 and 1960. Most have been replaced.[32]

Along with the expansion of the school’s buildings came improvement and expansion of the school’s grounds. In 1955, extensive drainage and earthworks and development of the oval were planned. The Minister for Public Instruction requested that the Brisbane City Council (BCC) transfer its park land to the east of the school to the Department of Public Instruction. The BCC agreed to vest the land in the Secretary of Public Instruction as trustee in perpetuity, provided an undertaking was given ‘to develop, maintain and use the area during normal school hours as playground for the school children, free of buildings and fencing and allow the use of the area by the general public during other than school hours’.[33] The transfer took place in June 1956 and on 10 August 1956 the completed, upgraded Meibush Oval, named after a former school principal, was opened by the Minister for Public Instruction, JCA Pizzey. The total cost of the project was £4087 including a government subsidy of £1577.[34] Further renovations of the oval were required in 1963 when, amongst other improvements, concrete stairs were built on the Massey Street side.[35]

With the transfer of Grade 8 education to secondary schools from January 1964, the issue of insufficient classroom accommodation was largely resolved. However, further additions to the site and improvements to facilities and accommodation occurred in the ensuing decades. During the 1970s and 1980s a number of new buildings were constructed.[36]

Early buildings were also altered over time. In 1970 extensions and alterations to the Block A teachers room took place. In 1977 the verandah of Block B was enclosed. In 1979 alterations to Blocks A, B and C were approved, as were plans for enclosure of Block C’s verandah. In 1980, provision was made for the janitor and cleaners in Block B, and all toilet blocks were remodelled and upgraded. The roofs of Blocks A, B and C were re-tiled in mid-1982. At the turn of the 21st century, as part of the Building Better Schools Program, classrooms in Block C were upgraded.[37]

The school’s grounds also underwent significant improvements. In 1966 a larger pool replaced the earlier one. In the 1980s, landscaping of the areas between Blocks A, B and C, and the rejuvenation and extension of the adventure playground took place. In 2000, the tennis court between Blocks D and G was converted into a covered area and a new canteen added to the east of Block D.[38]

Community involvement in the school has been significant since the school’s opening. In the early years the parents established gardens, built playground equipment, and constructed a tennis court and swimming pool. Creating a useable oval occupied the school committee’s attention for many years. For about 10 years from c1923, the Ascot Show Society held its annual show in the Ascot State School grounds. Fancy dress balls were also held at the school in the 1930s. From the 1960s, through until at least the late 1970s, fundraising through walkathons was popular.[39]

Introduced by the first Head Teacher at the school, murals were painted on classroom walls for educational purposes. The earliest, painted by a commercial artist, were in place by November 1930. Others were painted by Arthur E Guymer, while working as a trainee and as a teacher at the school in the 1930s. Murals of sheep- and cattle-raising, exports, mining, sugar growing and other industries were painted on bulkheads and classroom walls throughout the school. In the infants’ classroom, Brer Rabbit, Donald Duck and other characters were depicted.[40] Murals relating to Queensland industries, transport and tourism, Australian states and New Zealand remain in some classrooms of Block B.

In 2017, the school continues to operate from its original site. It retains its Urban Brick School Buildings, set in landscaped grounds with sporting facilities, playing areas, and mature shade trees. Ascot State School is important to Ascot as a key social focus for the community, as generations of students have been taught there and many social events held in the school’s grounds and buildings since its establishment.

Description

Ascot State School occupies a 1.816ha, sloping site within the residential suburb of Ascot, approximately 6km northeast of the Brisbane CBD. The rectangular site faces and is primarily accessed from Pringle Street to the north; and is bounded on other sides by Anthony Street to the west, Massey Street to the south and residential properties to the east. The school buildings are located on the elevated, western end of the school grounds, and a large playing field occupies the lower, eastern portion of the site. Fronting Pringle, Anthony and Massey streets, three connected Urban Brick School Buildings (blocks A, B and C) are set in a U-shape configuration and are the earliest and westernmost of the school buildings. The school grounds contain a number of significant mature trees and landscaping features, including a courtyard (between blocks A, B and C), mature trees and a playing field. Block B contains rare educational murals on its classroom walls.

Three Urban Brick School Buildings (blocks A, B and C)

The three Urban Brick School Buildings (blocks A, B and C) are individually designed, masonry and timber structures, which have terracotta-tiled gable and Dutch-gable roofs. The gable ends and gablets have decorative timbering set in front of circular roof vents; and prominent fleches protrude above the roofs. The three buildings are symmetrically arranged in a U-shaped plan, with Block A located centrally to the west (running north-south); Block B to the south (running east-west); and Block C to the north (running east-west).

The buildings range from a single storey with an undercroft (open space) at the west to two storeys at the east, reflecting the slope of the site. Block A has a single storey, which is lowset at the west; and the ground underneath has been cut to form an understorey (enclosed space).

The first floor of blocks B and C are aligned with Block A. Blocks B and C both have open undercroft spaces at the west and understorey spaces at the east. The first floor of the buildings generally have rough-cast finished masonry walls with red face brick dressings, and red face brick walls to the undercroft and understorey level. The first floors of the blocks are connected by a continuous verandah which runs to the north of Block C, east of Block A and south of Block B. Various stairs provide access to the verandah; with two enclosed by face brick walls and forming the eastern ends of blocks B and C.

The verandahs on each level provide access to the interior spaces. The first floor verandahs have raked ceilings lined in timber v-jointed (VJ) boards, timber floors, square timber posts, timber post-and-rail balustrades, and brick verandah walls (some have been painted). Some sections of single-skin, weatherboard-clad timber walls (former hat racks) are retained; and teachers annexes are connected to the verandahs of Block A and Block C. Block B’s verandah features a scalloped valance, eaves with exposed rafters, and timber-framed, wired-glass partitions at the eastern and western ends. Verandahs to the understorey level have flat ceilings lined with profiled and corrugated metal sheets, concrete slab floors, face brick columns and face brick verandah walls. Bag racks and modern louvre windows that enclose the verandahs are recent additions and are not of cultural heritage significance.

The interior spaces of the three blocks are linearly arranged, with almost all classrooms and offices leading off verandah spaces. On the first floor, Block A contains three classrooms of a similar size; Block B has six classrooms; and Block C has four classrooms, with two withdrawal rooms separating the outermost classrooms from innermost classrooms. Blocks B and C are each terminated at the eastern end by a store and staircase. The classroom spaces generally have plastered walls, timber picture rails, and plastered ceilings with painted timber battens, and ceiling vents. Most partition walls between classrooms have been partially removed, with remaining early sections featuring VJ timber board linings. Skirtings are of concrete and timber picture rails are featured in most rooms.

Block A’s teachers annexe comprises three small offices / store rooms (the outer two are of a lighter construction). Block C’s teachers room comprises a singular space, which has recently been divided by lightweight partitions to form toilet cubicles. The teachers rooms have plaster walls with VJ timber-lined ceilings; with the exception of the outer two rooms to Block A’s teachers annexe, which have flat sheet-lined walls and ceilings.

The lower level of blocks A, B and C comprises an undercroft at the west, and understorey at the east. Block A is mostly open play space, with an early enclosure at the northwestern end, and enclosed store rooms beneath the teachers rooms. The western ends of blocks B and C are mainly open play space with early toilet / amenities enclosures. The eastern end of Block C has three classrooms, with the two easternmost divided by a folding partition (now removed), and terminated by an eastern staircase with store located under the stairs. Block B features two classrooms, with the easternmost being of a double classroom width, and eastern stair with store room under. The floor level of the easternmost classroom is tiered at the western end (former seating platforms relating to the use of the room as a One Teacher School). The classroom spaces generally have plastered walls, plastered ceilings with painted timber battens and concrete skirtings. All undercroft spaces feature face brick columns, which are rounded below head height. 

Rare surviving early educational murals of painted text and images, on topics such as tourism, transport, farming, sugar cane, and Australian states, are painted directly onto the bulkheads and walls of classrooms in Block B. Most feature a detailed image with adjacent wording. Murals to the understorey classroom of Block B have been covered, although it is likely that these survive underneath the recent paint.

Most early timber joinery within the building has been retained, including: double-hung sash windows with awning fanlights to verandahs; casements and centre-pivoting windows with awning fanlights (some angled) to exterior walls; fixed louvres to the understorey level; dual timber panelled doors with stop-chamfered detailing and centre-pivoting fanlights; tall, centre-pivoting fanlights over verandah doors, and panelled, folding timber door partitions between some classrooms in Block B. Most windows feature horizontal painted concrete sills and lintels. Timber-framed, terracotta-tiled hoods shelter windows on the northern sides of all blocks, and on the western side of Block A.

Modern partitions, joinery, carpets and linoleum are not of cultural heritage significance.

Landscape Features

The school grounds are well established and comprise various mature trees, hard-scaping and courtyard spaces. Retaining walls and stairs terrace the site, down to a playing field at the east. Recent buildings are generally visually unified with the older school buildings through the use of red brickwork and tiled roofs.

A set of concrete stairs (1963) on the southern side of the playing field and a smaller set south of Block B, to the west of the swimming pool, provide access to the site from Massey Street.

A courtyard located between blocks A, B and C incorporates a covered play space, a modern sculpture garden and various mosaic artworks, none of which are of cultural heritage significance. A linear, paved and concreted space continues from the courtyard down to the playing field; and facilitates a visual axis across the length of the school site. Tall palm trees in the courtyard area are planted in rows, in line with the visual axis.

Mature trees including Poincianas (Delonix regia), silky oaks (Grevillea robusta), ironbarks (Eucalyptus sp.), tulipwoods (Harpullia pendula) and Jacarandas (Jacaranda mimosifolia) are concentrated along the northern and eastern boundaries of the playing field. A mature mango tree (Mangifera sp.) is located at the northeastern end of the playing field.

Prominent views of the Urban Brick School Buildings are available from Anthony and Pringle streets over open play spaces.

Non-Significant Elements

Other buildings, structures, shade sails, pathways, play equipment, sheds and cricket nets within the cultural heritage boundary are not of cultural heritage significance.

References

[1] Department of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Partnerships, Cultural Heritage Database and Register, <https://culturalheritage.datsip.qld.gov.au/achris/public/public-registry/home>, accessed 8 Feb 2017; ‘Land Sales’, The Courier, 13 Sep 1861, p.4; DNRM, Survey Plan RP34480, 1863; ‘Local and Domestic’, The North Australian, Ipswich and General Advertiser, 27 Apr 1858, p.3; Queensland Heritage Register (QHR) 600048 Windermere; McKellar map of Brisbane, 1896, sheets 2 & 3; Queensland Places – Ascot, <http://www.queenslandplaces.com.au/ascot>, accessed 27 Sep 2016; BCC, Brisbane Heritage Trails: Gallivant Through Ascot and Hamilton, BCC, Brisbane, 2014, pp. 4-5; State Library of Queensland (SLQ), Tattersall’s Estate map, 1899; SLQ, Ascot Railway Estate, 1913.
[2] Project Services, 'Mount Morgan State High School' in Queensland Schools Heritage Study Part II Report, for Education Queensland, 2008, pp.4-5; Paul Burmester, Margaret Pullar and Michael Kennedy Queensland Schools A Heritage Conservation Study, a report for the Department of Education, 1996, pp.87-8.
[3] Burmester, et al, Queensland Schools A Heritage Conservation Study, p. 28.
[4] Burmester, et al, Queensland Schools A Heritage Conservation Study, p.18.
[5] DNRM, Certificate of Title (CoT) 218455, being resubdivisions 75-91 and 89-103, comprising 3 acres 2 roods 6 2/10 perches; N Guy and Harold Sutcliffe, Ascot: A different school, Boolarong Press, Brisbane, 1995, p. 1; G. N. Logan, 'McKenna, Bernard (Joseph) (1870–1937)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, <http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/mckenna-bernard-joseph-7386/text12841>, published first in hardcopy 1986, accessed online 25 Oct 2016.
[6] ‘School wanted at Ascot’, Daily Standard, 23 Dec 1915, p. 7; Noela Guy and Harold Sutcliffe, Ascot: a different school, Boolarong Press, Brisbane, 1995, pp. 1, 3.
[7] Guy and Sutcliffe, Ascot, p. 3: QSA, Item ID13693, School Files (correspondence for State School, Ascot, No 296), Preliminary Estimate of Modified Plan’, Thomas Pye, Deputy Govt Architect, 9 May 1919.
[8] Burmester, et al, Queensland Schools A Heritage Conservation Study, a report for the Department of Education, 1996, pp.18, 99; QSA, Item ID13693, School Files (correspondence for State School, Ascot, No 296), Preliminary Estimate of Modified Plan’, Thomas Pye, Deputy Govt Architect, 9 May 1919.
[9] DPW, Annual Report of the DPW for 1919-20, Queensland Government Printer, Brisbane, 1920, p. 4.
[10] Department of Public Works (DPW) drawing, 16192660, July 1919; Guy and Sutcliffe, Ascot, p. 8; Project Services, Ascot State School’ in Queensland Schools Heritage Study Part II Report, for Education Queensland, 2008, pp. 1, 5, end pages.
[11] Burmester, et al, Queensland Schools A Heritage Conservation Study, a report for the Department of Education, 1996, pp.4, 48-9.
[12] Guy and Sutcliffe, Ascot, pp. 241-3.
[13] Thomas Henderson, 1934 cited by Guy and Sutcliffe, Ascot, p. 243.
[14] Guy and Sutcliffe, Ascot, p. 9.
[15] Guy and Sutcliffe, Ascot, pp. 9, 14; ‘Beautify the City’, Daily Standard, 23 May 1921, p. 5.
[16] SLQ, Winstanes Junction Estate map, >1918; SLQ, Jolimont Estate map, 1938; Queensland Places – Ascot, <http://www.queenslandplaces.com.au/ascot>, accessed 27 Sep 2016; Guy and Sutcliffe, Ascot, pp, 8, 13.
[17] DPW, Annual Report of the DPW to 30 June 1924, Queensland Government Printer, Brisbane, p. 4; Guy and Sutcliffe, Ascot, p. 14.
[18] Guy and Sutcliffe, Ascot, p. 28; DPW, Drawing 16192616, 15 Dec 1927.
[19] DPW drawing 16192627, 31 May 1932; ‘Ascot State School’, Daily Standard, 28 Aug 1928, p. 5; DPW, Annual Report of the DPW to 30 June 1928, Queensland Government Printer, Brisbane, p. 7; Project Services, Ascot SS, p. 6.
[20] Guy and Sutcliffe, Ascot, p. 29.
[21] ‘Labor at the Helm’, The Worker, 20 Jul 1932, p.8; ‘Queensland Parliament’, The Northern Miner, 17 Aug 1932, p.2; ‘Public Buildings’, Daily Mercury, 19 Oct 1933, p.7; DPW, Report of the DPW for the Year Ended 30 June 1934, Queensland Government Printer, Brisbane, 1934, pp.6-8; DPW, Report of the DPW for the Year Ended 30 June 1935, Queensland Government Printer, Brisbane, 1935, p.2; Report of the DPW for the Year Ended 30 June 1936, Queensland Government Printer, Brisbane, 1936, p.2; ‘State will spend over £460,000: big building plans’, The Courier-Mail, 28 Dec 1933, p.9; Report of the DPW for the Year Ended 30 June 1939, Queensland Government Printer, Brisbane, 1939, p.2.
[22] DPW drawings, 16192627, 1932 and 16192605, 12 May 1932; QSA, Item ID13695, School Files (correspondence) for State Schools, Ascot No 296 State School, DPW Work Order, Job 26717, 15 Sep 1932; Project Services, Ascot SS, p. 9.
[23] Guy and Sutcliffe, Ascot, p. 29; DPW, Annual Report for the Year ending 30June 1935, Queensland Government Printer, Brisbane, p. 7; DPW drawing 16192583, 13 Dec 1933 DPW, Annual Report for the Year ending 30 June 1934, Queensland Government Printer, Brisbane, p. 12.
[24] Guy and Sutcliffe, Ascot, pp. 32-3; DPW plan 16192528, 16192385, 16192528, 16192539 & 16192550, 12 May 1939; DPW, Annual Report of the DPW for the year ending 30 June 1939, Queensland Government Printer, Brisbane, p.12.
[25] DPW, Annual Report of the DPW for the year ending 30 June 1939, p. 12; DNRM, Aerial 1936, ADA5-5727; DNRM, Aerial 1944, RAAF0-1944; Guy and Sutcliffe, Ascot, pp. 32-3; Project Services, Ascot SS, p. 9.
[26] Ronald Wood, Civil Defence in Queensland During World War II, Journal of the Royal Historical Society of Queensland, Vol 15, 1993, p. 79; ‘Schools reopen; some await shelter survey’, The Courier Mail, 2 March 1942, p. 3.
[27] SLQ Photograph 42866.
[28] Burmester et al, Queensland Schools A Heritage Conservation Study, a report for the Department of Education, 1996, pp. 60-62.
[29] Guy and Sutcliffe, Ascot, p. 243.
[30] Guy and Sutcliffe, Ascot, p. 36.
[31] Project Services, Queensland Schools Heritage Study Part II Report, for Education Queensland, January 2008, pp. 28-31.
[32] Guy and Sutcliffe, Ascot, pp. 36, 38-9; DNRM, Aerial 23 Aug 1951, BCC4-3298; DPW, Annual Report of the DPW for the year ending 30 June 1957, Queensland Government Printer, Brisbane, p. 17.
[33] Guy and Sutcliffe, Ascot, p.104.
[34] Guy and Sutcliffe, Ascot, pp. 24-5.
[35] Guy and Sutcliffe, Ascot, p. 26.
[36] Guy and Sutcliffe, Ascot, pp. 39,43, 67; DPW Drawings 11332508, May 1973; 11332530, 1976; 16192440, 1975; 11151701, 11151712, 11151756 &11658339, 1984; 13061829, Architectural Record – Site Plan, 1976, 1996; DPW drawing 13061829, Architectural Record – Site Plan, 1976, 1996.
[37] DPW Plans: 11334862, May 1979; Plan 11333993, 1979; 17664570, 2000; DPW drawing 21258721 & 21258732, Apr 2000; Project Services, Ascot SS, p. 9; Guy & Sutcliffe, Ascot, pp. 39, 41; Project Services drawing 17664581, 2001.
[38] Guy and Sutcliffe, Ascot, pp. 41, 177; Project Services, drawing 20296/13891/PC/A01.
[39] Guy and Sutcliffe, Ascot, pp. 18-26, 244-5; ‘Ascot Show’, The Daily Mail, 27 Oct 1923, p. 17; ‘Ascot State School’, Daily Standard, 9 Sep 1927, p. 9; ‘Ascot Show’, Daily Standard, 5 Sep 1930; ‘Ascot Annual Show’, Daily Standard, 14 Sep 1931, p. 2.
[40] ‘City Youngsters Appreciate Wool and Primary Production, Qld Country Life, 29 Sep 1938, p. 7; ‘Head Teachers’ Social Club’, Queensland Times, 4 Nov 1930, p. 4; ‘City Youngsters Appreciate Wool and Primary Production’, Queensland Country Life, 29 Sep 1938, p. 7.

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Location

Location of Ascot State School within Queensland
Licence
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
Last reviewed
1 July 2022
Last updated
20 February 2022