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Wellcamp State School

  • 650248
  • 609 Drayton-Wellcamp Road, Wellcamp

General

Classification
State Heritage
Register status
Entered
Date entered
27 March 2020
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
1911, Block A, Department of Public Works (DPW) Timber School Building with Fleche and Floor Vent
1918, Block L, Late Open-air School Building
Historical period
1900–1914 Early 20th century
1914–1919 World War I

Location

Address
609 Drayton-Wellcamp Road, Wellcamp
LGA
Toowoomba Regional Council
Coordinates
-27.55443185, 151.85092039

Map

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Significance

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

Wellcamp State School (established as Wellcamp Provisional School in 1899) is important in demonstrating the evolution of state education and its associated architecture in Queensland. The place retains good representative examples of standard government designs that were architectural responses to prevailing government educational philosophies, set in large grounds with provision of sport and play areas, and mature trees.

The Department of Public Works (DPW) Timber School Building with Fleche and Floor Vent (Block A, 1911) demonstrates the evolution of timber school buildings to provide abundant lighting and ventilation.

The Late Open-air School Building (Block L, 1918, originally from Tangkam State School, relocated to Wellcamp c2005) demonstrates medical and educational theories of the period, which valued fresh air.

The large school grounds and its mature shade trees and open grassed playing field demonstrate the Queensland Government’s recognition of the importance of play and aesthetics in the education of children.

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

Block L, a Late Open-air School Building, is rare as one of only two known extant examples of its type in Queensland.

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

Wellcamp State School is important in demonstrating the principal characteristics of a Queensland state school. These include: timber-framed buildings constructed to standard designs by the Queensland Government; and generous, landscaped sites with mature shade trees, and play areas. The school is a good example of a small, country school.

Block A is important in demonstrating the principal characteristics of its type, a Department of Public Works Timber School Building with Fleche and Floor Vent. Its integrity is demonstrated by its highset form with gable roof; open understorey play space; front and rear verandahs with hatrooms; timber-framed and -clad construction; single classroom; and methods to provide abundant provision of natural light and ventilation to the interior including its hinged ventilation boards and large banks of operable windows.

Block L is a rare surviving example of a Late Open-air School Building, and is important in demonstrating the principal characteristics of its type. These include: its lowset form on stumps; timber-framed construction; single classroom space with timber sliding and fixed windows providing abundant natural light and ventilation to the interior; V-jointed (VJ) timber board cladding; and (evidence of) a large sliding door in one end wall. As a gable-roofed variant of a Late Open-air School Building, it also retains louvre vents in the gable ends, and a shingled gable.

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

Wellcamp State School has a strong and ongoing association with past and present pupils, parents, staff members, and the surrounding community through sustained use since its establishment in 1899, when it was founded due to a strong community demand for state-run education. The place is important for its contribution to the educational development of Wellcamp, with generations of children taught at the school, and its service as a prominent venue for social interaction and community focus. After its establishment, the school quickly became the centre of the community’s social life; and the strength of this association has continued to be demonstrated for more than 120 years through repeated volunteer action, donations, and an active Parents and Citizens Association.

History

Wellcamp State School was established in 1899 as Wellcamp Provisional School in Wellcamp, a rural area 10 kilometres west of the centre of Toowoomba. It retains good examples of standard school architecture (Block A, 1911 and Block L, 1918), set within spacious grounds with mature trees, play areas, and sporting facilities. In continuous operation since its establishment, the school has been a focus for the surrounding community as a place of important social and cultural activity.

Part of the traditional land of the Western Wakka Wakka people, the locality of Wellcamp was once within Westbrook pastoral station, leased by John Campbell in 1841. By 1864, the future site of the school, on Portion 115, was located in the northwest corner of the Drayton Agricultural Reserve, declared in 1861.[1] Portion 115, of 40 acres (16.2ha), was purchased by Mary McCleverty in December 1867, and by 1881 it was owned by James Paterson.[2] From the late 19th century, the district was used for dairy farming and agriculture.

Wellcamp was established c1866 as ‘Williams’ Camp’, the main railway construction camp for the 47 mile (75.6km) section of the Warwick (later the Southern) Railway, between Gowrie Junction and Hendon. Located on Portion 113, east of Portion 115, the construction camp was named after Daniel Williams, the contractor for the section. Bisected by the railway line, Portion 113 later became the site of a railway station.[3] The Southern Railway was opened (through Williams Camp) to Hendon on 11 March 1869; to Warwick on 9 January 1871; Stanthorpe in 1881, and Wallangarra in 1887.[4]

The name ‘Williams’ Camp’ was replaced by ‘Wellcamp’ c1878; apparently because there was a well at the construction camp.[5] A number of facilities were erected at or near the Wellcamp railway station over time, including a cottage for the gatekeeper, a station building, weighbridge and goods shed (c1883), loop siding, stockyards and loading bank; the Wellcamp Hotel (1908); and a small cheese factory (1917, extant 2019).[6]

Due to closer settlement in the Wellcamp district after the railway opened, the population increased and there was a need for a school. The establishment of schools was considered an essential step in the development of new communities and integral to their success. Locals often donated land and labour for a school’s construction and the school community contributed to maintenance and development. Schools became a community focus, a symbol of progress, and a source of pride, with enduring connections formed with past pupils, parents, and teachers.[7]

To help ensure consistency and economy, the Queensland Government developed standard plans for its school buildings. From the 1860s until the 1960s, Queensland school buildings were predominantly timber-framed, an easy and cost-effective approach that also enabled the government to provide facilities in remote areas. Standard designs were continually refined in response to changing needs and educational philosophy and Queensland school buildings were particularly innovative in climate control, lighting, and ventilation.[8]

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. Also, Trees and gardens were planted to shade and beautify schools. Arbor Day celebrations began in Queensland in 1890.[9]

The first school at Wellcamp, located less than one kilometre west of the railway station, was a provisional school. These were provided where student numbers were insufficient to justify a state school. A committee was formed in July 1898, at a meeting in the railway gatekeeper’s cottage, to obtain a school. The school’s site, 1 acre (0.4ha) of Portion 115, was purchased from James Paterson for £5 and transferred to the Secretary for Public Instruction in January 1899.[10] Wellcamp Provisional School opened with 27 students on 27 February 1899, and its opening was celebrated with an Arbor Day picnic in May 1899. The timber school building was lowset, with a verandah at the rear.[11] In 1903, two more acres (0.8ha) of Portion 115 were added to the school grounds, although title for this land was not transferred until 1936.[12]

The first school building quickly became the centre of Wellcamp’s social life, as a venue for dances, and meetings of organisations, including a committee in support of extending a telephone line from Toowoomba to Wellcamp, and farmers interested in forming a local dairy company. It was not the only local dance venue, however; in 1903 a concert and dance was also held at the railway goods shed, to raise funds for the school.[13]

In May 1909, when it had 43 pupils, Wellcamp Provisional School became Wellcamp State School.[14] A teacher’s residence was moved from New Farm State School in 1910, and positioned to the east of Wellcamp’s teaching building. The original school building was then replaced in 1911, when enrolments totalled 63. Erection of the new building was approved in May 1911, with the local community to pay a fifth of the cost. The tender of A Barr, for £577 and 16s, was accepted in October 1911.[15] A dance was held in the completed school building in March 1912.[16]

The new school building (Block A in 2019) was a standard type designed by the Department of Public Works (DPW): a Timber School Building with Fleche and Floor Vent.[17] From 1893 the DPW greatly improved the natural ventilation and lighting of classroom interiors, experimenting with different combinations of roof ventilators, ceiling and wall vents, larger windows, dormer windows and ducting. Achieving an ideal or even adequate level of natural light in classrooms, without glare, was of critical importance to educators. In c1909 highset timber buildings were introduced, providing better ventilation as well as further teaching space and a covered play area underneath. A technical innovation developed at this time was a continuous ventilation flap on the wall at floor level. This hinged board could be opened to increase air flow into the space and, combined with a ceiling vent and large roof fleche, improved internal air quality and decreased internal temperatures effectively. This type was introduced around 1909 and was constructed until approximately 1920.[18]

Block A was a highset timber-framed and -clad building with a gable roof, clad in corrugated iron. It had 8ft (2.4m) wide verandahs to the front (north) and rear (south), each accessed by a centrally located staircase, in line with sets of double doors to the single classroom, which was 31ft by 20ft (9.4m by 6.1m). The interior had abundant natural light and ventilation. Large banks of operable windows in the east and west gable walls, shaded by window hoods, and sets of highset operable windows in the south wall, shaded by the verandah, provided ample light and air. This ventilation was augmented by hinged timber boards in the verandah walls at floor level, and two vents in the lofty coved ceiling connected to a roof fleche. According to the plan drawn by DPW, hat rooms were proposed for the west end of both verandahs. The building was clad with weatherboards, except for the walls to the verandahs, which were single skin with framing exposed externally, and the interior walls and ceiling were lined with v-jointed tongue and groove boards.[19]

Block A was immediately used for community purposes, including a banquet in honour of the President of the Queensland Farmer’s Union; a lecture on cheese factories; and dances in aid of school funds and the Toowoomba Ambulance Fund. Entertainment was also provided for Captain Jack Brown of the Australian Light Horse, while he was home on leave in October 1917.[20] A fete and sports carnival was held at the school in October 1925, the same month that the Federal Attorney General, Sir Littleton Groom, addressed voters at the school. The Wellcamp Queensland Country Women’s Association also used the school for meetings in the 1930s.[21] Arbor Days continued to be a social event for the community, with picnic lunches and plantings. The school’s 50th Jubilee was celebrated on 23 February 1949, with a large crowd on the grounds.[22]

After Block A was constructed, decades passed with few changes to the fabric of the single-classroom school. In 1914, approval was given to enclose underneath Block A on two sides, and in 1916 a storeroom was built under the southwest corner (this area is still enclosed in 2019). Permission to build a tennis court (located between Block A and the residence) was given in 1920, and the teacher’s residence was removed in 1928. The hat room at the west end of the rear verandah was incorporated into a storeroom in 1961. Enrolments were low in the post-World War II period (18 pupils in 1946; 25 in 1957), and by the 1960s the school still only consisted of Block A, with a number of mature plantings around the perimeter of the north end of the school, including Pepperina trees (Schinus molle). These trees’ branches were sometimes used for disciplinary purposes. A Parents and Citizens Association was formed in 1965.[23]

By this time, the railway line from Gowrie Junction to Wyreema, through Wellcamp, had closed. When the route to Warwick was shortened in 1915 with the opening of a new railway line from Toowoomba to Wyreema via Drayton, traffic on the old line fell dramatically. The Gowrie Junction to Wyreema section finally closed on 1 December 1959, by which time Wellcamp Station had already been dismantled. [24]

In the 1960s, the district was still dominated by dairy farms, with milk being supplied to the Toowoomba Unity factory. However, from the 1970s dairy farming declined, being replaced by beef cattle and grain crops, while subdivision patterns also changed. The opening of the Gainsborough Lodge horse stud nearby brought new families into the area, and enrolments at Wellcamp State School rose from 27 in 1973, to 40 in 1975, and 46 in 1983. The school celebrated its 75th jubilee on 23 February 1974.[25]

As a result of increased enrolments, the grounds were expanded and new buildings were added to the school from the late 1970s. Five acres (2ha) of land was purchased at the southeast corner of the school c1980, creating the current ground size of 8 acres (3.2ha).[26] New buildings included a modular classroom building (Block B in 2019), erected northeast of Block A in 1977, and a new toilet block and septic system was installed south of the school buildings in 1978, replacing the previous Earth Closets. In the late 1970s, a new tennis court was formed on the former site of the teacher’s residence, and later a concrete block shelter shed (Block M) and a storeroom were added nearby. An adventure playground was built in 1986, and a practice cricket wicket, and a covered walkway between the school buildings and the toilets, were added in 1988. A building (Block D) was moved to the school, opening in 1994 as a ‘community room’, located south of Block A; and a shed was added south of the toilets by 1998. [27] Block R was added north of Block B c2009-11, and a new tennis court was built in the southwest corner of the school c2013-16, when Block N was built on the southern end of the 1970s tennis court.[28]

Alterations to Block A also occurred from the 1970s. In 1973, the P&C requested the enclosure of the rear verandah, although this was deferred due to restumping and concreting under the school. The majority of the front verandah of Block A was enclosed for a library in 1976, with the stairs moved to the west end of the verandah. The building was reroofed in 1982, and in 1983 permanent seating and a storage shed were approved for underneath the building. A health room existed on the rear verandah, east of the central stairs, by 1983. In 1999, a store room wall was removed from the west end of the rear verandah, and the remainder of the verandah west of the health room (an office by 1998) was enclosed as a Practical Learning Area, with new rear stairs and landing. By this time Block A’s banks of windows in the gable end walls had been replaced within the original openings.[29] After 2006, a suspended ceiling was added to the classroom space; but there is no evidence that the original coved ceiling, lattice ceiling vents and metal tie rods have been removed.[30]

In c2005-6, another early DPW-designed building, Block L, was added to the school, just northwest of Block A.[31] Small and lowset, it was a late version of an ‘open-air’ building, originally constructed in 1918 for Tangkam State School (1918-61), southwest of Oakey.[32]

Open-air school buildings were introduced as a standard design in 1913. This was developed in response to contemporary medical concern for child health and, under the direction of the newly-appointed Medical Inspector of Schools, Dr Eleanor Bourne, the relationship between classroom environment and child health was given importance. Dr Bourne advocated abundant ventilation and high levels of natural light in classrooms. Open-air school buildings achieved maximum ventilation and natural light, having full height walls only on the west side, and half off the south side, of the building. The other sides were partly open, enclosable with canvas blinds. However, this proved to provide limited weather protection and climate control, and the canvas blinds deteriorated quickly. Consequently, later open-air school buildings were designed with fixed and sliding windows instead of blinds, and a sliding door on the south side. Late Open-air school buildings were discontinued in 1923, and all earlier examples in Queensland were modified to replace their blinds with windows. [33]   

The building at Wellcamp State School is a Late Open-air School Building. As a variant within this type, it was designed with a gable roof instead of the usual hipped roof, and louvered vents and shingle cladding at its gable ends.[34] At Wellcamp, its original west wall faces south. At some point the doorway configuration of the building was altered; the sliding door at the east end was replaced with a swing door and wall sheeting, while the door at the west end was removed, and a new door was added on the south side. The shingles at the apex of the west gable end survive in 2019.  Block L is rare as one of only two known extant examples of the Late Open-air type in Queensland, and the only one with a gable roof with louvered vents and shingles.[35]

In 2019, Wellcamp State School continues to operate from its 1899 site. It retains its two early standard buildings (Block A and Block L), set in grounds with a playing field and mature shade trees. The school has played an important role in the Wellcamp and district community and continues to do so.





Description

Wellcamp State School occupies a 3.2ha, flat site in Wellcamp, a rural locality located on the western fringe of Toowoomba, approximately 10km west of Toowoomba central business district (CBD). The school faces north to Drayton-Wellcamp Road, with the site bounded on the west by Wellcamp-Westbrook Road, and the south and east by rural residential properties. The significant school buildings are located in the northwest corner of the site, prominently located near the road intersection.

The heritage boundary incorporates the northwest corner of the school site (total area of 1.2ha). Features of state-level cultural heritage significance are:

  • Block L: a Late Open-air School Building (1918, moved to Wellcamp State School c2005)
  • Block A: a Department of Public Works Timber School Building with Fleche and Floor Vent (1911)
  • Open school grounds between Block A, Block L, and Drayton-Wellcamp Road
  • Landscape features, including mature trees, and playing field at south end of the site

Block A: Department of Public Works Timber School Building with Fleche and Floor Vent (1911)

Block A is a highset, timber-framed and -clad teaching building with a gable roof continuous over front (north) and rear (south) verandahs. The verandahs have been partially enclosed and part of the north verandah wall has been removed. Access to verandahs is via front and rear stairs (the rear stair is centred on the south elevation; and the front stair has been relocated from the centre to the west end of the north elevation). The roof fleche has been removed.

The interior comprises a single classroom, with large banks of operable windows in the gable ends providing abundant natural light and ventilation to the space.

The understorey is partially enclosed and used as open play space.

Features of Block A also of state-level cultural heritage significance are:

  • location within school grounds and orientation with verandahs facing north and south
  • highset form and building size
  • gable roof form, clad in corrugated metal sheets (sheeting is not original)
  • timber bargeboards
  • VJ timber board soffit linings
  • centre alignment of stair to south elevation
  • layout: a single classroom, and front and rear verandahs with western hat rooms (former)
  • timber weatherboard cladding to exterior walls, including vertical strip in south wall indicating original extent of hatroom enclosure
  • raked verandah ceilings, lined in VJ timber boards
  • single-skin verandah walls with framing exposed externally
  • interior wall lining of VJ timber boards
  • locations of windows in east and west gable end walls
  • original high-level timber-framed windows to south verandah wall, including centre-pivoting sashes
  • timber-framed window hoods to gable end walls, with timber brackets and batten cheeks
  • hinged ventilation boards to base of verandah walls (not sighted in 2019, obscured by cupboards and blackboards)
  • open understorey with exposed subfloor structure of the upper level
  • location of a storage enclosure in the southwest corner of the understorey

Features of Block A not of state-level cultural heritage significance are:

  • metal roof sheets
  • solar panels to roof
  • ramp, stair, door, and skillion awning roof on northern side
  • south stair, including landing, balustrade and skillion awning roof
  • non-original verandah enclosures (excluding original hatroom enclosures)
  • suspended ceiling to classroom
  • opening in north verandah wall to extend classroom space
  • aluminium-framed windows and sashes, including louvres to some high-level windows in south verandah wall
  • flat wall sheeting
  • blackboard units
  • non-original floor lining, including carpet and linoleum
  • electrical fittings, including: lights, fans, heaters, air-conditioners, and associated conduits
  • concrete and metal posts, and metal sheeting to understorey
  • adjacent tanks, including associated pipework

Block L: Late Open-air school building (1918, moved to Wellcamp State School c2005)

Block L is a lowset, single storey, timber-framed and -clad former teaching building. The building has a gable roof and features separate skillion hoods running the length of the gable ends. The main access to the building is from the east elevation (where a swing door and wall sheeting have replaced the original sliding door), and a door has been added into the south elevation for staff access.

The interior comprises a single former classroom space (now administration), with a coved ceiling and a large bank of north-facing windows.

Features of Block L also of state-level cultural heritage significance are:

  • lowset form and building size
  • gable roof with long hoods along length of gable ends, clad in corrugated metal (metal sheets are not original)
  • timber bargeboards
  • rectangular louvre vents to gable ends
  • timber wall shingles to apex of western gable end
  • timber chamferboards to apex of eastern gable end
  • exterior walls, clad in V-jointed (VJ) timber boards
  • timber-framed, three-light fixed and sliding sash windows to north wall
  • coved ceiling, lined in flat sheets with D-moulded cover strips

Features of Block L not of state-level cultural heritage significance are:

  • location within school grounds and orientation
  • ramp to east entry
  • south entry, including footpath, landing, balustrade and door
  • gutters
  • wider VJ timber boards to east elevation marking former location of sliding door
  • timber sign to west wall, reading ‘WELLCAMP STATE SCHOOL’
  • door leaf and frame to east wall
  • floor linings, including carpet and linoleum
  • electrical fittings, including: lights, fans, air-conditioner, and associated conduits
  • stumps

Landscape Features

Landscape features of state-level cultural heritage significance are:

  • the alignment of the centre of Block A with the school’s front pedestrian entrance from Drayton Wellcamp Road (the alignment indicates the former location of Block A’s front entry stair)
  • the alignment of the straight footpath connecting the front pedestrian entrance and Block A
  • the open grassed school grounds, formed by the setback of Block A and Block L from Drayton-Wellcamp Road and Wellcamp-Westbrook Road, providing abundant natural light and ventilation to Block A and Block L’s interiors
  • views of and between Block A, Block L, Drayton-Wellcamp Road and Wellcamp-Westbrook Road
  • mature Pepperina (Schinus molle) trees, planted along the site’s north, west and east boundaries
  • a Cadaghi tree (Corymbia torelliana) east of the school’s front pedestrian entrance
  • a tree of an unidentified species west side of the school’s front pedestrian entrance
  • playing field at south end of the site

Features not of State-level Cultural Heritage Significance

Features of Wellcamp State School not of state-level cultural heritage significance are:

  • all other buildings and structures, including: teaching buildings, covered walkways, tanks and their stands, sheds, shade sails and their fixings, access ramps, play equipment, fences, and tennis courts
  • all other trees, gardens, and other vegetation not previously mentioned
  • all other paths not previously mentioned
  • car park and road to Drayton Wellcamp Road, including bitumen ground surface, line markings, wheel stops, associated signs and footpath; the inclusion of road reserve within the heritage boundary is to include the canopies of significant trees.

References

[1] https://culturalheritage.datsip.qld.gov.au/achris/public/public-registry/home (accessed 17 July 2019); R Pennycuick, Wellcamp State School: 1899-1999: work and play in harmony, Wellcamp, Centenary Committee, Parents and Citizens Association, Wellcamp State School, 1999, p.9; Squatting Map of the Darling Downs, JW Buxton, 1864; Darling Downs 2 Mile Map, sheet 5, 1923. The Drayton Agricultural Reserve covered 11,000 acres, or 4452ha (‘Drayton Agricultural Reserve’, Darling Downs Gazette, 21 March 1861, p.3).
[2] DNRME, Survey Plan DAR6210, 1861 (redrawn 1961); DNRME, Deed of Grant, 10130244, 11 July 1868; DNRME, Certificate of Title 10138135, 17 December 1868; DNRME, Certificate of Title 10371232, 19 May 1880.
[3] ‘Warwick Railway’, Brisbane Courier, 20 December 1865, p.3 (tender of David [sic] Williams accepted); ‘Weekly Epitome’, Brisbane Courier, 24 March 1866, p.5  (Daniel Williams arrives in Brisbane); ‘The two reports’, Northern Argus, 4 November 1867 (6 miles (9.7km) from [Gowrie] junction to William’s Camp; 4 miles (6.4km) from William’s Camp to the Westbrook Creek Bridge); DNRME, Survey Plan RP36643, 1868 (Portion 113). Pennycuick, Wellcamp State School: 1899-1999, p.10, states the construction camp was on a site of 56 acres and 1 rood, which was the original size of Portion 113 (DNRME, Survey Plan DAR6210, 1861 (redrawn 1961). Hendon was referred to as ‘Allora’ in the 1860s.
[4] JD Kerr, ‘Queensland Rail Heritage Report, final report’, July 1993, Part 1, 3-9.
[5] Darling Downs Gazette and General Advertiser, 7 August 1878, p.3 (name changed in the latest ‘Smith’s Queensland Bradshaw and Postal Guide’; ‘Hambledon Estate’, The Queenslander, 27 December 1879, p. 803 (refers to Wellcamp railway station); Pennycuick, Wellcamp State School: 1899-1999, p.9. However, the name Wellcamp was not used in Pugh’s Almanac and Directory until 1883, referring to the railway station).
[6] Pennycuick, Wellcamp State School: 1899-1999, p.10; ‘Official notifications’, The Week, 23 June 1883, p.8 (tender for goods shed at Wellcamp); ‘Toowoomba and District’, Brisbane Courier, 9 July 1908, p.2 (Wellcamp Hotel license); ‘Wellcamp Cheese Factory, the official opening’, Toowoomba Chronicle, 27 March 1917, p.3. The reinforced-concrete factory was opened by the Standard Dairy Co. of Brisbane, as an ‘auxiliary’ to the company’s condensing factory at Wyreema. The Wellcamp Hotel was offered for sale in 1922, and the cheese factory was closed in 1942. (‘Wellcamp Hotel for sale’, Toowoomba Chronicle, 29 July 1922, p.4; Pennycuick, Wellcamp State School: 1899-1999, p.11; JD  Kerr, ‘Queensland Rail Heritage Report, final report’, July 1993, Part 1, 3-9).
[7] 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.
[8] Burmester et al, Queensland Schools: A Heritage Conservation Study, pp.84, 120-1.
[9] Burmester et al, Queensland Schools: A Heritage Conservation Study, pp.4, 48-9.
[10] Pennycuick, Wellcamp State School: 1899-1999, p.12; DNRME, Certificate of Title 10371232, 19 May 1880 (transfer to Secretary for Public Instruction).
[11] ‘Wellcamp Provisional School’, Darling Downs Gazette, 25 February 1899, p.1 (opening date); ‘Arbor Day at Wellcamp. School opening celebration’, Toowoomba Chronicle and Darling Downs Advertiser, 9 May 1899, p.4; No author, 75th Jubilee, Wellcamp State School: 1899-1974, Wellcamp, Wellcamp State School Jubilee Committee, 1974 (np); Pennycuick, Wellcamp State School: 1899-1999, p.14. After the Arbor Day picnic and games, 130 people, including 45 couples, attended a public ball in the new school building. There was dancing from 8pm until supper at midnight – followed by dancing until 4am. 
[12] Pennycuick, Wellcamp State School: 1899-1999, p.15; DNRME, Certificate of Title 10942214, 3 January 1899 (2 acres to Secretary of Public Instruction in 1936); DNRME, Survey Plan AG1226, 1924 (a 3 acre (1.2ha) school reserve existed by this time). This plan shows the teacher’s residence east of the school building, on the ‘L’ shaped 1903 addition of land. A church (Methodist) is also shown, just south of the school. The church was at this location from 1905-32 (Pennycuick, Wellcamp State School: 1899-1999, pp.85-6).
[13] ‘School Social at Wellcamp’, Darling Downs Gazette, 27 September 1899, p.3; ‘Telephone communication with Wellcamp’, Darling Downs Gazette, 11 February 1901, p.2; ‘Wellcamp telephone extension’, Toowoomba Chronicle and Darling Downs General Advertiser, 30 March 1901, p.4; ‘Wellcamp Dairy Company’, Darling Downs Gazette, 29 October 1901, p.2; ‘Concert at Wellcamp’, Darling Downs Gazette, 7 September 1903, p.2.
[14] Pennycuick, Wellcamp State School: 1899-1999, pp.15, 20.
[15] Pennycuick, Wellcamp State School: 1899-1999, pp.16, 17, 21; ‘Wellcamp School’ Darling Downs Gazette, 16 March 1910, p.5 (tender accepted to move residence to Wellcamp); ‘School at Wellcamp’, Darling Downs Gazette, 27 May 1911, p.4; ‘Public Works tender’, Telegraph, 13 October 1911, p.2. The old school building was sold for removal in 1912 (The Queenslander, 20 July 1912, p.12).
[16] Pennycuick, Wellcamp State School: 1899-1999, p.17.
[17] Categorised as a Type C/T2 in P Burmester, M Pullar and M Kennedy, Queensland Schools: A Heritage Conservation Study, Conservation Management, a report for the Department of Education, November 1996, p.19.
[18] Burmester et all, Queensland Schools A Heritage Conservation Study, pp.19-20. Another example was built at Mount Sylvia State School (1912).
[19] DPW, Plan 16176985, ‘Wellcamp state School’, August 1911; Project Services, ‘Wellcamp State School’, in Queensland Schools Heritage Study Part II Report, for Education Queensland, January 2008. By 1949, a hat room had been added to the east end of the north verandah (photograph of Block A in Pennycuick, Wellcamp State School: 1899-1999, p.28)
[20] ‘Queensland Farmers’ Union. Wellcamp-Burton Branch. Complimentary banquet’, Darling Downs Gazette, 1 July 1912, p.7; ‘Cheese making. Address at Wellcamp. Establishing local factory’, Darling Downs Gazette, 7 July 1914, p.5; ‘Personal notes’, Brisbane Courier, 25 October 1917, p.7; ‘Wellcamp dance’, Toowoomba Chronicle, 29 October 1917, p.4; ‘District News, Wellcamp’, Toowoomba Chronicle, 10 July 1918, p.6.
[21] ‘Fete at Wellcamp. Bazaar and sports carnival’, Toowoomba Chronicle and Darling Downs Gazette, 19 October 1925, p.3; ‘Local and General News, Sir LE Groom’s meetings’, Toowoomba Chronicle and Darling Downs Gazette, 22 October 1925, p.4; ‘Wellcamp Branch’, Toowoomba Chronicle and Darling Downs Gazette, 9 February 1933, p.4.
[22] Pennycuick, Wellcamp State School: 1899-1999, pp.25-29. A 1949 photograph of the school building during the Jubilee shows that the front verandah had semi-enclosed hat rooms at both ends by this time. What may be two Cypress pine trees (genus Callitris) are also shown, planted either side of the path north of the building; but these are not extant in 2019.
[23] Pennycuick, Wellcamp State School: 1899-1999, pp.17-37. Aerial photographs in 1955, 1965 and 1975 show the school building and the former site of the residence, at the north end of the school grounds, surrounded by a perimeter planting of trees (DNRME, aerial photographs QAP0483059, 6 May 1955; QAP1485077, 11 July 1965; and QAP28380043, 28 May 1975). Card nights were held by the P&C in the school building to raise funds for the school (Pennycuick, Wellcamp State School: 1899-1999, p.43).
[24] Pennycuick, Wellcamp State School: 1899-1999, p.11; JD Kerr, ‘Queensland Rail Heritage Report, final report’, July 1993, Part 1, 3-9.
[25] Pennycuick, Wellcamp State School: 1899-1999, pp.40-47, 56, 63. The land between the school and the railway station, both north and south of the Drayton-Wellcamp Road, was subdivided into housing blocks in 1908, but a town never developed. In 1972, the allotments south of the road were re-subdivided into 5 acre (2ha) blocks (DNRME, Survey Plans RP22802 1908, and RP136181, 1972).
[26] The new land was combined with the land purchased in 1903, to form Portion 206, by 1980 (DNRME, Survey Plan AG3785, 1980).
[27] Pennycuick, Wellcamp State School: 1899-1999, pp. 43-48, 50-61, 66-69; DPW, Plan 10911681, ‘Wellcamp state School site plan – sports store’, October 1982; DNRME, aerial photographs QAP4354096, 7 August 1984, and QAP5257069, 8 November 1994; DPW, Plan 14142711, ‘Wellcamp State School Block A, upgrade GLA’s BBS Programme’, October 1998.
[28] Google Earth.
[29] Pennycuick, Wellcamp State School: 1899-1999, pp.43, 47, 55, 57, 71; DPW, Plan 13613721, ‘Wellcamp SS provision of a wet area’, June 1983 (library extant on east side of front verandah; health room extant on east side of south verandah; proposed removal of store room wall, west end of rear verandah (not occur at this time?); DPW, Plan 14142711, ‘Wellcamp State School Block A, upgrade GLA’s BBS Programme’, October 1998 (store room wall removed, west end of rear verandah, for PLA area; gable windows modified by this time, as exist in 2019). A photograph of Block A in 1995 shows it with an enclosed front verandah, with the front stairs and entry on the west side of the verandah (Pennycuick, Wellcamp State School: 1899-1999, p.3).
[30] Project Services, ‘Wellcamp State School’, in Queensland Schools Heritage Study Part II Report, for Education Queensland, January 2008.
[31] Google Earth. Block L is not on a June 2005 plan (DPW, Plan 19899726, ‘Proposed site plan’, June 2005).
[32] Type D/T2 (Burmester, et al, Queensland Schools: A Heritage Conservation Study, Conservation Management, p.31); ‘Public works, expenditure approved’, Telegraph, 23 February 1918, p.2 (£320 for new Tangkam State School). Tangkam State School opened on 26 November 1918 and closed on 22 January 1961 (Queensland State Archives Agency ID 6038, Tangkam State School). Tangkam railway station was located on the line from Oakey to Cecil Plains, about 20km northwest of Wellcamp State School.
[33] Burmester et al, Queensland Schools: A Heritage Conservation Study, pp.25-26; and Burmester, et al, Queensland Schools: A Heritage Conservation Study, Conservation Management, pp.24, 31; DPW, plans of various Open-air school buildings, 1914-21.
[34] Although no original plans of the Tangkam Late Open-air school building exist, its roof is similar to that designed for the Open-air school building at Birimgan State School (DPW, Plan 19216813, ‘State School Type No.1 (Open Air), Birimgan via Blair Athol, plans for shingle roof’, c1917-18). Late Open-air school buildings with hipped roofs were designed for Deep Creek (1920), Biddeston (1921), Cinnibar Upper (1921) and Lower Beechmont (1921) (DPW Plans).
[35] The only other known surviving Late Open-air school building is located on Chevallum School Road, Chevallum, but is no longer used as school building.

Image gallery

Location

Location of Wellcamp 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