Camphora Issue 14, Summer 2021

Page 40

STORIES FROM THE ARCHIVES

38

VERY MUCH LOVE FROM LENIS My Dearest Everyone,

When the Cabin Steward called us at 4 am, “You will be in port in about twenty minutes”, our ablutions were hastier than usual and within the twenty minutes we were on deck, watching the lights of Port Said and all the activities which attend the arrival of a vessel in the harbour. . . Very much love from Lenis

She was an inveterate letter writer. Letters to her family invariably began with “My Dearest Everyone” and closed with “Very much love from Lenis”, presumably her pet name. She was the only female Principal to serve our College during wartime. She was the only Principal who was not born in Australia. She was the only Principal to head two Presbyterian colleges, in succession, and both in New South Wales. Indeed, she was the only Principal to have three headships to her credit in her career. But near the end of 1937 Dr Helen Isabella Wilkie, aged 42, was a passenger aboard the Twin Screw Steamship T.S.S. Jervis Bay at the entrance to the Red Sea, 14.XI.37. Built in 1922 for the Aberdeen and Commonwealth Government Line, the Jervis Bay travelled the UK to Australia shipping route to encourage assisted migration and to increase capacity for the export of Australian produce. Dr Wilkie, travelling on her own, had left her native Edinburgh and was heading to Sydney, and thence to Armidale, where she was to become the Principal of PLC Armidale. While we do not know what led her to decide to move to the other side of the world to head a struggling school in a country town, we do know that she relished the voyage, for our College Archives holds a ten-page typewritten document that combines seven letters written between Port Said and Sydney that recounts the journey. Dr Wilkie was a keen observer of the people and places she experienced, here are some extracts:

1 PLC SYDNEY / CAMPHORA

Now you must realise that all the fishermen, in fact almost everyone whom we had met. . . wore real Eastern clothes and the majority were barefoot. They seemed to have great dignity of carriage. . . What a motley assortment of colours and shapes of garments – flowing robes which came down from shoulder to ankle worn with a turban; nondescript robes worn with a red fez; and one which could easily have claimed kinship with a gym tunic. Port Said, Egypt

By this time the clouds were piling up and it looked as if we were in for a bad thunder storm, but with our usual luck we did not get more than occasional very heavy showers; but it did keep hot and clammy. We gradually settled down to our longest stretch of ocean. The weather appeared to become hotter as we crossed the equator. We did that at 3 am, so there were no ceremonies accompanying the “crossing of the line”. Between Colombo and the Australian Bight

We have reached Australia at last. There in the distance was the low coastline of the district around Fremantle. . . the queue then moved on to the smoke room, where the customs and other officials were sitting. There they stamped passports and took from us our landing cards. Now I am all ready officially to land on Australian soil. . .the cabin steward came to find me because there was someone to see me in the lounge. . . I went to find that the President of the West Australia Association of University Women was there to greet me, bringing with her her small daughter and a lovely bouquet. . . as a greeting from the Association. We spoke for some time. Then a Press Representative came up and interviewed me. I felt terribly important. Fremantle, Western Australia Dr Helen Isabella Wilkie was 46 years old when she became the fourth Principal of PLC Sydney. It was January 1942 and Australia had been at war since September 1939. Less than a month after her 47th birthday on 18 April, the Croydon campus had been requisitioned by the RAAF to be used as a radar unit, the College had been packed up, and both goods and students had relocated to temporary premises in Strathfield. Even with the kind help from Meriden School with sharing some classroom and boarding space with us, Dr Wilkie’s time as Principal was dominated by the challenges imposed by adapting to temporary facilities and the hardships of war and rationing. Still, the curriculum remained robust.


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Articles inside

Save the date

1min
pages 59-60

Interview with Whitney Luxford

10min
pages 51-52

Celebrating 100 years

1min
page 50

Ex-Student Spotlight: Elizabeth Ryu

8min
pages 56-57

Ex-Student Spotlight: Allison Bellinger

4min
page 54

Interning with the Ex-Students

3min
page 55

Welcome to the Common Room

1min
page 49

President’s message

3min
page 42

Providing an enriching environment at PLC Sydney Preschools

1min
pages 30-31

60 seconds with… Mr Gavin Sinclair

3min
page 28

Stories from the Archives Very much love from Lenis

7min
pages 40-41

SEED: Building a sustainable future

1min
page 29

Thank you to our generous PLC Sydney community

2min
pages 38-39

Ventilation testing of classrooms provides a ‘real life’ opportunity for student learning

3min
page 26

Sarah sets her sights on Paris

2min
page 25

Boarders’ gain job-ready skills at school

2min
page 24

Embracing the challenge of engineered systems

1min
page 20

Olympic Games for Science thinkers

4min
pages 18-19

Challenging yet fun: Online Science in the Junior School

3min
pages 22-23

Working with the Juvenilia Press: Students edit and publish the juvenile writing of Felicia Hemans

3min
page 17

How does the violin saw its tooth?

4min
page 21

Performing Arts creativity thrives during

3min
page 16

International Mathematical Modelling Challenge

6min
pages 14-15

Run for your intellectual life

5min
pages 4-5

From the Principal

3min
page 3

Lego Masterchef

2min
page 8

Expedition to the eclipse

4min
pages 12-13

Looking Beyond Online Art Competition

2min
pages 6-7

A Principal’s reflections on Covid-19

5min
pages 10-11

Wattle Warriors and Data DeTECHtives

1min
page 9
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