The Hornby Street buildings were promptly demolished to make way for a housing estate, Ballarat East Primary School (Queen Street)*, Ballarat Primary School (Humffray Street)*, Collingwood Primary School (Cambridge Street)*, Diggers Road Primary School (Werribee South), Eastmeadows Primary School (Broadmeadows), Eureka Street Primary School (Ballarat East)*, Geelong Primary School (Swanston Street)*, Geelong Technical School (Moorabool Street), Geelong Technical School (Reynolds Road, Belmont), Golden Point Primary School (Ballarat East)*, Jordanville South Primary School (Chadstone), Koonung Heights Primary School (Mont Albert North)*, Merlynston Primary School (Coburg North)*, Middlefield Primary School (Blackburn North), North Melbourne Primary School (Boundary Road)*, Port Melbourne Primary School (Nott Street)*, Richards Street Primary School (Ballarat East), Rosehill Park Primary School (Keilor East), South Melbourne Primary School (Dorcas Street)*, South Melbourne Primary School (Eastern Road)*, Victoria Park Primary School (Abbotsford), Warrawong Primary School (Blackburn South), Yarra Park Primary School (East Melbourne)*. Students were consolidated at the Waaia site and Yalca South was closed. In 1989 the school was renamed Darebin Parklands Secondary College as governments were taking a different view of technical education. Enrolments reached 101 in 1889, and the school was rebuilt in 1962. Would you like to know more? The school was rebadged as Tormore Secondary College in 1990 only to be closed at the end of 1991. Northcote Farm operated until 1976, ultimately catering for under-privileged Victorian families. For many years a poor-quality building was used, and the Education Department ignored requests for something more suitable. Enrolments varied between 20 and 40 over the ensuing years. Then the Avenue was burnt down along with the school in the February 1983 Ash Wednesday fires. Enrolments reached 164 in 1914 but had settled at around 40 by the 1960s. The site was sold ($1.9m) to become a campus of John Batman Institute of TAFE (now Kangan Institute). State School 3884 opened on the corner of Bangholme and Worsley Roads in 1915. The building has National Trust heritage protection, being a striking example of school design from the Henry Bastow era. Fortunately, the school building is still standing. The remainder was acquired by Victoria Police as a training facility, and the new Ballarat North police station, State School 1213 opened as Brunswick Central in temporary accommodation in 1873, moving into a new Albert Street building in 1877. In 1992 it was merged with Reservoir High and Kingsbury Technical to form the triple campus Reservoir District Secondary College. The Eureka Street and Richards Street schools were retained as campuses until the new school buildings in Otway Street South opened in 1997. State School 4698 opened on the corner of High Street Road and Vannam Drive in 1953. Would you like to know more? The site proved unsuitable for growing enrolments and in 1920 was moved to a new double-storey brick building in Station Street, alongside Box Hill Gardens. The Hadfield campus lasted for a few years before it was closed and sold to make way for Pascoe Vale Gardens Retirement Village. By the end of the year enrolments had reached 263, requiring some classes to be taken in St Marys Church of England Hall. More classrooms were added every few years until 1965, as the Education Department tried to keep up with growing numbers. Declining enrolments led to a merger with Kananook Primary at the end of 1993. At the end of 1988, the Education Minister directed Hurstbridge High to merge with Diamond Creek Technical, with each becoming campuses of Diamond Valley Secondary College. 12) and the school was closed. Rosanna West State School (SS4774) opened on the corner of Dougharty Road and Helen Street in 1957. However, declining enrolments saw the school merged with Trentham Primary at the end of 1993 to form Trentham District Primary. This meant consolidation on the Branxholme site, and closure for Wallacedale North Primary. However, there is no plaque or marker to commemorate its education history. Low enrolments led to schools closure between 1951 and 1957. The buildings were removed but the school lives on as Vinifera Primary School Community Park, abutting the pristine Nyah Vinifera Park. The school building was enlarged in 1889 to cater for increased enrolments, which had reached 83. State School 2953 opened at 5055 Great Alpine Road in 1889, and was rebuilt in 1912. State School 645 opened at 577 Wangoom Road in 1865. It backed on to Merri Creek, which could hardly be described as a lake. The result of a quality provision task force decision, it meant consolidation on the Alberton West site, and closure for Binginwarri Primary. The school building was relocated to Beeac Primary and is now used as the Warrabee library by all local primary schools. By 1960 enrolments had reached 643. But numbers continued to decline, and Alberton West and District Primary was closed at the end of 1999. The school was prominent on many fronts, being the Ballarat centre where examinations for the Certificate of a Child being Sufficiently Educated were held. The heritage building ($1.48m) became the Essendon campus of Broadmeadows College of TAFE (now Kangan Institute), while the other parcel of land ($1,805,000) became the Wheeler Place housing estate. It became a co-educational college in 1985 upon merging with Whitehorse Girls Technical School (which closed). However, the school did not have sufficient enrolments to survive the Kennett Governments rationalisation plans and was closed at the end of 1993. State School 2116 opened in 1879. By the 1980s numbers began to go the other way, so much so that the school was merged at the end of 1993 with Northvale Primary to form Albany Rise Primary School. State School 3862 opened on the corner of Leakes Road and the Melton Highway in 1914. Today, the original school buildings are home to the Gippsland branch of Enjoy Church Australia. Murrumbeena High School opened in temporary accommodation in 1958, moving into a new building on the corner of North and Murrumbeena Roads the following year. Moreland Central School (SS4635), located on the corner of The Avenue and De Carle Street, became a High School in 1953. The school was closed in 1996 and the grounds became a housing estate. Initial enrolments of 294 grew to 900 by 1967. State School 1714 opened on Humphrys Road in 1876. State School 4340 opened in temporary accommodation in 1927, to serve families recently arrived under a soldier settlement scheme. Sold to private interests ($138,500), it has recently been restored as The Old School Cottages, offering self-contained accommodation in the refurbished buildings. The school was also known as Kilmany Park, as the Victorian Government had purchased land from the Kilmany Park Station to develop a sugar beet industry. State School 2761 opened in the public hall in 1886, moving into a new building on the Princes Highway in 1900 (i.e. Consequently, Ensay Group School was closed in 1994. Nearly 200 schools and more than 1.200 teachers have participated in the . Please note:Ballarat, Bendigo and Geelong Centreshave different opening times. In 1928 a superior site was acquired in Meredith Street, and a new timber school was erected. The site was later sold ($19,500). Strath Creek and Flowerdale Township State School (SS3173) opened in Ferguson Street in 1892 and was renamed Strath Creek in 1904. Footscray High School opened in temporary accommodation in January 1954, moving into a new building on Wembley Avenue a few months later. Enrolments had declined to 139 in 1993 and the school was closed at the end of the year. It was rebadged as Brighton Bay Secondary College in 1990, but the writing was on the wall due to plummeting numbers in the junior forms. Enrolments reached 220 in 1970 but declined thereafter. Richmond Technical School opened in 1926 on Church Street, behind the Richmond Town Hall. Enrolments reached 100 by 1933, but declined in the years that followed. However, numbers continued to decline in the region, with only six students remaining in 1993. It remained a small, rural school for much of its history. The three school populations were consolidated on the Mount Duneed site (Williams Road). Kingsbury Technical School opened in temporary accommodation in 1963, moving into its new building on the corner of Dunne and Stymie Streets the following year. Like many secondary schools it was rebadged as a secondary college in 1990. However, the new entity was located at Harcourt Primarys Market Street site and therefore Harcourt North was closed. It has been home to The Salvation Army Bendigo Corps ever since. A school building was erected next door (3056 Princes Highway) in 1914, and the name was changed to Kalimna West in 1919. Hurstbridge High School opened in temporary accommodation in 1966, moving into a permanent site off Graysharps Road in 1968 (abutting Hurstbridge Park). The former Yalla-Y-Poora Primary was sold to the Shire of Ararat ($21k) and become a community centre. In the mid-1970s the name was formally changed to Hadfield Primary School. It was conceived as an annex of Geelong Technical School. It had been relocated to an old building on Mincha West Road by 1906. State School 5052 opened in temporary accommodation in 1973, moving to a new site on Mimosa Street mid-year. State School 2725 opened at 699 Steels Creek Road in 1886. Would you like to know more? In 1966 all secondary students transferred to Werrimull Group School, and the original school became Meringur Primary. The resultant Portland Secondary College was located on the Must Street site of the former Technical School. The site was sold for $30k. The school was temporarily closed between 1950 and 1961, and declining numbers led to permanent closure at the end of 1993. Fawkner Technical School opened in a new building on Anderson Road in 1961. Notable alumni included Sidney Nolan and George Johnston (and his brother Jack, a founding student). The result of a quality provision task force decision, it meant consolidation on the Box Hill North site, and closure for the other two schools. The Buckley Primary site was sold to Surf Coast Shire ($35,780) and became public tennis courts. State School 246 opened on Main Street in 1861. Syndal High School opened in temporary accommodation in 1967, moving to a permanent site on Medina Road in 1969. Would you like to know more? The school was merged with Fish Creek Primary at the end of 1993 to form Fish Creek and District Primary School. It was permanently closed in 1996. Declining enrolments led to the schools closure in 1990, and eventual sale ($26,000). Burwood Technical School was opened on the corner of Eley and Middleborough Roads in 1956. State School 1822 opened in 1877, and was remodelled in 1923. With albums including photos of: 19th and 20th century school buildings Arbor day, education week and picnic day celebrations Children participating in a variety of curriculum activities Classroom tools and equipment Junior farmers clubs Last updated: 28-Feb-2023 Mundoona State School (SS1555) opened on Echuca Road in 1875 and was later renamed St Germains. In 1994 the school became an annex of Beaufort Primary, but this arrangement ceased late 1996 and Raglan Primary was closed. This expansion was reflected in new buildings on Macalister Street (Boys school) in 1927 and the addition of a Girls school in 1930. Woodburn South State School (SS3344) opened on the Melba Highway in 1902, and its name was changed to Glenburn in 1905. The school was rebadged as Joseph Banks Secondary College in 1990, but declining enrolments led to its closure at the end of 1992. By then the Education Department had built a school at 7975 Bass Highway, which was destroyed in a 1926 bushfire and then rebuilt. Numbers reached 72 following the Second World War, thanks to another influx of soldier settlers. Would you like to know more? Swinburne Junior Technical School opened within the Technical College in 1913. The school was closed, and the buildings left untouched until the site was sold in March 2015 ($80k). Fluctuating enrolments led to the closure of the school between 1894 and 1898, and then again between 1936 and 1940. This was located at the former High School and Macleod Primary was closed. Would you like to know more? In 1988 it was merged with Richmond High to form the dual campus Richmond Secondary College. Port Albert Common School opened in 1861 and became State School 490 in 1873. By 1997, falling enrolments led to a merger with Coburg-Preston Secondary College to form Moreland City College (closed 2004). This was completed by 1991 and the Bell Street campus was closed. Rosanna High School opened in temporary accommodation in 1958, moving into a new building on Crissane Road the following year. The former Gnotuk school had been demolished by 2015. A major rationalisation of schools occurred in December 1993, when Richards Street was merged with three other schools to form Canadian Lead Primary (i.e. State School 4734 opened on the corner of Thrush Street and Eagle Parade in 1955. Although the school was closed in 1992, the building is now a well-maintained private residence. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples should be aware the collection and website may contain images, voices and names of deceased persons. State School 1998 opened on the corner of Queen Street North and Dyte Parade in 1878. Welcome to the 'official' Boronia Heights SS Facebook page. AC/DC Boronia High School, Melbourne - Mar 22, 1975 Mar 22 1975 Following concerts AC/DC Ringwood Iceland, Melbourne - Mar 23, 1975 Mar 23 1975 AC/DC Southside Six Hotel, Melbourne - Mar 25, 1975 Mar 25 1975 Last updated: 22 Feb 2023, 03:01 Etc/UTC Concert People I was there No user attended. But it was not until 1964 that Kewell Primary reopened again, this time in a new one-room building on the corner of Henty Highway and Minyip-Dimboola Road. In 1995 it was merged with Mortlake High to form the single campus Mortlake P-12 College. In 1994 declining numbers led to a merger with Knoxfield Primary to form Carrington Primary. The original building became home to the Yarraville Community Centre, providing adult education and other community services to Melbournes western suburbs. The original building in St Georges Road is now part of Melbourne Polytechnic. Temporary lasted 25 years. The following year the site was acquired by the State Training Board and became the Avondale Heights campus of Kangan Batman TAFE (now Kangan Institute) until 2005. Javascript must be enabled for the correct page display, Record Series Number (VPRS): 1396, 14517, 10516 - covering the years 1890-1967, Record Series Number: 1396, 14562, 14514, 14516, 14581, Victorian Electronic Records Strategy (VERS), Digitised photographs of schools & other education buildings, Government school building and property records, City of Melbourne building plans and permits (1916-1960), Divorce files and cause books, Melbourne and Ballarat (1890-1976). Located on Swanston Street, the brick building was remodelled, and the school expanded in 1912. The site was promptly sold to make way for a housing estate. Towards the end of 1966 the new school building was ready, located on Epsom Road between Flemington Racecourse and the Showgrounds. Tottenham Technical School opened in temporary accommodation in 1957, moving to a permanent site in South Road, Braybrook the following year. Tintern Grammar acquired the Southwood Primary site to open its initial boys campus in 1999. State School 3499 opened on South Canal Road in 1905. As for Altona Gate, it was merged out of existence in 2009. But this too was short-lived, as the site was sold in 1993 ($1.43m) and the buildings demolished. These buildings were resold in 2013 ($2.398m) and by 2018 were being converted into a new Greenland Early Learning Centre. Musk Creek State School (SS1171) opened on School Road in 1872, and only became known as Musk in 1968. Prior to 8:30am Students to remain in the Community Centre. The buildings have been retained as a private residence. In 1990 it was rebadged as Boronia Heights Secondary College. State School 1057 opened in a red-brick classic in Heily Street in 1872 one of the first Henry Bastow Schools to be built. Would you like to know more? They were successful and the Centre opened in 2004. The site was sold soon after ($813,500) and in 1995 became Ilim College. Would you like to know more? The Kalkallo School opened in the Donnybrook Scots Church in 1855, becoming State School 195 by 1873. From the 1930s to the 1950s enrolments surged, courtesy of Bendigo mines being in full operation. Nissen huts) were added and numbers peaked at 612 in 1956, before stabilising. In 1969, there was a formal separation of the secondary school from the tertiary College of Technology, and the 12-17 year old boys and girls were located solely at 505 Burwood Road. Declining enrolments led to the schools closure at the end of 1994. The property was sold ($45k), and became Proline Boring & Excavations, where today the school building has been largely obscured by industrial sheds. In 1893 it was renamed Doncaster East State School. It was renamed Jordanville High on 17 February and then Waverley High on 26 March. As for the Altona North Technical site, it is now home to several entities: a Bunnings outlet, a child care centre, and a Greek Orthodox Church/community centre. This led to a merger with Box Hill North Primary and Box Hill Primary at the end of 1993. The original wooden structure was replaced with a new building in 1929. To cope with the demand, in 1972 the Victorian Government demolished the existing buildings to make way for a three-storey modern structure. Enrolments had reached 756 by 1970, but eventually declined. Opened in 1926 as Richmond Domestic Arts School in Gleadell Street. State School 2938 opened on Lardner Road in 1889. In 1987 it was amalgamated with Maryvale High, Morwell High and Churchill Post Primary to form the multi-campus Kurnai Secondary College. This lasted until end 1994 when the senior campus (ex Monterey High) was closed and students consolidated on the Silvertop Crescent campus. Would you like to know more? The original building was a sub-divided shed, catering for 40 pupils. Declining enrolments led to a mega merger at the end of 1993. The site has been cleared and declared surplus by the Education Department. In the mid-1970s the school was renamed Rosebank Primary, but declining enrolments led to the schools closure in December 1992. The College was consolidated in the Sutcliff Street buildings of the former High School and the three primary schools were closed. The parking lot is big, accessible from both Schmidt and Lily Cache. Numbers surged to nearly 1,000 following the second World War, leading to the building of new schools in the district. The site was acquired by the Bendigo-based training organisation CVGT Australia, and became its Head Office in 2003. The opening of timber mills in the area saw student numbers begin to increase. Declining enrolments led to the schools closure at the end of 1996, and it became the founding campus of ISIK College (now Sirius College) in 1997. A new building was erected in 1966, but declining enrolments led to the schools closure at the end of 1997. However, declining enrolments led to its closure at the end of 1992 to make way for the Scotia Crescent housing estate. Enrolments reached 548 by 1969. It was closed again in 1993, this time permanently. It has been on-sold four times since then and remains a weed-infested eyesore, with no plaque or acknowledgement of its history. Jumbunna Central School (SS2927) opened in temporary accommodation in 1889 and was renamed Krowera in 1899. In 1969 the high school building was built and the 9th-12th grades were moved to their present building. Enrolments varied between 12 and 26 in the years leading up to the First World War. Myrtlebank Primary was closed, and the land sold in 1996. The remainder of the site became a housing estate. The school was closed in 1990 and sold in 1996. Most recently resold in November 2014, for $149,950. The TAFE separation on the late 1970s and early 1980s had a negative effect on the number of secondary students, which had fallen to 356 by 1981. However, changing demographics in the area led to a merger with Huntingdale Technical in 1990 to form the dual campus Clayton Huntingdale Secondary College. But the school is not forgotten, as the Victorian War Heritage Honour Roll was moved to Myall Hall, just across the road. Streamline your workflow with our best-in-class digital . Ironically, most of the remaining students found their way to Keilor Heights Primary for the 1994 school year. Fitzroy High School opened on Falconer Street in 1957, in the red brick building previously used for the secondary classes of Fitzroy North Central School. In 1990, Education Minister Joan Kirner visited the school to launch an Arts program. Lakeside Primary was closed and sold ($500k) to Melbournes Vietnamese Buddhist community and became the Linh Son Buddhist Temple. Altona North Technical School opened in temporary accommodation in 1959, moving to its permanent site on Millers Road (near Buntings Court) the following year. At least there is now a sign that acknowledges the former school. Protected by a Yarra City Council heritage overlay, the site became Collingwood English Language School. Although enrolments had been high for much of its history, they fell to 100 in 1996. Dwindling enrolments led to the schools closure in the end of 1993, having drawn the short straw with Eastwood Primary and Croydon West (now Ainslie Parklands) Primary. Therefore, Denison Primary was closed. The Fyans Street site has since been cleared. State School 3250 opened in temporary accommodation in 1895, moving into a new one-room building on Woomelang Road (now McClelland Street) in 1907. State School 523 opened as a Denominational School in 1861. Moorabbin City Council (now City of Glen Eira) purchased the site and converted it into the Moorleigh Community Village. Located in Aire Street, a new building was added in 1961. Some former students made their way to a new entity: Melbourne Girls College. But the original building had National Trust heritage classification and has been retained as the Black Flat Community Centre by the City of Monash. Enrolments had reached 622 by 1968. In the Black Friday bushfires of 1939 Woods Point including the school was virtually destroyed. The school was merged at the end of 1993 with East Oakleigh Primary to form Amsleigh Park Primary School. A commemorative plaque on the site was a 2009 community initiative. A push for the inclusion of girls led to the construction of Preston Girls Technical School on nearby Cramer Street in 1956. Dwindling enrolments led to a merger with Ruthven Primary at the end of 1993 with students consolidated at the Ruthven site. The school developed a rich tradition of scholarship, supplying students to both Melbourne High and MacRobertson Girls High over the years. The school moved to the Quantong Hall in 1903 and then a permanent site on Chequers Road in 1908. The former Golden Point Primary site became GPlace in 2008. RM 2A2WEKJ - Negative - Classroom, Catholic School, Glen Iris, Victoria, 1955, One of approximately 85,000 negatives from the Laurie Richards Collection taken by the Melbourne based Laurie Richards Studio between the 1950s -1970s. Would you like to know more? However, numbers fell below 12 by 1993 and the school was closed. Most of the site was sold ($2,101,000) to become a housing estate. The school was closed at the end of 1993 when merged with Woorinen North Primary and Woorinen South Primary to form Woorinen District Primary School. Box Hill Technical School opened on Dunloe Avenue, Mont Albert North, in 1943. State School 3325 opened on Carboor Road in 1899. Then in 1991 changing demographics in the area led to a merger with Thornbury High, with each becoming a campus of Thornbury Darebin Secondary College. The large single-room school with tiered seating was renamed Glen Waverley in 1921. Located in a rapidly growing area, enrolments reached 950 by 1968. However, declining enrolments led to the closure of the Albert Road campus late 1992, leaving the Graham Street campus to its own chequered future. Enrolments were high for most of its history, but doubled almost overnight when a nearby Housing Commission estate opened in 1967. It was renamed Noble Park when it moved into a new building on the corner of Thomas and Douglas Streets the following year. The school moved to Vernon Street in 1914 and additional rooms were added in the years that followed. The site was then acquired by nearby Mount Waverley Secondary College for its junior campus. In consequence, Neerim East Primary was closed. Declining enrolments led to a merger with Doveton Primary to form Doveton Heights Primary at the end of 1993. Warrawong Primary was sold ($80k) and most of the site became a housing estate. The Heathmont Primary site was cleared to make way for the Skyline Place housing estate. But the consolidation occurred at the Nangiloc site, and therefore Colignan was closed. By 1968 enrolments had reached 700, but fell to 220 by 1996. Would you like to know more? Class photographs or student reports are not usually found in these series as it appears most schools did not retain copies of these. A fire destroyed the building in 1935 and it was rebuilt the following year. The site was cleared and sold by the State Government in July 2019 ($9.709m). Would you like to know more? The former school was left to the elements for some years until the degree of vandalism led to most of the buildings being demolished. The school was rebuilt in 1874 and operated with small enrolments for about 100 years. After the school was closed in 1999 the Bonnie Doon Community Group campaigned for several years to retain the building as a Community Centre. State School 4820 opened in 1959, on a site bounded by Photinia Street, Chestnut Road and Matipo Street. Photos 3K Videos 1 . In a nice touch, KHS retained the original buildings, which were readily adapted to suit its business requirements. The High School was therefore closed, and eventually made way for the Portland Child and Family Complex. This only lasted until late 1993 when Rosehill Park Primary was closed and sold ($1,408,450) to make way for a housing estate. The building had been added to the Victorian Heritage Register in 1982 and was acquired by the Salvation Army following its closure ($425k). Late that year the school moved into its new building on the corner of Waverley and Huntingdale Roads. Information for parents and carers including learning and wellbeing resources, advice, study skills, a quick guide glossary, homework help, tools for learning remotely, support for additional needs and more. The site was sold to make way for a housing estate. In 1972 it became Ensay Group School, by absorbing Ensay North Primary, Reedy Flat Primary and Tambo Crossing Primary. Numbers had plummeted by the early 1990s though. Located near Deep Creek it was transferred to the state system as State School 46. During the 1960s enrolments stabilised at around 750. Would you like to know more? By 1972 enrolments had risen to 640, yet by 1996 had fallen to 163. State School 4260 opened in 1926 on the corner of Nicholson and Harding Streets, in a building of unusual Mediterranean design. A private residence has been built on the site. State School 1810 opened on Morrisons Road in 1876. State School 34 opened as a National School in 1853. Numbers sat at 33 in 1969 but continued to decline thereafter until the school was closed in September 1993. By 1969 there were only nine pupils, and the school was finally closed in 1997. Enrolments reached 53 in 1889, sat around 30 in 1970, and then continued to decline. Enrolments varied: 13 in 1933, and 37 in 1954. It was closed in 1994 and sold in 1996 to make way for new houses. Huntingdale High School opened in temporary accommodation in 1959, moving into its permanent site on Riley Street the following year. A substantial housing estate rose in its place, centred around Wattlebird Court and Murray Drive. State School 1691 opened in a one-room bluestone building in 1876, located on the Hamilton Highway near the Moorabool River. Enrolments peaked at 48 in 1914, but then declined, leading to the schools closure in 1922. Would you like to know more? Yet by 1992 enrolments had declined so markedly that the Nott Street school was merged with Graham Street at the end of the year and closed. OTC closed its Fiskville facility in 1969 and it passed into the hands of the County Fire Authority (CFA), which in 1971 opened its Training College in the grounds. Declining enrolments led to a merger with Poowong Consolidated School at the end of 1994. State School 3670 opened on Grand Ridge Road in 1910. The buildings were demolished a few years later, and the land became part of the Pentridge Village housing development, featuring College Boulevard and Governors Road. The Tottenham Technical site became the Tottenham English Language Centre, now a campus of the Western English Language School. The Kingsbury site was cleared and sold to make way for a housing estate. This meant consolidation on the Welshpool site, and closure for Port Welshpool Primary. Increasing enrolments led to the building of a new school further up Austin Street in 1956. Burnt down during the 1983 Ash Wednesday fires, it was rebuilt. The school closed in 1966 due to low numbers but was able to reopen the following year. The school was rebuilt in 1968, but declining enrolments led to its closure at the end of 1993. It became known as the Morwell Heights campus, catering for Years 7-10. The school was closed end 1993 and sold ($1,806,084) after an application for heritage listing was rejected.
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