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Wednesday, February 5, 2025

Ghosts, Gough and other famous Telopeans

Telopea Park School is celebrating its 100th year โ€“ minus the nine days when it was a temporary hospital in 1927 โ€“ and there are some scintillating ghost stories and Gough stories to tell.

Few people would know that the school was a hospital for nine days during the opening of Old Parliament House and, sadly, was put to use when an ill-fated flying formation saw a plane nose-dive into the ground. 

Flying officer Francis Ewen was rushed to Telopea Park School and although he died later at Acton, his ghost is said to frequent room number 22 at the school, where students say a door swings open and a strange smell is in the air.

Former head of history and English, Esther Davies, says the childrenโ€™s story was that the pilot died in what was room 22, โ€œmy roomโ€.

โ€œThe children would say his ghost is there and you can tell because the door swings open and thereโ€™s this strange smell,โ€ Esther says. โ€œThe door swings open because thereโ€™s a cross draft from the windows, the strange smell, I say thatโ€™s your sneakers.โ€

Esther knows the school well, having worked at the school for 12 years, 36 years ago, and is archivist of the schoolโ€™s historic records, which include 55 illustrious โ€œTelopeansโ€.

None more famous than the late former Prime Minister, Gough Whitlam, who attended the schoolโ€™s 75th anniversary and when Esther told her what subject she taught, he replied, โ€œI like history, after all, I made so much of itโ€.

โ€œPeople often ask why did Whitlam go for four years to Telopea and then Boys Grammar,โ€ Esther says. โ€œHis exact words to me were, โ€˜I was sent down, my dear, the headmaster thought I was impertinent. The teachers couldnโ€™t manage meโ€™.  People who knew him told me he could be very willful when he was young.โ€

Former Telopea Park School staff: Esther Davies, Kerrie Blain (ex-principal) and Michele McLoughlin (ex-deputy principal). Photo: Georgia Curry.

So fond was Whitlam of his time at Telopea Park School that in his final years, he kept a photo of himself as a student at Telopea by his bedside at a nursing home.

โ€œI got a signed copy of [Whitlamโ€™s biography) His Time,โ€ Esther says, โ€œand the author wrote โ€œTelopea Park School, the making of a manโ€, and he wrote: โ€˜I concurโ€™. 

There are too many stories to recount from Telopeaโ€™s past, but itโ€™s worth mentioning that Skywhale creator, artist Patricia Piccinini, attended Telopea (and later studied accountancy, of all things, at ANU). Incidentally, the ANU was originally founded at Telopea.

Another interesting tidbit, the schoolโ€™s very first principal, Cecil Henry, fought against the French in World War I, a few years before leading the French-Australian School of Canberra, Telopea Park School/Lycรฉe Franco-Australien de Canberra.

The building itself, however, represents the capitalโ€™s actual โ€œbricks and mortarโ€ beginnings. It was designed by government architect, John Smith Murdoch, who later designed Old Parliament House in 1927. Telopea Park School was the very first building to test the architectโ€™s skill.

โ€œWhat unites every one of us is the building and I have great affection for it,โ€ Esther says. โ€œItโ€™s a building thatโ€™s built as a statement of โ€˜here we are, weโ€™re going to stay and the capitalโ€™s startingโ€™. Itโ€™s designed by a man who never married, never had children, so in some ways itโ€™s not a childโ€™s place.โ€

Telopea Park School will officially mark its centenary on 11 September 2023.

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