Bindoon

A rural town, to the north of Perth, in the Shire of Chittering, which has grown into a tourist destination. Servicing a predominantly cattle, sheep and fruit growing area, it was one of the first areas outside of Perth to be settled. The village has a number of picturesque stone buildings and a museum filled with mainly agricultural machinery.

Events

Bindoon annually hosts the Bindoon and Districts Agricultural Show.

The Flavours of Chittering is a one-day food and wine festival which celebrates the shire's unspoilt valley and its wonderful produce.

Catholic Agricultural College Bindoon is a Year 7 to 12, co-educational College for day and residential students. It is set on a 3300 hectare working farm 10 km from the township of Bindoon

The majority of training and selection for the Australian Special Air Service Regiment takes place at Bindoon. Some of the facilities include live-firing ranges, the Brigade Special Training Facilities and full scale Boeing 747 mockup to simulate the storming of an airliner.

The name Bindoon is thought to be Aboriginal in origin and is thought to mean "place where the yams grow". The name has been in use in the area since 1843 when an early settler, William Brockman, named the property he had surveyed as Bindoon. The townsite was gazetted in 1953.

Bindoon Boys Town

The property on which the Catholic Agricultural College stands was gifted to the Christian Brothers in the 1930s by a wealthy landowner and widow, Mrs Catherine Musk, for the purpose of establishing a farm school for orphaned and socially disadvantaged boys. Construction of the college started in 1940, with the official opening in 1941.

After World War II, Bindoon became home for many migrant boys from the United Kingdom and Malta. Its principal, Brother Francis Paul Keaney, set about erecting his own monument by embarking on the near impossible task of completing five large granite buildings at Bindoon using child labour. His unpaid hungry, fearful labour force were mostly child migrant boys, some as young as 10, who were also expected to clear, fence and establish vineyards and orchards on what was undeveloped farmland.


View Larger Map

Where is it?

84 km north of Perth; 19 km east of Gingin; 48 km north east of Yanchep, on the Great Northern Highway within the Shire of Chittering, and on route to New Norcia.


To achieve his vision, he inflicted a manic and brutal regime of slave labour on the boys under his care. They were relentlessly driven from dawn to dusk in a dangerous work environment where the risk of accident was a reality. With their bare hands they cleared the land, laid the foundations and erected the most magnificent structures for Keaney and the Christian Brothers Order.

Those unable to cope with the back-breaking labour were flogged, sometimes until their bones were fractured. Education was largely denied these boys, as was an adequate diet and protective clothing. Christian love and care was distinguished not by its presence but by its absence.

The complex, known as Bindoon Boys Town, was renamed Keaney College, after its tyrannical overseer upon his death in 1954. The name was changed again after a statue of Keaney in front of the college was beheaded when accusations of institutionalized cruelty to native and migrant children were brought to the public's attention. Many of the buildings they built and lived in are now abandoned and derelictThe boys were put to work on the Christian Brothers building projects in what many now see as enforced child slave labour.

In 1994, the Parliament of Western Australia was presented a petition with 30,000 signatures which demanded an inquiry into the emotional, sexual and physical assault that took place in Bindoon. Other institutions run by the Congregation of Christian Brothers in Castledare, Clontarf and Tardun were also named in the petition. The child abuse that took place at Bindoon at the hands of Keaney and the Christian Brothers is recounted in the film Oranges and Sunshine.

History of Bindoon

As early as 1836 the Chittering valley had been explored by George Fletcher Moore who returned and settled in the district in 1841.

The first European settler in the area named his property (the ruins of the original homestead can still be seen north of the town - ask at the Chittering Tourist Promotion Centre or at the Bindoon Hotel for directions) Bindoon which is thought to be the local Aboriginal word for 'a place where yams grow'.

The early pioneers eked a simple living from the land by growing fruit and vegetables and raising a few head of cattle and sheep. There was no real development of the area and transportation between Bindoon and Perth was slow and unreliable.

The development of the village was so slow that even by the 1950s there was really nothing more than a post office, garage and general store. Bindoon's proximity to Perth and its location en route between Perth and New Norcia have ensured that in recent times the district has seen a dramatic expansion of tourism.

Design by W3Layouts | Content © 2013 Phoenix Group Co. | Sales: phone 1300 753 517, email: [email protected]