Digging Around My Family Tree
A Sobraon BoyĀ
George Joseph Chandler (1886-1953)
Searching for George Chandler on Ancestry I came across a conviction for delinquent behaviour in 1900 when he was 13 years old. The warrant states,Ā āHe is habitually wandering about the streets in no ostensible lawful occupationā.Ā
The record goes on to say Georgeās character isĀ āBadā and that he has previously been before the magistrate and given a reprimand.Ā It seems George was not attending school, engaging in anti-social activities with questionable company at all hours of the day and night.
What I didnāt understand was the title of thisĀ document;Ā āEntrance Books for the Vernon and the Sobraon, 1867-1911ā³.
It turns out, before NSW had reform schools, wayward boys were removed from their families, housed on Nautical School Ships and taught elementary educational, nautical and industrial skills in an effort to turn them into worthy citizens.Ā
George Chandler was sent to the NSS Sobraon.
For 24 years, from 1866-1891, the Aberdeen built clipper shipĀ āSobraonā brought passengers from England to Australia in comfort and speed. But in 1891 sheĀ was bought by the NSW government and permanently moored near Cockatoo Island in Sydney Harbour. For the next twenty years theĀ āSobraonā would be a floating reformatory for delinquent boys.
TheĀ āSobraonā replaced theĀ āVernonā and with itās accommodation for more than 200 boys had more than three times the capacity of theĀ āVernonā. Over its twenty year life as a Nautical School Ship 4000 boys wereĀ trained on the āSobraonā. Sobraon boys remained until they received sufficient skills to be apprenticed, join the navy or return to their families.
From the Entrance Book,Ā George ChandlerĀ sounds like a hard case but after reading further almost all the boys had the identical description:Ā
āHe is habitually wandering about the streets in no ostensible lawful occupationā
It seems to have been the particular wording used by police to encourage a magistrate to remove a troublesome boy from the streets. As a matter of fact, when Georgeās younger brother, Reginald, was also sent to theĀ āSobraonā his description was exactly the same.
The educational program provided aboard the āSobraonā achieved impressive outcomes, particularly considering the poor level of literacy many of the boys brought with them. ThereĀ is little doubt they had opportunities on theĀ āSobraonā that they couldnātĀ get in their home environment even considering class sizes of 60 or 70 students was the norm.
George Chandlerās life was notĀ turned around unequivocally by his time on the āSobraonā. He experienced many more ups and downs through the years:
George left the āSobraonā to beĀ apprenticed as a farm labourer to Michael Hanrahan at Robertson in the NSW southern Highlands.
In 1904, at 17 years old, he was returned to theĀ āSabraonā for absconding from his employer.
In 1912 George married Flora Westlake (a young widow with a 9 year old son). I can find no evidence George and Flora had children of their own.
George and Flora lived in Erskinville and George worked as a wharf labourer.
Police warrants were issued for Georgeās arrest in 1921 for violent conduct and malicious damage in their home, andĀ on two occasionsĀ in 1922 for wife desertion.
In 1943 George was living without Flora in Glebe.
George Chandler died on 9 May 1953 at the age of 66. I can't know whether being a Sobraon boy made his life better or worse but I thank him for introducing me to a chapter of NSW education history that I had not previously known.









