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Born in
Kingston, Jamaica, West Indies eldest son of Joseph Crowther and Mary
née
Bebb. The family migrated to Melbourne in 1856 and went to Horsham the
following year; his father was a teacher-headmaster in country Victoria
(1858-77). After matriculating at Wesley College (1872) and later
graduating at Melbourne University (B.A., 1876; LL.B., 1878;
M.A., 1879; LL.D., 1884), Crowther became master of the
matriculation form at Hawthorn Grammar School (1879-81). On the
success of the matriculation results gained at Hawthorn, he founded Brighton Grammar School
on 14 February 1882 in a rented former coach house in New Street. Just
eight students were enrolled on the first day; by the
time of his death, some two thousand boys had passed under his watchful eye
including (Sir) Stanley Argyle (1867-1940), (Sir) Harold Clapp (1875-1952),
(Sir) Trent Champion de Crespingy (1882-1952), John Duigan (1882-1951) and
Albert 'The Great' Thurgood (q.v.). Many remembered an effortless strict
disciplinarian well-liked by all who rarely used the cane rather preferring
“long multiplication sums that had to be proved by subtraction”. An ardent
supporter of private schools, Crowther was a foundation member of the
(Incorporated) Association of Secondary Teachers of Victoria with
Otto
Krome (q.v.) formed in 1904 to combat moves by the government to
establish high schools and technical colleges that threatened the very
existence of many private schools. He was critical of Frank Tate’s
(Box Hill Cemetery) ‘state socialist’ agenda arguing against the
centralisation and rigidity of a state education system; with the passing of
the Education Law Further Amendment Act (1910) some 337 private
schools eventually closed which existed between 1885 and 1910. Locally, Crowther was
for over thirty years churchwarden of St. Andrew’s and represented the
church on the Brighton General Cemetery Trust (1902-18). He died of
coronary vascular disease on 6 November 1918 aged 64 years old. An old boy,
William McClelland (q.v.), remembered Crowther’s “great intellectual
gifts…under that august exterior there dwelt a kindly, patient, lovable
personality, often stern but always just”. |

(above) Dr. George
Crowther
(Reproduced with kind permission of
Brighton
Grammar School)

(above) Monumental
Headstone (enlarge
image) |
|
Source:
ADB Volume 8 1891-1939 (Cl-Gib).
“The Brighton Grammarian”, December 1918 &
May 1919.
Hall, H., Zachariah, H., & James, G.,
“Meliora Sequamur. Brighton Grammar School 1882-1982” (1983).
Biographical Sketch prepared by Mr Harry
Zachariah. |
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