Sydney Leonard BUCKLEY

BUCKLEY, Sydney Leonard

Service Numbers: Not yet discovered
Enlisted: 3 January 1917
Last Rank: Not yet discovered
Last Unit: Australian Army Chaplains' Department
Born: Rutherglen, Victoria, Australia, 8 September 1882
Home Town: Moonee Ponds, Moonee Valley, Victoria
Schooling: Hawthorn College, Victoria, Australia
Occupation: Church of England Clergyman
Died: 9 March 1964, aged 81 years, cause of death not yet discovered, place of death not yet discovered
Cemetery: Not yet discovered
Memorials:
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World War 1 Service

3 Jan 1917: Enlisted
19 Feb 1917: Involvement Australian Army Chaplains' Department, --- :embarkation_roll: roll_number: '1' embarkation_place: Melbourne embarkation_ship: HMAT Ballarat embarkation_ship_number: A70 public_note: ''
19 Feb 1917: Embarked Australian Army Chaplains' Department, HMAT Ballarat, Melbourne

Established Ivanhoe Church of England Boys Grammar School

IVANHOE Grammar School will enter upon one of the Most important stages in its history this year, for the school will celebrate the
twenty -fifth anniversary of its establishment. In the Rev. S. L. Buckley, the founder of the school, Ivanhoe Grammar boys have always found an inspiring head master and leader; one who understands their youthful ways and is quick to recognise ability and help young ambitions. Twenty-flve years ago on February 13 next, Mr. Buckley established the Ivanhoe Church of England Boys' Grammar School in the Ivanhoe parish Hall. He shortly afterwards left Melbourne , for Europe as chaplain to the 21st Battalion A.l.F. (a Victorian regiment), and later transferred to the 49th Battalion from Queensland. His introduction to the war occurred while sailing in the Ballarat, which was torpedoed off Lands End by a German submarine. Two years later Mr. Buckley returned, and in 1920 purchased the 24-acre site on which the school now stands.. Since then the school has grown' up to 300 pupils. Accommodation will be taxed to the limit this year, and Mr. Buckley has therefore set out to commemorate the school's silver jubilee by adding to the school's buildings and increasing facilities. A fund has already been established. Ivanhoe is unique among public schools in that it provides a complete agricultural course for 50 boys.

The Age Tuesday 30 January 1940 page 4

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Biography contributed by Faithe Jones

Sydney Leonard Buckley was born at Rutherglen in north-eastern Victoria on September 8, 1882. He was the fourth son of a family of six boys and four girls. On completing his schooling at Hawthorn College, he returned to Rutherglen where he joined the staff of the lo- cal branch of the State Savings Bank as its first junior clerk at a salary of £20 per annum. It was during his employment with the Bank in Melbourne that Buckley first became interested in social work. Ultimately he decided he would seek to enter the Ministry of the Anglican Church. After taking his Arts Degree, Buckley set to work to obtain his Licentiate of Theology. He took his Diploma in 1910 and was ordained at St Paul's Cathedral, Melbourne, in the same year. Buckley began his ministry in 1910 as curate of St Thomas's Church, Essendon. He was later sent to Ivanhoe, where he commenced the St James Grammar School in 1915. It became the institution that we know, 99 years later, as Ivanhoe Grammar School. In an article from Hoe, published by the Old Ivanhoe Grammarians in 1964, a special article paid tribute to Buckley’s 33 years as Headmaster, over 49 years of service at Ivanhoe. “Some two thousand boys passed through his hands.”
Sydney Buckley enlisted in the First AIF in 1917, serving as Chaplain on the troopship Ballarat, and with the 66th, 49th and 21st Battalions. “On his return, in 1919, he decided with the approval of the Archbishop of Melbourne, to devote himself entirely to the school and it was due to his tremendous energy and sense of dedication that its present beautiful property was acquired and the school itself became firmly established as a leading secondary school for boys.” In 1927, he married Sister Evelyn Flett, matron of the boarding house. Their daughter Mary was born. Hoe remarked: “Mr Buckley was a man of vision and of the highest integrity. As a schoolmaster, he was interested primarily in the development of character and the ideal of service to the community. “Indeed his inspiration was communicated to his boys by precept and ex- ample, right from the early days; this was his dedicated life’s work ...” Sydney Buckley, and some of his brothers, were members of the Eagle-mont Lodge, which met at the Ivalda Masonic Temple. There were plans to form an Ivanhoe Grammarians Lodge in 1939, but the outbreak of World War II interrupted. The consecration of Ivanhoe Grammarians Lodge took place on Tuesday night, July 2, 1946, at Ivalda. Up to 150 Masons attended on that night. Buckley’s brother, Harry, was our first Master. ‘Cobber’ (Sydney) was Chaplain for many years. His name consistently appears as proposer or seconder for many of the Lodge’s candidates in those early years. The editorial writer of The Ivanarian magazine in 1947, writing about Cobber’s imminent retirement, said it this way: “Even the youngest amongst us have been unable to help liking the informal kindly advances of the bronzed old warrior who patted them on the head at morning assembly or during his frequent visits to the Prep. playground. “As the years pass, that liking grows into a tremendous respect for a truly great man. It is said that willingness to serve is a mark of true greatness. “If this is so, then our Head must be ranked among the greatest, for truly has he served God and his country. “There are few fields of national service greater than educating its youth, and countless boys can testify to the willing service, help and friendship tendered to them by their Headmaster.” Bro. Sydney Buckley passed to the Grand Lodge Above on March 9, 1964.

http://documents.mx/documents/ivanhoe-grammarians-lodge-newsletter-feb-2014.html

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