John Berjew


John Berjew founded schools in North Adelaide, South Australia and Stanley, Tasmania.

History

John Berjew and his wife Catherine Berjew, née Fooks, emigrated from England aboard Waterloo, arriving in Adelaide in November 1840. Their first child, Jane, was born on board the ship.
In 1846 Mrs Berjew founded a Ladies' Seminary at their home on Kermode Street, North Adelaide.
Later that same year John Berjew, who had teaching experience at Milborne Port in England, founded the North Adelaide Academy in Kermode Street, adjacent to the Church of Christ site. He had the assistance, briefly, of one Gompertz BA, a Cambridge graduate, of whom further trace has been found.
In July 1849, as an outcome of a lawsuit brought on by one Highland, Berjew's furniture and effects were sold by auction. Berjew and his family departed for Melbourne, leaving his assistant C. W. May as head of the school. The school closed later that year and in 1850 May was appointed to St. Peter's College.
In Melbourne Berjew worked as a journalist with the Argus for seven years, and in April 1856 moved to the Circular Head region of Tasmania, living at Stanley, where he founded a school, which ran for 28 years. He supplemented his income with a variety of jobs, including secretary for the West Emu Bay Board of Works,
In 1884 they moved to Burnie. John John had a stroke in 1890 and was crippled by paralysis until he died on 19 March 1894. His body was interred at Wivenhoe General Cemetery, Burnie.
Catherine died on 14 May 1904 at her daughter's residence, Wilson Street, Burnie, at age 84. Her body was also interred at Wivenhoe General Cemetery.

Family

Charles Berjew, architect of Hermitage, Dorset, married Susan Hooke on 11 September 1839. Among their children were: