The cache across the road from St Joseph’s School, Mount Isa, overlooking the Penola Centre.
Mary MacKillop was born in Melbourne in 1842. When she was in Penola she met Julian Tenison Woods and together they opened the first St Joseph's School in 1866.
Mary MacKillop and Julian Tenison Woods founded the Sisters of St Joseph to continue this work. Over the many following years, the number of Sisters grew as did their schools. Schools were opened as the needs arose: in country towns, mining towns, cities. The Sisters also became involved in other areas of need including setting up a refuge for women in need and orphanages for children, visiting prisons and working with the sick.
Queensland Story…
Mary MacKillop and five other Sisters of St Joseph arrived in Queensland on 31 December, 1869, at the invitation of James Quinn, first Catholic bishop of Brisbane and founder of the Catholic Education system in Queensland.
The Sisters offered Catholic education to the children of the working class in cities and isolated settlements according to the Woods-MacKillop system of parish-based schools.
During the next ten years the Sisters established fourteen schools, an orphanage at Mackay and were teaching about half of the total number of children attending Catholic schools in the diocese. Seventy-nine Sisters had worked in the colony and of these over sixty had joined the Sisterhood in Queensland.
These ten years, however, were marred by a controversy with Bishop Quinn over the Sisters’ style of government which placed the responsibility for the internal administration of the Sisterhood with the Sisters themselves rather than with the bishop of the diocese. This controversy culminated with Bishop Quinn asking them to leave his diocese. Although many of the laity petitioned the bishop to allow the Sisters to remain, the bishop refused, and in mid-July 1880 the last community of Josephites left the diocese of Brisbane.
Twenty years later the Josephites would return. The Sisters of St Joseph returned to Queensland in 1900, not to Brisbane, but to a country town, Clermont.
It was not until 1915 that the Sisters were invited to return to the Archdiocese of Brisbane, and in 1916 they opened Catholic schools at Nundah, a working class suburb of Brisbane.
Mount Isa…
The original St. Joseph's School, staffed by the Sisters of St. Joseph, opened in Mount Isa in 1932. After humble beginnings the school became well established in Railway Avenue and provided quality primary education until 1984.
In 1985 St. Joseph's School moved to its present site on Twenty-Third Avenue. These buildings were previously San Jose College - a Secondary School for girls established in 1964, under the administration of the Sisters of St. Joseph.
Since the establishment of the present St. Joseph's School, the association with the Sisters of St. Joseph continued with the Principal being a Josephite, until 1999 when the first lay principal was appointed. The Penola Centre is named after the first school Mary establiched in Penola, South Australia.
St. Joseph's School has the traditions, values, policies, and high standards of two fine schools in its historical background and is steeped in the spirituality of Mary MacKillop, the first Sister of St. Joseph.
Mary MacKillop…
Mary MacKilop's famous saying was "Never see a need without doing something about it"
Well..... there was a need, a geochache in her honour, and something has been done about it!
This is one of many caches placed in significant locations of her story.
Mary died on August 8th, 1909.
She was declared Australia’s first Saint in 2012.