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CAPE, WILLIAM TIMOTHY (1806-1863), schoolmaster,
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was born at Walworth, Surrey, England, on 25 October 1806. His father,
William Cape, was a London bank manager who emigrated to Australia with his
family in 1821, and at the end of 1822 became master of a private school, the
Sydney Academy. On 1 April 1824 he was appointed master of the Sydney public
school in Castlereagh-street, but about two years later he resigned because Archdeacon
Scott (q.v.), who had become king's visitor to the schools, had "reduced the
school to a mere Parochial School of St James". (See Cape's account of his
experiences in Australia in H.R. of A., vol. XXII, p. 487). He went on
the land that had been granted him but, considering that he was entitled to
further grants, for the last 16 years of his life he was continually making
applications to the government about his grievance. He died in 1847 still
unsatisfied. His son, William Timothy Cape, was educated at the Merchant
Tailors' school, London, and on his arrival in Australia became an assistant
master at his father's school. Though barely 20 years of age he was made
headmaster of the Sydney public school when his father resigned. He had already
made a reputation as a teacher and shortly afterwards, when a number of public
school teachers from the country were brought into Sydney for training, Cape was
given charge of them as he was considered the only qualified person available.
In 1829 he opened a private school in King-street, Sydney, and when the Sydney
College was founded in 1835 he transferred his own pupils to it on being
appointed headmaster. For seven years he was a most successful headmaster; his
distinguished pupils included Sir John
Robertson (q.v.), William
Forster (q.v.), William Bede
Dalley (q.v.), Sir James
Martin (q.v.), and T. A.
Browne (q.v.), and the number of boys was approaching 300 when Cape came
into conflict with the trustees and resigned at the end of 1841. This was
disastrous for the school, for though the number of pupils kept up for some
time, between 1843 and 1847 there was a falling off from 283 to 62. The colony
was passing through bad times, but it is clear that the trustees had not been
able to find a successor who could approach Cape in personality and knowledge.
He had in the meantime opened a private school at Paddington which was carried
on until 1856 when he retired. In 1859 he was elected a member of the
legislative assembly for Wollombi, and interested himself in the educational
life of the colony as a commissioner of national education, a fellow of St
Paul's College of the university of Sydney, and in connexion with the Sydney
School of Arts. He visited England in 1855 and was again in England from 1860 to
1863. He died at London on 14 June 1863. He married and left descendants; a
grandson, Captain C. S. Cape, was awarded the D.S.O. at the Boer war and in 1933
was a well-known pastoralist and solicitor at Sydney.
Cape was a man of liberal views, a strict disciplinarian, a consistent
encourager of the good student, and an invariably just ruler. He gave his boys
the sound classical education of his time, but he gave them more than that and
more than they knew, and won the admiration and respect of everyone who came in
contact with him. A tablet to his memory was placed in St Andrew's cathedral by
his former pupils.
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