Clackline School

A monument commemorating British colonisation was erected in 1929, and remains in use as a stopping point on the Kep Track.

[12] In 1915 the school's teachers and children, with the local progress association, organised a charity social event.

Gifts sold to benefit the Western Australia Day Fund for the sick and wounded, with £22 1s 8d raised.

[13] Approximately 35 students attended Clackline School in 1920, which had gardens and wheat plots for the children to enjoy.

Despite unfavourable weather, they successfully held sports competitions throughout the day, with prizes awarded, followed by entertainment in the evening, attended by children and adults in the public hall.

[19] On 12 December 1942, the Clackline School children participated in the dedication and consecration of the Avro Anson Memorial, which commemorates four Royal Australian Air Force airmen killed nearby earlier that year.

The monument features a sculpture of a lion, with a plaque reading:[23] ERECTED by the PUPILS of CLACKLINE to COMMEMORATE the CENTENARY of the

The Clackline School lion monument
Plaque on the lion monument