Notes from our past: 1944 to 1953
- AWEA lost funding and the relationship with Auckland University after the passing of the Adult Education Act 1947. The ASB remained loyal paying AWEA a small annual grant which kept it alive.
- AWEA's early home in Symonds St, the old Grammar School building, was destroyed by fire in 1949.
- AWEA persisted in trying to stimulate 'serious intellectual study, particularly in political and social affairs, so that our students may become better citizens and more able to understand and to deal with the grave problem that a man as a social being is called upon to face in the atomic age.' Roy Shuker.
Click on the photos to enlarge
![ASB Queen St 1953 [Auckland War Memorial Museum Archives]](http://awea.org.nz/sites/awea.org.nz/files/styles/collageformatter/public/collageformatter/images/centenary/258x330_symlink_-P8114-659110.jpg?itok=NR3l7beD)
![It was considered important to try to educate people about the implications of entering a nuclear age. [New York Times Magazine, August 1945]](http://awea.org.nz/sites/awea.org.nz/files/styles/collageformatter/public/collageformatter/images/centenary/240x198_symlink_1945-Atomic-Age-NYT.jpg?itok=CFsSjrC_)
![The old Grammar School building, bulit in the 1880s was an early home to AWEA [Auckland City heritage photo - 995.1102 G73 S98g]](http://awea.org.nz/sites/awea.org.nz/files/styles/collageformatter/public/collageformatter/images/centenary/240x132_symlink_Grammar%20school%201880s.jpg?itok=dfid4Vmk)
