In 1868,
James Alipius Goold, the founding
Roman Catholic Bishop and
Archbishop of Melbourne, Australia, asked the Christian Brothers, as well as other orders, to establish schools in
Victoria, Australia. Treacy was sent as leader of the Christian Brothers, together with three confrères
Dominic Fursey Bodkin,
John Barnabas Lynch and
Patrick James Nolan, who arrived in Melbourne in the
Donald McKay in November 1868 to find the Catholic school system receiving some state aid, but in a parlous condition under the control of local parish priests. Treacy opened a primary school in
Lonsdale Street, Melbourne in 1869. Undaunted by lack of money, Treacy initiated a colony-wide campaign to finance land and buildings. With generous help from colonists of all creeds,
Parade College was erected in Victoria Parade on
Eastern Hill. The school opened in January 1871, and its final cost was about £12,000. In 1872, the Victorian colonial government passed the
Education Act 1872 (Vic), which set up a system of 'free, compulsory and secular' education in Victoria, controlled by an Education Department. The Catholic Church, unlike other Australian churches, determined to retain and pay for its own comprehensive alternative system of education. Having observed the deplorable state of diocesan schools during his collecting tours, Treacy advocated to the
Catholic Education Committee a rise in teachers' salaries and a training college. State aid was withdrawn from church schools around 1880. Treacy offered to train as teachers senior boys selected from his own system. There were no funds for a teachers' college but his further offer to inspect metropolitan schools was accepted. Treacy's report on the condition of the system resulted in up-to-date equipment, and under him the Brothers organised a training scheme for their aspirants. and took over the running of
St Patrick's College, Ballarat in 1893. By 1900, when Treacy retired after thirty years as a provincial superior, he had established 27 schools in the principal cities of Australia, and one in
New Zealand. ==Teacher training==