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W. H. Burford & Sons

W. H. Burford and Sons was a soap and candle-making business founded in Adelaide in 1840 by William Henville Burford (1807–1895), an English butcher who arrived in the new colony in 1838. It was one of the earliest soapmakers in Australia, and up to the 1960s when it closed, the oldest. In 1878 he took his two sons Benjamin and William into partnership as W. H. Burford & Sons.[1] Its expansion, (in the latter part of the 19th century and early part of the 20th century, at the hands of son William Burford) accompanied by a number of takeovers, made it the dominant soap manufacturer in South Australia and Western Australia. Its founders were noted public figures in the young city of Adelaide.

W. H. Burford and Sons was in turn taken over by J. Kitchen & Sons, who became Lever & Kitchen, part of the British Lever Brothers empire, which in 1930 merged with Dutch Margarine Unie to form the multi-national Unilever.

W. H. Burford and Sons

Factories

W. H. Burford's first factory was on the corner of Grenfell Street and East Terrace, later the site of an Adelaide Electric Supply Company's building, (AESC became the Electricity Trust of S.A. – ETSA – in 1946) and in 1989, the Tandanya National Aboriginal Cultural Institute.[citation needed]

Initially it was little more than a tin shed in a vacant field. During one of the recessions that faced the colony, Burford was forced to sell the land then lease it back to keep the business running.[citation needed]

The second factory, opened in 1900 at Sturt Street, previously owned by competitor Tidmarsh & Co,[2] occupied 4 acres of floor space ( 19,000 sq yards / 16,000m2 / 1.6 hectares ) and employed over 200 men. Its most salient feature was the brick chimney – 152 ft 4in (46.5m) in height and a flue diameter of 4 ft (1.2m), and still standing (though no longer used). The boiler room housed four boilers, one of which was 27 ft long and 7 ft 6in in diameter (8.2m x 2.3m) and the largest to have been built in South Australia. The still-room had six large stills: four for distillation of stearine and two for glycerine. The building was organised so that manufacture started on the top floor and progressed by chutes or conveyors to the second floor for wrapping and packaging, thence to the ground floor, all with a minimum of handling.[3] The smell emanating from the Sturt Street factory, despite installation of deep drainage, was the source of much complaint from neighbours.[4]

In 1887 Burfords took over Apollo Soap Ltd of Adam Street, Hindmarsh. The factory, which continued to be called the "Apollo Works", was the site of work mostly peripheral to the core business of soap and candle making, such as rendering down of animal fats and grinding of corn, bone, starch and blacking, and the manufacture of wooden packing crates. In 1888 they took over Frearson's Printing Works, whose factory was also on Adam Street.[1] These premises were destroyed by fire on 25 December 1907.[5]

In February 1919 the Sturt Street premises were destroyed by fire.[6] Rather than rebuild in the city, a new factory was set up in Dry Creek near the railway station where there had once been a smelter.[7] Manufacture resumed in 1922. Much was made at the time of a model suburb to serve employees of the soap works and the nearby abattoirs. "Burford Garden Suburb" as it was named, was designed by W. J. Earle, the town planner behind Cadbury's model town at Claremont, Tasmania.[8] The Dry Creek lots were snapped up immediately they were offered for sale.[9] The greater part of the Sturt Street property was sold around the same time.[10] "Burford Gardens" as the name of a suburb has since vanished, though its streets remain: Flame Avenue, Gum Avenue, Wattle Avenue, Grevillea Avenue and Bushwood Avenue, all in what is now known as Dry Creek.[9]

In Western Australia, the Victoria Park factory opened in 1897. After taking over the Swan Soap and Candle Company Ltd., the Rocky Bay factory opened in 1899,[11] and Kalgoorlie factories opened later.

In 1924 Burford's merged with rival soap makers J. Kitchen and Sons of Melbourne and Lever Brothers of Sydney as Australian Producers Co-Partnership Ltd. In 1928 Kitchen's Fremantle factory was destroyed by fire, and Burford's was able to make up the shortfall by manufacturing to Kitchen specifications, the product being wrapped, packed and distributed by the Kitchen factory. This opened the way for further rationalization, and by 1937 all Burford factories were under the control of J Kitchen & Sons. In 1932 Associated Producers became Associated Enterprises Pty Ltd, renamed Lever Associated Enterprises Pty Ltd in 1944. By 1948 production by Burfords in Adelaide had been wound down and in 1957 Unilever (Australia) bought out W. H. Burford & Sons.[1]

Products

Products manufactured during the history of W. H. Burford & Sons include:

  • Soaps: "Burford's Prize No 1" soap, "Signal" soap, mottled soap, yellow soap, transparent soap, White Naptha soap, Apollo laundry soap in various sized bars, Borax soap, "Sayso" carbolic family soap, "Snowflakes" extract of soap powder, Dr Bayley's medicated soap, sulphur soap, White Dove soap, and kerosene soap (foliage spray for controlling insects)
  • "Exhibition" candles, carriage candles, bedroom candles, piano candles
  • "Brunswick" stove blacking
  • "Excelsior" blacklead
  • Linoleum polish ("Roylat" brand in Western Australia)
  • Boot polish, boot cream
  • "Swansdown" starch
  • Soda crystals
  • Magic Egg Preserver (waterglass)
  • "Southern Sky" washing blue
  • Snow-white starch
  • Lubricating oils[12]
  • Greases
  • Bone manure

Public nuisance

When Burford's soapworks and Peacock's tannery were founded on Grenfell Street, there were no residences nearby; nothing but virgin bushland. But as the population grew nearby (and to some extent attracted by the businesses), the number of complaints about smells grew until, in 1866, a case was brought against Burford in the Supreme Court. The jury appeared to be convinced by the argument that the complainants had chosen to build knowing what trades were carried on there so had no right to complain, and found for the defendant.[13]

The Council had other plans. In 1919 it offered Burfords £12,000 as an incentive to move out of the city altogether. The offer was turned down, so the Council amended the Health Act to prohibit such industries,[14] then the fire engulfed the factory[6] and the Dry Creek facility moved a big step towards reality.

Fires

In 1885 a fire which started in a timber yard in Grenfell Street and East Terrace spread to Burford's factory, which was destroyed. This led to the establishment of a factory in Sturt Street.[15]

On 25 December 1907, the factory on Adam Street, Hindmarsh, "The Apollo Works" was destroyed in one of the greatest fires in Adelaide's history, along with neighbouring skin dealers Wilcox and Co. in Torrens Street (now named River Street). The nearby factory of G. H. Michell & Sons and David Reid's tannery suffered lesser damage.[16]

In 1919 the works bounded by Sturt, Gilbert, Norman and Russell Streets in the city were destroyed by fire[6] and a new factory was then set up in Dry Creek; the office area was rebuilt and the rest sold.

Competitors

Other early soap and candle makers of South Australia included:

  • J. H. M. Hawkes
  • J. Tidmarsh & Co.
  • Walker Brothers
  • Apollo Soap and Candle factory at Adams Street, Hindmarsh. (est. 1881) was taken over by W. H. Burford.
  • Bunyip Soaps (1898 – ca.1955) had a factory at Winwood Street, Southwark,[17] and became Crompton Bunyip Soaps Ltd. (c. 1955 – c. 1991) It was still trading in 1962 with offices at 49 Flinders Street, Adelaide, and factory at Winwood St, Thebarton.[18]

The other major Australian soap manufacturer was J. Kitchen & Sons of Melbourne, which dominated the Eastern States much as Burfords had dominated South and Western Australia. Lever Brothers of England had a factory in Sydney and one in Wellington, New Zealand.

Merger and Acquisition

In 1924, Lever and Kitchen and W. H. Burford & Sons formed Australian Producers Partnership Pty Ltd. Burford ordinary shares were held by Lever and Kitchen; around 1962 after a few more takeovers the parent company was renamed Unilever.[19] The Burford's factory was still running profitably in the mid-50s, and the factory at Dry Creek was still listed as such in 1962; the office at 83 Sturt Street still bore the Burford's name, alongside that of its nominal owner J. Kitchen & Sons Ltd, Rexona Pty. Ltd. and Lever Brothers Pty. Ltd.[18]


William Burford

 
William Henry Burford 1893
 
1892 portrait in oil of William Burford by his son, artist Frederick Rumsey Burford (1870–1928)

William Burford (11 December 1845 – 6 March 1925) was born in a cottage at 154 Grenfell Street, Adelaide,[20] adjacent to his father's factory.

He was educated first at the Church of England Grammar School in Pulteney Street then, with brother Benjamin, at J. L. Young's Adelaide Educational Institution in Stephens Place. Leaving school, he joined his father's business. In 1878 he and his brother Benjamin were taken into partnership, but after about eight years the latter withdrew from the enterprise.[15]

In 1868, while on holiday in New Zealand, William visited a soap works which boiled soap using steam rather than fire. On his return to Adelaide he wasted no time in getting his father to adopt this method.[8]

He was chairman of directors of the company from 1895 until his death, in his Belair home (on Sheoak Road) called "Birralee". When he took the reins, the company had 6 employees; at the time of his death it had grown to over 500 spread over several factories, though his time as a hands-on manager had long since passed.[15]

Philanthropy and Public Works

William Burford's many offices, services and philanthropic deeds included:

Justice of the Peace from 1890 to 1893.
For over 60 years he was a member of the council of the Chamber of Manufactures, and served both as president and vice-president.
For some years he was a member of the Adelaide Hospital Board, resigning in 1913.[21]
He was on the committee of the Home for Incurables.[22]
He was on the board of the Adelaide Licensing Bench from 1902.[23]
For 12 years he served as a member of the Unley Council.
He was alderman and councillor on the Glenelg Council.
He was a vice-president of the Industrial School for the Blind[24] and Royal Institution for the Blind from its foundation, and of the organising committee for its Great Floral Fair.[25]
He was treasurer of Adelaide City Mission until 1902.[26]
He was on the board of the Adelaide Benevolent and Strangers' Friend Society.
He was on the board of the Belair Inebriate Retreat.[27]
He was a life member of the Adelaide Y.M.C.A., and its president from 1914.[28]
He was, like his father, a lifelong member of the Church of Christ, originally with the Grote Street Church, then Unley and Glenelg, which were established largely due to his generosity.
He donated his property in Unley to the Church of Christ, to assist in establishing Ellerslie College, a Church of Christ school for girls at Magill Road, Magill.
For over 30 years he supported Church missions to India and China.
He was a generous supporter of the British and Foreign Bible Society.[15]

Mrs Burford was a prominent member of the Wattle Blossom League (later Wattle Day League) and held an annual function at "Monomeith", the Burfords' summer residence at Ashton.[29]

Recreation

He was a life member of the South Australian Cricket Association and a member of the East Adelaide Cricket Club.

In his later years he was a serious bowls player.

He was a keen yachtsman, was a member of the Holdfast Bay Sailing Club (and Vice-commodore in 1896)[30] and with son F. R. Burford owned the yacht Empress 1894 – 1896.[31]

Family of William Burford

William married Mary Richardson (c. 1845 – 12 May 1921) on 11 November 1867. She died at their home "Birralee", in Glenelg. Their 53 year marriage produced eleven children,[32] of whom five sons and four daughters survived childhood. All five sons went into the family business:

  • William Henville Burford II (1 November 1868 – 27 May 1947) married Alice Louise Carr on 17 September 1891
  • Two daughters Nell Burford and Violet Lillian Burford
  • Frederick Rumsey Burford (10 or 30 April 1870 – 14 August 1928 at Glenelg) married Elizabeth Genevieve Kellery
  • Hubert Henry Richardson Burford (22 Mar 1872 – 8 Nov 1907 in Sydney, two weeks after wedding) married Annie Morish on 23 October 1907[33]
  • Lillian May Burford – b: 2 March 1874. m: Thomas Eyres 13 October 1899[34]
  • Evaline Sarah Burford (10 February 1876 – 6 Apr 1961, Fullarton) married Horace Cansfield Park[35] on 11 November 1919. Evaline lived in Birralee, Belair in the 1930s
  • Emily Finlayson "Emmie" Burford (10 Jun 1878 – 23 Oct 1953) never married – lived at Birralee, Belair in the 1920s and 1930s.[36]
  • Horace Edgar Colls Burford (11 September 1881 – 24 Jan 1947) married Sibyl Freda Jay on 11 November 1915
  • James Clifford Burford (6 October 1883 – 6 Feb 1970, Fullarton) married Margaret Mary Marshall, who died in 1920s. He was Detective Inspector of Customs. Lived at Birralee, Belair in 1930s.
    • Only daughter Gwenyth Marshall Burford – engaged to Ronald F Angel, 18 February 1936[37] but married Wilfred Douglas Verco, 8 August 1938[38][39]
  • Alice Gertrude Marion "Allie Marian" Burford (30 Jan 1886 – 7 September 1925 at her residence, Birralee, Belair) married Octavius Cyril Beale, eighth son of Octavius Beale of 'Llanarth', Burwood NSW, on 11 November 1914; her parents' wedding anniversary,[41] a tradition followed by several of her siblings
    • Two daughters: Beverley Burford Beale and Megan Beale

After the death of his wife, he sold the Glenelg mansion "Birralee" on Albert Terrace and Seawall, in September 1921,[42] and the summer home "Monomeith", on 3 acres (1.2 ha) at Ashton, South Australia, in 1922.[43] By 1921, both the Monomeith and Birralee Glenelg properties were mostly used by Mrs. Burford and her daughters.

He died on 6 March 1925 at his "Birralee, Belair" home on Sheoak Road in Belair, located next to the National Park and overlooking the Adelaide Plains. He had suffered a heart attack a year previously.[15] At some stage he had married the widow of William Finlayson jun. and she nursed him in his final years.[15]

Sources

References

  1. ^ a b c "Archives: WH Burford and Sons Ltd". Australian National University. Retrieved 24 January 2018.
  2. ^ Messrs W. H. Burford & Co's (sic) Jubilee The Advertiser 4 November 1890 p.6 accessed 8 July 2011
  3. ^ An Immense Industrial Concern South Australian Register 9 June 1900 p.4 accessed 5 July 2011
  4. ^ "The Burford Soap-Factory Case". Evening Journal (Adelaide). Vol. XV, no. 4338. South Australia. 6 April 1883. p. 3. Retrieved 5 May 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
  5. ^ "The Apollo Works". The Express and Telegraph. Vol. XLV, no. 13, 286. South Australia. 26 December 1907. p. 1. Retrieved 26 April 2019 – via National Library of Australia.
  6. ^ a b c "A Tremendous Fire". The Advertiser (Adelaide). Vol. LXI, no. 18, 816. South Australia. 3 February 1919. p. 7. Retrieved 26 April 2019 – via National Library of Australia.
  7. ^ A Fine New Factory The Advertiser 16 June 1920 p.9 accessed 8 July 2011
  8. ^ a b An Old-Established Business The Register 31 May 1922 p.8 accessed 4 July 2011
  9. ^ a b Burford Gardens – Wonderful Public Enthusiasm The Mail 14 April 1923 p.1 accessed 8 July 2011
  10. ^ Factories, Garages, Foundries and Workshops The Mail 28 April 1923 p.1 accessed 8 July 2011
  11. ^ Popular Laundry Soaps The West Australian 8 June 1933 p.7 accessed 8 July 2011
  12. ^ Manufacture of Oil South Australian Register Tuesday 29 November 1892 p.7 accessed 5 July 2011
  13. ^ Supreme Court South Australian Register 8 September 1866 p.3 accessed 7 July 2011
  14. ^ McDougall & Vines (August 2006). "City of Adelaide - a Thematic History" (PDF). Adelaide City Council. Retrieved 26 April 2019.
  15. ^ a b c d e f Mr. W. Burford – a Large-Hearted Citizen The Register 7 March 1925 p.13 accessed 4 July 2011
  16. ^ Parsons, Ronald Hindmarsh Town Corporation of the Town of Hindmarsh, South Australia, 1974 ISBN 0-9598793-0-7
  17. ^ "Soapworks at Southwark". The Advertiser (Adelaide, SA : 1889 - 1931. 29 July 1890.
  18. ^ a b Sands & McDougall's Directory, 1962 ed. p.1633
  19. ^ . Archived from the original on 2 November 2012.
  20. ^ Death of Mr. W. Burford Barrier Miner (Broken Hill) Saturday 7 March 1925 p.5 accessed 4 July 2011
  21. ^ Adelaide Hospital The Register 11 April 1913 p.6 accessed 8 July 2011
  22. ^ "Labour Bureaus". South Australian Register. 2 April 1892.
  23. ^ Concerning People The Register Thursday 27 March 1902 p.5 accessed 8 July 2011
  24. ^ "Cheesemaking Experiments". The Advertiser (Adelaide, SA : 1889 - 1931). 3 August 1901.
  25. ^ "The Committees". The Advertiser (Adelaide, SA : 1889 - 1931). 11 April 1903.
  26. ^ "Adelaide City Mission". The Advertiser (Adelaide, SA : 1889 - 1931). 5 December 1902.
  27. ^ "Belair Inebriate Retreat". The Advertiser (Adelaide, SA : 1889 - 1931). 17 September 1902.
  28. ^ Current Comment The Mail 7 February 1914 p.8 accessed 8 July 2011
  29. ^ Concerning People The Register Friday 13 May 1921 p.8 accessed 8 July 2011
  30. ^ Yachting The Advertiser 15 November 1895 p.6 accessed 10 July 2011
  31. ^ Yachting South Australian Register 26 December 1894 p.7 accessed 5 July 2011
  32. ^ William Burford family tree, www.mypioneerancestors.com.au
  33. ^ Marriages Burford-Morish, The Advertiser, 12 November 1907, p.4
  34. ^ Marriages, South Australian Register, 21 October 1899, p.6
  35. ^ Horace Cansfield Park AAMC AIEF of "Bryndale", West Bridgford, Nottingham, England – Engagements, The Mail, 13 May 1916, p.4
  36. ^ Party at Birralee, Belair, "Social Notes" conducted by Idra, The Advertiser, Friday 9 December 1932, pg 16
  37. ^ Engagement Announced, The Advertiser, Tuesday 18 February 1936, p.7
  38. ^ Wedding Dates, The Advertiser, 22 July 1938, p.8
  39. ^ Verco—Burford Wedding At St. John's, The Advertiser, 9 August 1938, p.9 – contains guest list which includes many Burford names
  40. ^ Mrs Douglas Verco and her son Richard visited her father Mr J C Burford at American River over Xmas 1950 – Holidays, The Advertister, 26 December 1950, p.6
  41. ^ Weddings Beale-Burford, The Mail, 14 November 1914, p.5
  42. ^ "Birralee" Glenelg The Register 22 September 1921 p.5 accessed 4 July 2011
  43. ^ Home in the Hills (advt.) (Property at Ashton) The Register 30 November 1922 p.5 accessed 8 July 2011

burford, sons, burford, sons, soap, candle, making, business, founded, adelaide, 1840, william, henville, burford, 1807, 1895, english, butcher, arrived, colony, 1838, earliest, soapmakers, australia, 1960s, when, closed, oldest, 1878, took, sons, benjamin, wi. W H Burford and Sons was a soap and candle making business founded in Adelaide in 1840 by William Henville Burford 1807 1895 an English butcher who arrived in the new colony in 1838 It was one of the earliest soapmakers in Australia and up to the 1960s when it closed the oldest In 1878 he took his two sons Benjamin and William into partnership as W H Burford amp Sons 1 Its expansion in the latter part of the 19th century and early part of the 20th century at the hands of son William Burford accompanied by a number of takeovers made it the dominant soap manufacturer in South Australia and Western Australia Its founders were noted public figures in the young city of Adelaide W H Burford and Sons was in turn taken over by J Kitchen amp Sons who became Lever amp Kitchen part of the British Lever Brothers empire which in 1930 merged with Dutch Margarine Unie to form the multi national Unilever Contents 1 W H Burford and Sons 1 1 Factories 1 2 Products 1 3 Public nuisance 1 4 Fires 1 5 Competitors 1 6 Merger and Acquisition 2 William Burford 2 1 Philanthropy and Public Works 2 2 Recreation 2 3 Family of William Burford 3 Sources 4 ReferencesW H Burford and Sons EditFactories Edit W H Burford s first factory was on the corner of Grenfell Street and East Terrace later the site of an Adelaide Electric Supply Company s building AESC became the Electricity Trust of S A ETSA in 1946 and in 1989 the Tandanya National Aboriginal Cultural Institute citation needed Initially it was little more than a tin shed in a vacant field During one of the recessions that faced the colony Burford was forced to sell the land then lease it back to keep the business running citation needed The second factory opened in 1900 at Sturt Street previously owned by competitor Tidmarsh amp Co 2 occupied 4 acres of floor space 19 000 sq yards 16 000m2 1 6 hectares and employed over 200 men Its most salient feature was the brick chimney 152 ft 4in 46 5m in height and a flue diameter of 4 ft 1 2m and still standing though no longer used The boiler room housed four boilers one of which was 27 ft long and 7 ft 6in in diameter 8 2m x 2 3m and the largest to have been built in South Australia The still room had six large stills four for distillation of stearine and two for glycerine The building was organised so that manufacture started on the top floor and progressed by chutes or conveyors to the second floor for wrapping and packaging thence to the ground floor all with a minimum of handling 3 The smell emanating from the Sturt Street factory despite installation of deep drainage was the source of much complaint from neighbours 4 In 1887 Burfords took over Apollo Soap Ltd of Adam Street Hindmarsh The factory which continued to be called the Apollo Works was the site of work mostly peripheral to the core business of soap and candle making such as rendering down of animal fats and grinding of corn bone starch and blacking and the manufacture of wooden packing crates In 1888 they took over Frearson s Printing Works whose factory was also on Adam Street 1 These premises were destroyed by fire on 25 December 1907 5 In February 1919 the Sturt Street premises were destroyed by fire 6 Rather than rebuild in the city a new factory was set up in Dry Creek near the railway station where there had once been a smelter 7 Manufacture resumed in 1922 Much was made at the time of a model suburb to serve employees of the soap works and the nearby abattoirs Burford Garden Suburb as it was named was designed by W J Earle the town planner behind Cadbury s model town at Claremont Tasmania 8 The Dry Creek lots were snapped up immediately they were offered for sale 9 The greater part of the Sturt Street property was sold around the same time 10 Burford Gardens as the name of a suburb has since vanished though its streets remain Flame Avenue Gum Avenue Wattle Avenue Grevillea Avenue and Bushwood Avenue all in what is now known as Dry Creek 9 In Western Australia the Victoria Park factory opened in 1897 After taking over the Swan Soap and Candle Company Ltd the Rocky Bay factory opened in 1899 11 and Kalgoorlie factories opened later In 1924 Burford s merged with rival soap makers J Kitchen and Sons of Melbourne and Lever Brothers of Sydney as Australian Producers Co Partnership Ltd In 1928 Kitchen s Fremantle factory was destroyed by fire and Burford s was able to make up the shortfall by manufacturing to Kitchen specifications the product being wrapped packed and distributed by the Kitchen factory This opened the way for further rationalization and by 1937 all Burford factories were under the control of J Kitchen amp Sons In 1932 Associated Producers became Associated Enterprises Pty Ltd renamed Lever Associated Enterprises Pty Ltd in 1944 By 1948 production by Burfords in Adelaide had been wound down and in 1957 Unilever Australia bought out W H Burford amp Sons 1 Products Edit Products manufactured during the history of W H Burford amp Sons include Soaps Burford s Prize No 1 soap Signal soap mottled soap yellow soap transparent soap White Naptha soap Apollo laundry soap in various sized bars Borax soap Sayso carbolic family soap Snowflakes extract of soap powder Dr Bayley s medicated soap sulphur soap White Dove soap and kerosene soap foliage spray for controlling insects Exhibition candles carriage candles bedroom candles piano candles Brunswick stove blacking Excelsior blacklead Linoleum polish Roylat brand in Western Australia Boot polish boot cream Swansdown starch Soda crystals Magic Egg Preserver waterglass Southern Sky washing blue Snow white starch Lubricating oils 12 Greases Bone manurePublic nuisance Edit When Burford s soapworks and Peacock s tannery were founded on Grenfell Street there were no residences nearby nothing but virgin bushland But as the population grew nearby and to some extent attracted by the businesses the number of complaints about smells grew until in 1866 a case was brought against Burford in the Supreme Court The jury appeared to be convinced by the argument that the complainants had chosen to build knowing what trades were carried on there so had no right to complain and found for the defendant 13 The Council had other plans In 1919 it offered Burfords 12 000 as an incentive to move out of the city altogether The offer was turned down so the Council amended the Health Act to prohibit such industries 14 then the fire engulfed the factory 6 and the Dry Creek facility moved a big step towards reality Fires Edit In 1885 a fire which started in a timber yard in Grenfell Street and East Terrace spread to Burford s factory which was destroyed This led to the establishment of a factory in Sturt Street 15 On 25 December 1907 the factory on Adam Street Hindmarsh The Apollo Works was destroyed in one of the greatest fires in Adelaide s history along with neighbouring skin dealers Wilcox and Co in Torrens Street now named River Street The nearby factory of G H Michell amp Sons and David Reid s tannery suffered lesser damage 16 In 1919 the works bounded by Sturt Gilbert Norman and Russell Streets in the city were destroyed by fire 6 and a new factory was then set up in Dry Creek the office area was rebuilt and the rest sold Competitors Edit Other early soap and candle makers of South Australia included J H M Hawkes J Tidmarsh amp Co Walker Brothers Apollo Soap and Candle factory at Adams Street Hindmarsh est 1881 was taken over by W H Burford Bunyip Soaps 1898 ca 1955 had a factory at Winwood Street Southwark 17 and became Crompton Bunyip Soaps Ltd c 1955 c 1991 It was still trading in 1962 with offices at 49 Flinders Street Adelaide and factory at Winwood St Thebarton 18 The other major Australian soap manufacturer was J Kitchen amp Sons of Melbourne which dominated the Eastern States much as Burfords had dominated South and Western Australia Lever Brothers of England had a factory in Sydney and one in Wellington New Zealand Merger and Acquisition Edit In 1924 Lever and Kitchen and W H Burford amp Sons formed Australian Producers Partnership Pty Ltd Burford ordinary shares were held by Lever and Kitchen around 1962 after a few more takeovers the parent company was renamed Unilever 19 The Burford s factory was still running profitably in the mid 50s and the factory at Dry Creek was still listed as such in 1962 the office at 83 Sturt Street still bore the Burford s name alongside that of its nominal owner J Kitchen amp Sons Ltd Rexona Pty Ltd and Lever Brothers Pty Ltd 18 William Burford Edit William Henry Burford 1893 1892 portrait in oil of William Burford by his son artist Frederick Rumsey Burford 1870 1928 William Burford 11 December 1845 6 March 1925 was born in a cottage at 154 Grenfell Street Adelaide 20 adjacent to his father s factory He was educated first at the Church of England Grammar School in Pulteney Street then with brother Benjamin at J L Young s Adelaide Educational Institution in Stephens Place Leaving school he joined his father s business In 1878 he and his brother Benjamin were taken into partnership but after about eight years the latter withdrew from the enterprise 15 In 1868 while on holiday in New Zealand William visited a soap works which boiled soap using steam rather than fire On his return to Adelaide he wasted no time in getting his father to adopt this method 8 He was chairman of directors of the company from 1895 until his death in his Belair home on Sheoak Road called Birralee When he took the reins the company had 6 employees at the time of his death it had grown to over 500 spread over several factories though his time as a hands on manager had long since passed 15 Philanthropy and Public Works Edit William Burford s many offices services and philanthropic deeds included Justice of the Peace from 1890 to 1893 For over 60 years he was a member of the council of the Chamber of Manufactures and served both as president and vice president For some years he was a member of the Adelaide Hospital Board resigning in 1913 21 He was on the committee of the Home for Incurables 22 He was on the board of the Adelaide Licensing Bench from 1902 23 For 12 years he served as a member of the Unley Council He was alderman and councillor on the Glenelg Council He was a vice president of the Industrial School for the Blind 24 and Royal Institution for the Blind from its foundation and of the organising committee for its Great Floral Fair 25 He was treasurer of Adelaide City Mission until 1902 26 He was on the board of the Adelaide Benevolent and Strangers Friend Society He was on the board of the Belair Inebriate Retreat 27 He was a life member of the Adelaide Y M C A and its president from 1914 28 He was like his father a lifelong member of the Church of Christ originally with the Grote Street Church then Unley and Glenelg which were established largely due to his generosity He donated his property in Unley to the Church of Christ to assist in establishing Ellerslie College a Church of Christ school for girls at Magill Road Magill For over 30 years he supported Church missions to India and China He was a generous supporter of the British and Foreign Bible Society 15 Mrs Burford was a prominent member of the Wattle Blossom League later Wattle Day League and held an annual function at Monomeith the Burfords summer residence at Ashton 29 Recreation Edit He was a life member of the South Australian Cricket Association and a member of the East Adelaide Cricket Club In his later years he was a serious bowls player He was a keen yachtsman was a member of the Holdfast Bay Sailing Club and Vice commodore in 1896 30 and with son F R Burford owned the yacht Empress 1894 1896 31 Family of William Burford Edit William married Mary Richardson c 1845 12 May 1921 on 11 November 1867 She died at their home Birralee in Glenelg Their 53 year marriage produced eleven children 32 of whom five sons and four daughters survived childhood All five sons went into the family business William Henville Burford II 1 November 1868 27 May 1947 married Alice Louise Carr on 17 September 1891 Two daughters Nell Burford and Violet Lillian Burford Frederick Rumsey Burford 10 or 30 April 1870 14 August 1928 at Glenelg married Elizabeth Genevieve Kellery Hubert Henry Richardson Burford 22 Mar 1872 8 Nov 1907 in Sydney two weeks after wedding married Annie Morish on 23 October 1907 33 Lillian May Burford b 2 March 1874 m Thomas Eyres 13 October 1899 34 Evaline Sarah Burford 10 February 1876 6 Apr 1961 Fullarton married Horace Cansfield Park 35 on 11 November 1919 Evaline lived in Birralee Belair in the 1930s Emily Finlayson Emmie Burford 10 Jun 1878 23 Oct 1953 never married lived at Birralee Belair in the 1920s and 1930s 36 Horace Edgar Colls Burford 11 September 1881 24 Jan 1947 married Sibyl Freda Jay on 11 November 1915 James Clifford Burford 6 October 1883 6 Feb 1970 Fullarton married Margaret Mary Marshall who died in 1920s He was Detective Inspector of Customs Lived at Birralee Belair in 1930s Only daughter Gwenyth Marshall Burford engaged to Ronald F Angel 18 February 1936 37 but married Wilfred Douglas Verco 8 August 1938 38 39 Richard Verco 40 Alice Gertrude Marion Allie Marian Burford 30 Jan 1886 7 September 1925 at her residence Birralee Belair married Octavius Cyril Beale eighth son of Octavius Beale of Llanarth Burwood NSW on 11 November 1914 her parents wedding anniversary 41 a tradition followed by several of her siblings Two daughters Beverley Burford Beale and Megan BealeAfter the death of his wife he sold the Glenelg mansion Birralee on Albert Terrace and Seawall in September 1921 42 and the summer home Monomeith on 3 acres 1 2 ha at Ashton South Australia in 1922 43 By 1921 both the Monomeith and Birralee Glenelg properties were mostly used by Mrs Burford and her daughters He died on 6 March 1925 at his Birralee Belair home on Sheoak Road in Belair located next to the National Park and overlooking the Adelaide Plains He had suffered a heart attack a year previously 15 At some stage he had married the widow of William Finlayson jun and she nursed him in his final years 15 Sources EditThe State Library of South Australia has a useful index of Burford articles at http www slsa sa gov au manning pn b b31 htm burfordG and of the factories in Hindmarsh at http www slsa sa gov au manning pn h hindmar htm factoriesReferences Edit a b c Archives WH Burford and Sons Ltd Australian National University Retrieved 24 January 2018 Messrs W H Burford amp Co s sic Jubilee The Advertiser 4 November 1890 p 6 accessed 8 July 2011 An Immense Industrial Concern South Australian Register 9 June 1900 p 4 accessed 5 July 2011 The Burford Soap Factory Case Evening Journal Adelaide Vol XV no 4338 South Australia 6 April 1883 p 3 Retrieved 5 May 2017 via National Library of Australia The Apollo Works The Express and Telegraph Vol XLV no 13 286 South Australia 26 December 1907 p 1 Retrieved 26 April 2019 via National Library of Australia a b c A Tremendous Fire The Advertiser Adelaide Vol LXI no 18 816 South Australia 3 February 1919 p 7 Retrieved 26 April 2019 via National Library of Australia A Fine New Factory The Advertiser 16 June 1920 p 9 accessed 8 July 2011 a b An Old Established Business The Register 31 May 1922 p 8 accessed 4 July 2011 a b Burford Gardens Wonderful Public Enthusiasm The Mail 14 April 1923 p 1 accessed 8 July 2011 Factories Garages Foundries and Workshops The Mail 28 April 1923 p 1 accessed 8 July 2011 Popular Laundry Soaps The West Australian 8 June 1933 p 7 accessed 8 July 2011 Manufacture of Oil South Australian Register Tuesday 29 November 1892 p 7 accessed 5 July 2011 Supreme Court South Australian Register 8 September 1866 p 3 accessed 7 July 2011 McDougall amp Vines August 2006 City of Adelaide a Thematic History PDF Adelaide City Council Retrieved 26 April 2019 a b c d e f Mr W Burford a Large Hearted Citizen The Register 7 March 1925 p 13 accessed 4 July 2011 Parsons Ronald Hindmarsh Town Corporation of the Town of Hindmarsh South Australia 1974 ISBN 0 9598793 0 7 Soapworks at Southwark The Advertiser Adelaide SA 1889 1931 29 July 1890 a b Sands amp McDougall s Directory 1962 ed p 1633 Lever amp Kitchen Pty Ltd Personal Care Product Manufacturers Sydney New South Wales Archived from the original on 2 November 2012 Death of Mr W Burford Barrier Miner Broken Hill Saturday 7 March 1925 p 5 accessed 4 July 2011 Adelaide Hospital The Register 11 April 1913 p 6 accessed 8 July 2011 Labour Bureaus South Australian Register 2 April 1892 Concerning People The Register Thursday 27 March 1902 p 5 accessed 8 July 2011 Cheesemaking Experiments The Advertiser Adelaide SA 1889 1931 3 August 1901 The Committees The Advertiser Adelaide SA 1889 1931 11 April 1903 Adelaide City Mission The Advertiser Adelaide SA 1889 1931 5 December 1902 Belair Inebriate Retreat The Advertiser Adelaide SA 1889 1931 17 September 1902 Current Comment The Mail 7 February 1914 p 8 accessed 8 July 2011 Concerning People The Register Friday 13 May 1921 p 8 accessed 8 July 2011 Yachting The Advertiser 15 November 1895 p 6 accessed 10 July 2011 Yachting South Australian Register 26 December 1894 p 7 accessed 5 July 2011 William Burford family tree www mypioneerancestors com au Marriages Burford Morish The Advertiser 12 November 1907 p 4 Marriages South Australian Register 21 October 1899 p 6 Horace Cansfield Park AAMC AIEF of Bryndale West Bridgford Nottingham England Engagements The Mail 13 May 1916 p 4 Party at Birralee Belair Social Notes conducted by Idra The Advertiser Friday 9 December 1932 pg 16 Engagement Announced The Advertiser Tuesday 18 February 1936 p 7 Wedding Dates The Advertiser 22 July 1938 p 8 Verco Burford Wedding At St John s The Advertiser 9 August 1938 p 9 contains guest list which includes many Burford names Mrs Douglas Verco and her son Richard visited her father Mr J C Burford at American River over Xmas 1950 Holidays The Advertister 26 December 1950 p 6 Weddings Beale Burford The Mail 14 November 1914 p 5 Birralee Glenelg The Register 22 September 1921 p 5 accessed 4 July 2011 Home in the Hills advt Property at Ashton The Register 30 November 1922 p 5 accessed 8 July 2011 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title W H Burford 26 Sons amp oldid 1147189059, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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