List of South Australian manufacturing businesses

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A list of manufacturing companies founded in South Australia, many now forgotten but "household names" in their day. It does not include local affiliates of multinational companies, such as General Motors Holden, Kelvinator and Philips Electrical Industries. Nor does it (yet) include food and beverage companies such as AMSCOL, Chapmans, Coopers, Glen Ewin and Haighs or pharmaceuticals and toiletries such as Bickfords, Cromptons and Fauldings.

Business
Name
Founded Ceased Founder/s Factory address SA-manufactured products Notes
Actil 1941 Actil Ave., Woodville cotton fabric
bed sheets
for Australian Cotton Textile Industries Ltd.
Bagshaw Ltd. John Stokes Bagshaw farm machinery, inc. Ridley's "stripper"
Castalloy 1948 76 Mooringe Ave., North Plympton aluminium alloy castings[1]
pressure cookers
alloy wheels
Clipsal 1920 Alfred Gerard electrical conduit fittings
mains plugs and sockets
switchgear
Coldstream 1926[2] David Garvie 82–86 Mary St., Unley refrigerators
Dobbie Dico 1862 A. W. Dobbie Sultram Place, Adelaide brass castings
water meters
Entech Group 1986 7 Marlow Road, Keswick PCB's, membrane keypads, electronic products
Griffin Press 1858 contract printers subsidiary of Advertiser Ltd.
Hills Industries 1948 Lance Hill South Rd., Edwardstown Hills hoists
TV antennae
Horwood Bagshaw Joel Horwood farm machinery
Humes Walter Hume concrete pipes
James Martin & Co James Martin farm machinery
railway engines
K.B.C. c. 1947? Kenneth Bowes 17 Woodlands Tce., Edwardstown die-cast parts for auto makers
hand-operated clothes wringer
pistol drills (240VAC and 32VDC models)[3]
domestic food mixers
for Kenneth Bowes Co.
Lightburn & Co Albert Henry Lightburn washing machines
hydraulic jacks
concrete mixers
Zeta cars
May Brothers and Company Alfred May
(John) Frederick May
mining machinery
farm machinery
Metters 1895? Frederick Metters 7–25 Manchester St., Mile End South windpumps
wood stoves
gas stoves
bakers' ovens
Minelab metal detectors
Perry Engineering 1899 1969 Samuel Perry railway engines
Pope Products 1935 Barton Pope 13–23 Pope St., Beverley garden sprinklers
washing machines
electric motors
Rossi Boots 1910 Arthur Edward Rossiter Dunn's Lane, Unley
now Churchill Road, Kilburn
boots and shoes for Rossiters Ltd.
Sabco 1892[4] Betting St., Albert Park brooms and brushes for South Australian Brush Co.
Scott Bonnar & Co 1920[2] Scott Bonnar
Malcolm Cornelius Bonnar
Holland Street, Thebarton brass castings
electric lawnmowers
hand mowers
Simpson 1853 Alfred Simpson 41–49 Pirie St., Adelaide
(later) Simpson Ave., Dudley Park
tinware
wood stoves
gas stoves
fireproof safes
washing machines
Sola Optical spectacle lenses
Solver Paints 1931 W. P. Crowhurst 95–97 Gouger St., Adelaide house paints
Sportco 837 South Road, St. Marys .22 rifles[5] for Sporting Arms Ltd.
Wakefield Press 1942 books, esp. academic and SA history
Wallis Refrigeration 1935[2] Hughie McKenzie Wallis 136 South Rd., Richmond kerosine refrigerators
electric refrigerators
Mistral Appliances 1968 airfryers

kitchen appliances cooling systems

Gerard Lighting[6] Simon Gerard lighting appliances

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Well, what is it?". The News. Vol. 61, no. 9, 457. South Australia. 1 December 1953. p. 19. Retrieved 4 January 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
  2. ^ a b c "Big Variety in Electrical Appliances". The Advertiser. Vol. 94, no. 29, 142. South Australia. 6 March 1952. p. 13 (Royal Adelaide Exhibition Supplement). Retrieved 15 December 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
  3. ^ "Advertising". The Chronicle. Vol. 92, no. 51, 194. South Australia. 7 July 1949. p. 12. Retrieved 15 December 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
  4. ^ "About sabco".
  5. ^ "Premier to see first mass-made shotguns". The News. Vol. 62, no. 9, 518. South Australia. 11 February 1954. p. 10. Retrieved 16 December 2016 – via National Library of Australia.
  6. ^ Chappell, Trevor (1 August 2012). "Gerard Lighting shares soar 26 per cent". news.com.au. Retrieved 8 March 2022.