Lightburn & Co

Lightburn & Company Limited was a South Australian engineering and manufacturing company.

A factory worker at Lightburn & Co
Pratt & Whitney milling machine

The founders

Albert Henry Lightburn (c. 1877 – 27 October 1940) was a son of Liverpool marine engineer John Bolton Lightburn (c. 1840 – 5 May 1916) and his wife Matilda Lightburn (13 May 1847 – 10 May 1930) who arrived in South Australia from England in 1898 and lived in Athelstone until after John's death, when she lived with Albert in Unley.[1]

Albert attended fitting and turning classes at the School of Mines in 1910. He started a business around 1921 in the backyard of his 42 Arthur Street, Unley home,[2] while running "Unley Motor Garage" as Lightburn & Gardner with William Gleed Gardner at 1 Unley Road, Unley. From June 1932 he ran the service station on his own account.[3] He owned several general machining workshops in the city.

His son Harold Anderton Lightburn (9 April 1910 – 28 August 2002) was educated at Unley High School and started an apprenticeship at an engineering firm, studying at the School of Mines at night. He became unemployed in 1941 so started manufacturing equipment for automotive repair workshops.[4] In 1944 he took over his father's business, and restructured it as a public company with a staff of 15. After his death, he was buried at the Scott Creek Cemetery.

Harold was one of South Australia's leading amateur boxers. In 1931 he won the State welter, middle. and heavy amateur titles, and retired from the ring in 1932 after winning the Australian amateur welterweight title, and shortly before his marriage.[5] In his six-year career and 30 bouts he was defeated only once, and 9 of his 24 wins were by knockout. His trainer was Charlie "Red" Mitchell (c. 1907 – 30 July 1961).[6] He served for several years as president of the South Australian Amateur Boxing and Wrestling Association.[7]

Family

John Bolton Lightburn (c. 1840 – 5 May 1916) married Matilda Humphreys (c. June 1847 – 12 May 1930) on 14 January 1872

  • Albert Henry Lightburn (c. 1877 – 27 October 1940) married Florence Amy Fry (c. 1879 – 26 July 1944) of Athelstone in 1903. Their children included:
  • Jack Hiltoin Lightburn (1907 – 1986) married Jean Ethel Turnbull (1908 – 1984) on 30 October 1937
  • Harold Anderton Lightburn (1910 – 2002) married Vera Liddicoat ( – 2009) on 21 January 1933
  • Elva Florence Lightburn (1917 – 1995) married Cyril Gordon Tucker ( – 1983) on 12 January 1945
  • Samuel Bolton Lightburn (1881 – 7 August 1939) married Ellen Stonehouse Parkin (16 March 1880 – 9 November 1966) in 1907, with Shell Petroleum, lived at Toorak Gardens

Lightburn Limited

In July 1945 Lightburn & Company Limited was established to take over the assets of A. H. Lightburn and Company. 100 acres (40 ha) of vacant land off Morphett Road, Camden (previously the Camden Motordrome?[8]) was purchased in 1946. The company's own employees cleared it, laid down roads, and set up a factory in seven aircraft hangars and by 1948 they were manufacturing a limited range of products. By 1950 they had 500 employees, and another 66 acres (27 ha) of adjoining land was purchased, and the firm's six premises on West Terrace, Franklin Street and 101 Flinders Street, Adelaide were consolidated into their complex on Morphett Road.[9]

The company's products included brick moulds, "Lightning" brand concrete mixers, wheelbarrows, boats, power tools, trailers, wheels, hydraulic jacks, go-karts, range hoods, washing machines and spin driers. Lightburn began marketing domestic washing machines around 1949[10]

The company had a deserved reputation for unsophisticated, well-made, rugged reliable products, but a later venture, the Zeta automobile, manufactured from 1963 to 1965, was an unmitigated failure.

Staff

Staff at Lightburn's included Harold Lightburn (managing director) W. R. Greig (general manager), C. C. Cosgrove (chairman of directors), and D. F. Cooper (secretary). The company introduced a collective incentive scheme under which employees received a share of company profits. [11][12]

gollark: Well, that would be inconvenient.
gollark: Increasing the key sizes a lot isn't very helpful if it doesn't increase the difficulty of breaking it by a similarly large factor.
gollark: I'm not sure what P = NP would mean for that. Apparently doing that is non-polynomial time, and a constructive P = NP proof would presumably let you construct a polynomial-time algorithm.
gollark: Asymmetric cryptography stuff relies on it being impractically hard to do some things, such as factor large semiprime numbers.
gollark: Symmetric encryption is safe still, I think. And polynomial-time doesn't mean you can't have ridiculously gigantic (fixed) exponents or constant factors.

References

  1. "Mrs. Matilda Lightburn Dead". The News (Adelaide). XIV (2, 129). South Australia. 14 May 1930. p. 14. Retrieved 29 January 2017 via National Library of Australia.
  2. "New Factory at Camden". The Advertiser (Adelaide). South Australia. 9 July 1946. p. 8. Retrieved 11 January 2017 via National Library of Australia.
  3. "Advertising". The Advertiser (Adelaide). South Australia. 10 June 1932. p. 3. Retrieved 11 January 2017 via National Library of Australia.
  4. "South Australian Profile — No. 126". The News (Adelaide). 63 (9, 729). South Australia. 16 October 1954. p. 4. Retrieved 11 January 2017 via National Library of Australia.
  5. "Lightburn Retires From Ring". The News (Adelaide). XIX (2, 894). South Australia. 27 October 1932. p. 4. Retrieved 11 January 2017 via National Library of Australia.
  6. "Charlie (Red) Mitchell". BoxRec. Retrieved 31 January 2017.
  7. "Elected to amateur job". The News (Adelaide). 55 (8, 529). South Australia. 7 December 1950. p. 33. Retrieved 31 January 2017 via National Library of Australia.
  8. Camden Motordrome was a dirt-track speedway, closed in 1941, a predecessor of Rowley Park Speedway.
  9. "Interstate Branches For Lightburn & Company". The Advertiser (Adelaide). South Australia. 19 March 1946. p. 2. Retrieved 11 January 2017 via National Library of Australia.
  10. "Big Variety In Electrical Appliances". The Advertiser (Adelaide). 94 (29, 142). South Australia. 6 March 1952. p. 13 (Royal Adelaide Exhibition Supplement). Retrieved 11 January 2017 via National Library of Australia.
  11. "New Factory to be Built". The Advertiser (Adelaide). South Australia. 18 January 1946. p. 9. Retrieved 11 January 2017 via National Library of Australia.
  12. "Its Plant is on 166 Acres". The News (Adelaide). 61 (9, 457). South Australia. 1 December 1953. p. 30. Retrieved 11 January 2017 via National Library of Australia.
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