John Danks & Son

Last updated

John Danks & Son was a major manufacturing company in Melbourne, Victoria.

Contents

History

John Danks (January 1828 – 28 February 1902) was born in Wednesbury, Staffordshire, England. He served an apprenticeship with his father, also named John Danks, a manufacturer of wrought iron tubing, then joined his brothers Samuel and Thomas, who were setting up a similar factory. In 1857 the brothers emigrated to Melbourne in the Shaftesbury, and started manufacturing iron pipes and plumbing fittings; one of their first major contracts was to manufacture connectors for Melbourne's pioneering Yan Yean Reservoir. [1]

Thomas and Samuel Danks retired from business in 1860 and 1871 respectively; under John's management the company steadily grew; he brought in as a partner his son Aaron Turner Danks, who made a speciality of brass casting, and opened a subsidiary business in Staffordshire. The payroll grew from 35 to 150, aided by import tariffs of from 12½% to 20%. The business was hard hit by the Depression of the 1890s, but they opened a factory in Sydney, and won a major contract associated with expansion of the Melbourne sewerage network; by 1900 the payroll had reached 200. Aaron followed his father as managing director of John Danks & Son in 1902.

They cast and installed the eight bells of St Bartholomew's Church, Burnley 1927–1929.

In the Depression years of the 1930s, the company's manufacturing business shrank, and its fortunes depended on retail trade from its stores at 391 Bourke Street, Melbourne, and elsewhere.

John Danks & Son was floated as a public company in 1950. [2]

In 1970 John Danks Holdings Ltd. became part of an Australia-wide chain of hardware retailers Australian Hardware Distributors Pty. Ltd., which comprised John Danks & Son, Pty. Ltd. of Sydney and Melbourne; Sandovers Ltd. of Western Australia; Colton, Palmer and Preston Ltd. of South Australia, W. Hart & Sons, Launceston, Tasmania; Homecrafts (Tasmania), Hobart, Tasmania; and Brett and Co. Pty. Ltd., Queensland. [3]

Danks was acquired by a joint venture of Woolworths Group and Lowe's in 2009. [4] In 2016, the former Danks operations were sold to Metcash. [5]

People

John Danks (January 1828 – 28 February 1902) was elected to the Emerald Hill Council in 1871 and served until 1880, including two years as mayor 1874-1876. In 1877 he stood, unsuccessfully, for the Emerald Hill seat in the Legislative Assembly. He was, like his Adelaide contemporary Samuel Perry, an active supporter of the Methodist Church and was for many years a Sunday school-teacher. He donated £3000 to the Cecil Street Wesleyan Church, and gave generously to other charitable institutions. He was married to Ann, née Turner (ca.1828 – 2 February 1910); they lived at "Vermont", Merton Crescent, South Melbourne, where he died in 1902 after a short illness.

Sir Aaron Turner Danks (1861 – 5 June 1928) was born in Melbourne and educated at Wesley College and Horton College, Tasmania. In 1887 he married Jane Blaylock Miles ( – 8 October 1931), daughter of the then Town Clerk of Melbourne. They had a daughter Annie, and two sons: John predeceased him by six years; the other, Frederick Miles Danks, succeeded Sir Aaron as managing director. He was involved in many philanthropic organizations: he was a member of the Melbourne Hospital Committee from 1916 and its president from 1920; he was president of the Walter and Eliza Hall Research Institute; he was chairman of the Metropolitan Hospitals Association; he was president of the Child Welfare Association; he was Special Magistrate on the Children's Courts at South Melbourne. He was on the executive of the Protectionist Association of Victoria and an active member of the member of the Victorian Chamber of Manufactures. He was knighted in 1925. [6] They lived at "Hazeldene", 8 Balwyn Road, Canterbury.

Frederick Miles "Fred" Danks, sole remaining son of Sir Aaron, was an expert gardener and plant breeder, noted for his "Gartref" strain of Iceland poppy. [7] He married Dorothy Twiston Williams (died 1974) in 1924. Their family included John Twiston Danks and David Miles Danks; they lived at "Gartref" (Welsh for "home"), 33 Balwyn Road, Canterbury.

John Twiston Danks (born 16 May 1926) was educated at Camberwell Grammar School and Wesley College. He married Norma Mary Butt in 1948. He joined John Danks and Son in 1948 and was a director of Danks Holdings from 1952 and General Manager from 1959. [8]

David Miles Danks (4 June 1931 – 8 July 2003), [9] born with an undiagnosed hole in the heart condition, he was a noted researcher into human genetics. He identified the cause of Menkes' disease in 1972 and was appointed Professor of Paediatrics at the Royal Children's Hospital, Melbourne, in 1974. [10] The David Danks Professorship of Child Health Research at the University of Melbourne was named for him.

Related Research Articles

Woolworths Group (Australia)

Woolworths Group Limited, a major Australian company, has extensive retail interests throughout Australia and New Zealand. It is the largest company in Australia by revenue and the second-largest in New Zealand. In addition, Woolworths Group is the largest takeaway liquor-retailer in Australia, the largest hotel and gaming poker-machine operator in Australia, and was the 19th-largest retailer in the world in 2008.

Balwyn North Suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

Balwyn North, also known as North Balwyn, is a suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 10 km east of Melbourne's Central Business District. Its local government area is the City of Boroondara. At the 2016 Census, Balwyn North had a population of 20,406.

Coles Supermarkets Australian supermarket chain

Coles Supermarkets Australia Pty Ltd, trading as Coles, is an Australian supermarket, retail and consumer services chain, headquartered in Melbourne as part of the Coles Group.

IGA (supermarkets)

IGA, Inc. is an American chain of grocery stores that operates in more than 30 countries. Unlike the chain store business model, IGA operates as a franchise through stores that are owned separately from the brand. Many of these stores operate in small town markets and belong to families that manage them. It was founded in the United States as the Independent Grocers Alliance in 1926. The headquarters is in Chicago, Illinois.

St Michaels Collegiate School Independent early learning, primary and secondary day and boarding school in Hobart, Tasmania, Australia

St Michael's Collegiate School, colloquially known as Collegiate, is an independent Anglican early learning, primary and secondary day and boarding school for girls located in Hobart, Tasmania, Australia.

John McPhee (politician)

Sir John Cameron McPhee, KCMG was an Australian politician and member of the Tasmanian House of Assembly. He was Premier of Tasmania from 15 June 1928 to 15 March 1934.

Blundstone Footwear

Blundstone Footwear is an Australian footwear brand, based in Hobart, Tasmania, with most manufacturing being made overseas since 2007. The company's best-known product is its line of laceless, elastic-sided, ankle-length boots. The official name for this product line is "The Original", although the boots are colloquially known as "Blunnies" in Australia.

IGA (Australian supermarket group)

Independent Grocers of Australia (IGA) is an Australian chain of supermarkets. IGA is owned by Metcash, but individual IGA stores are owned independently. Its main competitors are Woolworths, Coles and Aldi Süd. It is the fourth largest chain, since Aldi overtook Metcash in supermarket revenues. In 2019 it was reported that IGA had 7 per cent of the grocery market.

Mitre 10

Mitre 10 is an Australian retail and trade hardware store chain. Operations are based on a cooperative system, where the store owners are members of the national group and each has voting rights. The chain name references the mitre joint. There are over 400 "Mitre 10" and its associated "True Value Hardware" franchises throughout Australia.

Ampol Australian petroleum company

Ampol Limited, previously branded as Caltex Australia, is an Australian petroleum company, with headquarters in Sydney, New South Wales. It was first incorporated in 1936 in New South Wales to market petrol for its chain of service stations. In 1995, Ampol merged with Caltex to form Australian Petroleum, which in 1997 became simply as Caltex Australia. In December 2019, Chevron Corporation, owner of the Caltex trademark, gave notice to terminate the licence agreement for the use of the Caltex brand in Australia. From May 2020, the company officially rebranded as Ampol Limited along with a new logo that is being rolled out across Australia in 2020 and 2021.

Coles Group Limited is an Australian public company operating several retail chains. Its chief operations are primarily concerned with the sale of food and groceries through its flagship supermarket chain Coles, and the sale of liquor and petrol through its Coles Liquor and Coles Express outlets. Since its foundation in Collingwood, Victoria in 1914, Coles has grown to become the largest retailer in Australia before its principal rival Woolworths in terms of revenue. It is more popular than Woolworths because of its low prices and superior delivery service.

Foy & Gibson

Foy & Gibson was one of Australia's largest and earliest department store chains. A large range of goods were manufactured and sold by the company including clothing, manchester, leather goods, soft furnishings, furniture, hardware and food.

Sir George James "G.J" Coles, CBE was an Australian entrepreneur. He was the founder of what was to become the Coles Group retail shopping empire, at one time the largest chain store group in Australia, before Woolworths Supermarkets.

Home Timber & Hardware

Home Timber & Hardware is Australia's third largest retail hardware chain after Bunnings Warehouse and Mitre 10. It is owned by Metcash.

Masters Home Improvement

Masters Home Improvement was an Australian home improvement chain operated by retailer Woolworths Limited. It was established as a way for Woolworths Limited to enter the hardware retail market, which has been historically dominated by Bunnings Warehouse, owned by rival Wesfarmers. The two companies also compete with each other with groceries, liquor, fuel and general merchandise.

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. Its expansion, 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.

Hugh Denison

Sir Hugh Robert Denison, originally Hugh Robert Dixson was a businessman, parliamentarian and philanthropist in South Australia and later New South Wales. He was a member of the South Australian House of Assembly from 1901 to 1905, representing West Adelaide (1901-1902) and Adelaide (1902-1905). Outside of politics, he was involved in his family's tobacco business, a forerunner of the British-Australasian Tobacco Company, was involved with a number of newspapers, and founded the Macquarie Broadcasting Services Pty Ltd radio network. He changed his surname by deed poll in 1907 to avoid confusion with his uncle Sir Hugh Dixson.

John Darling Jr.

John Darling, Jr. was a Scottish born South Australian businessman and politician. He was a member of the South Australian House of Assembly from 1896 to 1905, representing the electorates of East Torrens (1896-1902) and Torrens (1902-1905). He was Leader of the Opposition from 1902 to 1904. After leaving politics, he was chairman of the board of directors of Broken Hill Proprietary Co. Ltd. from 1907 to 1914.

Hart Aircraft Service Pty. Ltd. was an Australian aviation company registered at Melbourne in mid-1929 with directors James Hart, John Hider and Norman Charles Trescowthick. Director James Hart (c1891-1951) was a former Royal Flying Corp aviator who had flown as gunner for Hereward de Havilland. Norman Trescowthick had served with distinction in the Australian Flying Corps' famous 4th Squadron with Arthur H. Cobby during the First World War.

References

  1. J. Ann Hone, 'Danks, John (1828–1902)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, published first in hardcopy 1972, accessed online 6 December 2014
  2. "John Danks to be a public coy". The Argus . Melbourne: National Library of Australia. 14 April 1950. p. 9. Retrieved 6 December 2014.
  3. "Chain created for hardware stores". The Canberra Times . National Library of Australia. 31 October 1970. p. 18. Retrieved 6 December 2014.
  4. Greenblat, Eli (24 August 2009). "Woolworths moves into hardware with Danks buy". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 30 December 2018.
  5. "Home Timber & Hardware: Metcash to buy business from Woolworths" . Retrieved 30 December 2018.
  6. "Birthday Honours". The Argus . Melbourne: National Library of Australia. 3 June 1925. p. 19. Retrieved 6 December 2014.
  7. "Delphiniums and Poppies". The Australasian . Melbourne: National Library of Australia. 7 March 1931. p. 39. Retrieved 7 December 2014.
  8. Barnier, Cheryl (ed.) Notable Australians Paul Hamlyn Pty. Ltd. 1978 ISBN   0 86832 0129
  9. Choo, K. H. Andy (November 2003). "David M. Danks, M.D., A.O. (June 4, 1931–July 8, 2003):Founder, Murdoch Childrens Research Institute". American Journal of Human Genetics. 73 (5): 981–985. doi:10.1086/379383. ISSN   0002-9297. PMC   1180503 .
  10. Carolyn Rasmussen and Alister Danks, Double Helix, Double Joy ISBN   052286211X is his biography, and is rich in detail on the Danks family.