The Hindmarsh Brewery was a
brewery founded 1844 in
Hindmarsh
Hindmarsh is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
* Alfred Hindmarsh, MP for Wellington South (New Zealand electorate) and first leader of the New Zealand Labour Party
*Ian Hindmarsh, Australian rugby league player
* Jean Hindm ...
, in the then
colony of South Australia, by E. J. F. "Fred" Crawford. Crawford lost possession of the business in 1859, then re-established it on a different site before becoming
bankrupt. It was then taken over by Henry Haussen and George Catchlove, and was successfully operated by them and their successors until 1927.
History
The Hindmarsh Brewery has been touted as the first in the colony, but others almost certainly predated it: there was
*Anthony Lillyman's (died 1847) brewery, on the banks of the
River Torrens, which was a known landmark in March 1838, and closed later that year.
*John Warren (c. 1783 – 22 March 1873), arrived January 1838 aboard ''Royal Admiral'', had a brewery on the banks of the Torrens that same year
*
Union Brewery on south side of Rundle street, James Place corner:
Daniel Cudmore 1838 to 1841?; John Richmond (c. 1797–1862) and
John Primrose 1841 to November 1875.
*
Grenfell Street brewery opposite Fordham's hotel 1839
*Auld & Shand's "Torrens Brewery" "Park Land Brewery" 1841; both John Auld and John Shand insolvent 1843.
*Thomas Kilpatrick Auld's "Adelaide Brewery" in August 1842 on
Town Acre 49, north side of Hindley Street, two allotments from King William Street. John Auld was publican of "Adelaide Brewery Hotel" next door. He and John were brothers of
Patrick Auld. Thomas later had a brewery at Morphett Vale, then Gawler. Proved insolvent 1858, possibly moved interstate.
*John Newington had the Kent Brewery on
Halifax Street
Halifax Street is a street in the south-eastern sector of the centre of Adelaide, South Australia.[Map]
o ...
near St John's Church, before December 1842. Insolvent 1846.
*Thomas Moulden's Barleycorn Brewery,
Rundle Street, opposite Sir John Barleycorn Hotel (1843 to 1846).
*Andrew Birrell and Edward Moger 1843; Birrell (died 1867?) insolvent 1843; Moger (c. 1812–1899) then employed at
Pirie Street Brewery
The Pirie Street Brewery was a brewery situated on Pirie and Wyatt Streets, Adelaide, in the early days of the British colony of South Australia. It was succeeded on the same site after a few years by the Adelaide Brewery. Its original address w ...
, insolvent 1851, later at Gumeracha Brewery,
Gumeracha
Gumeracha ( ) is a town in the Adelaide Hills, South Australia, located on the Adelaide-Mannum Road. It is located in the Adelaide Hills Council local government area on the south bank of the upper River Torrens. At the 2006 census, Gumeracha ...
.
*Away from the city, the Balhannah Brewery operated 1843 to 1844 by
James Turnbull Thomson
James Turnbull Thomson (1810 – c. 20 August 1876) was a publican and brewer, recognised as the founder of Balhannah, South Australia.
History
Thomson was a son of Rev. James Thomson, pastor of Steeple Church, Dundee, and his wife Hannah Thomso ...
, again in 1855.
and around the same time:
*Tasmanian Brewery, at rear of Tasmanian Hotel,
Hindley Street, near the corner of
Morphett Street, operated by John Wheland in 1844.
*William Hardyman Colyer and
William Williams founded
Walkerville Brewery
Walkerville Brewery was a brewer of beer in Adelaide, South Australia, originally founded in the 1840s. The company became a co-operative, and grew by admitting hotel owners as shareholders, and absorbed smaller breweries. After several amalgama ...
1844
*
W. H. Clark's Halifax Street Brewery 1844
Crawford brothers
Edward James Frederick "Fred" Crawford (c. 1809 – 8 May 1880) and
George Tinline were partners in a brewery, which by 1844 was producing an ale of marketable quality. From that year on, Tinline's name did not appear with reference to the brewery; though it is likely that being a banker, his interest in the business was only ever financial, and remained so. The brewery then operated as "Crawford Brothers", though the name of no brother ever appeared in connection with the brewery. James Field Crawford (1815 – 24 May 1906), the explorer,
and Thomas George Tremlett Crawford (c. 1825 – 5 September 1911) were brothers, for whom
Mt. Crawford may have been named.
The brewery was situated on Lot 83, Manton Street, Hindmarsh, which Crawford leased from
Daniel Cudmore, and later purchased; the area today bounded by Orsmond, Milner, and Manton streets, and Crawford Lane.
:The site was noted for the safe drinking water which the brewery extracted from an aquifer, using a pump built by
John Ridley, and made available to nearby residents.
In 1850 Crawford purchased from
Luther Scammell
F. H. Faulding & Co was a pharmaceutical company founded in Adelaide, Australia, in 1845 by Francis Hardey Faulding (23 August 1816 – 19 November 1868), a native of Swinefleet, near Goole in Yorkshire, son of Francis Faulding, a surgeon.A ...
a strip of land, soon dubbed Brewery Lane, for better access from the
Port Road to his brewery. At a later date this was known as Kangaroo Lane, and is now Crawford Lane.
:In July 1854
W. H. Clark, with partners
J. B. Spence
John Brodie Spence (15 May 1824 – 7 December 1902) was a prominent Scottish-born banker and politician in the early days of South Australia. He was a brother of the reformer Catherine Helen Spence.
Spence was born in Melrose, Scottish Bord ...
,
J. H. Parr and
Edward Logue
Edward Joseph Logue (February 7, 1921 – January 27, 2000) was an American urban planner and public administrator who worked in New Haven, Boston, and New York State.
Commentators often compare Logue with Robert Moses - both were advocates ...
, took over Crawford Brothers' Hindmarsh Brewery in order to close it down and supply its customers from their Halifax Street brewery. The business continued however under Crawford, but under what conditions it has not yet been found. In 1859, under financial stress, he assigned the property to his creditors.
[ Around this time Crawford was manager of the ]Pirie Street Brewery
The Pirie Street Brewery was a brewery situated on Pirie and Wyatt Streets, Adelaide, in the early days of the British colony of South Australia. It was succeeded on the same site after a few years by the Adelaide Brewery. Its original address w ...
.[
In 1861 he purchased the brewery founded in 1859 by Watson & Borrers, on Hindmarsh Lot 162 on nearby Richards Street. and taken over the following year by the short-lived partnership of Bauer & Coulthard.
Crawford was an avid real estate speculator, which may have been the cause of his bankruptcy in 1867 after four years of drought and recession, and he departed for Ararat, Victoria out of reach of his creditors. The property was purchased by Haussen & Catchlove.
In 1869 E. J. F. Crawford founded the Crawford and Moyle brewery, later Crawford Brothers, and did much to encourage local hop growing. The brewery closed sometime before 1875 and he was employed at the Victoria Brewery, Sale, Victoria.
He and his wife died there, she in 1877 and he died intestate in 1880. Probate was granted to his eldest son James John Crawford (1848– ) in 1894 and published ten years later. John James Crawford settled in Koroit, perhaps initially in straitened circumstances][ but grandson ]Sidney Crawford
Sidney Crawford (4 November 1885 – 14 May 1968) was a South Australian businessman born in Victoria.
History
Edward James Frederick Crawford (c. 1808 – 15 May 1880), at one time a prosperous brewer associated with the Hindmarsh Brewery. He wa ...
(1885–1968) became a wealthy and influential Adelaide businessman.[Susan Marsden, 'Crawford, Sidney (1885–1968)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/crawford-sidney-9859/text17443, published first in hardcopy 1993, accessed online 12 February 2018.]
Haussen & Catchlove
Henry Hermann Haussen (1 September 1830 – 28 December 1870) was born in London, a son of Otto Carl Haussen (c. 1781 – 11 August 1862) and Maria Haussen (c. 1784 – 15 June 1865), who emigrated to South Australia aboard ''John'', arriving in September 1839 with their children Otto Charles Haussen (c. 1821 – 16 October 1881) married Henriette Wormker (spelling?) in 1850, Emily Rose, Emma and Henry Hermann. Emily Rose, the youngest daughter, married G.A.F. Heseltine on 7 May 1846.
Haussen established a potato business in Gouger Street, Adelaide that operated 1859–1870; much of the business being importation of seed potato
The potato is a starchy food, a tuber of the plant ''Solanum tuberosum'' and is a root vegetable native to the Americas. The plant is a perennial in the nightshade family Solanaceae.
Wild potato species can be found from the southern Unite ...
es from Van Diemen's Land (today's Tasmania).
George Henry Catchlove (c. 1830 – 17 October 1892) and his widowed father Henry Catchlove (c. 1806–1867) arrived in June 1839 aboard ''Hooghly''. Henry's brother Edward William Catchlove (c. 1878–1846) arrived in November 1836 aboard ''Tam O'Shanter'' with a larger family. His wife Harriet died ''en voyage''. Edward was licensee of the Shipwright's Arms, Albert Town (today's Alberton), transferred it to George in 1845.
The Hindmarsh Brewery was purchased in 1868 from Crawford's bankrupt estate by Haussen and his brother-in-law Catchlove, operating it originally as Crawford & Co., then Haussen & Catchlove.
The brewery's cellars, dubbed "the warren", were extensive, totalling about , and remarkable for requiring no timbering or brickwork, as the ground was of a most tenacious type of clay.
They had offices at 63 Hindley Street, which from January 1869 also carried a wide range of imported ale, wines and spirits. They also had an office and warehouse at Port Adelaide.
The company only produced their beverages in barrels for supply to licensed premises, but at least one company made a business of bottling their ales and porters: this was R. Strutton of Gilbert Place, later of Blyth Street.
Haussen died in 1870, and his wife continued as partner in the business until 1874 when it was purchased by Frederick Estcourt Bucknall
Frederick Estcourt Bucknall (6 July 1835 – 4 June 1896) was an English-born publican, brewer and politician in the early days of the colony of South Australia.
Life
Bucknall was a member of the Estcourts of Estcourt, an influential old f ...
and Frank South Botting (c. 1849–1894),[ but continued trading as Haussen & Co.
Some time after 1881 Bucknall, who was Mayor of Hindmarsh 1880–1883, ceased to have any involvement in the Company, perhaps as late as 1886 when he lost most of his fortune with the failure of the ]Commercial Bank of South Australia The Commercial Bank of South Australia was a South Australian bank founded in 1878 that failed in February 1886 due to fraudulent loans and transfers by the Manager, Alexander Crooks and Accountant, Alexander McKenzie Wilson. It was also notable f ...
.
Botting and his father Francis Joseph Botting (1819–1906) took over the business.
Frank Botting died in November 1894, and his father became sole proprietor.
A public company Haussen & Co. Ltd. was established in 1910 to operate the Richards Street brewery, which continued operation until 1927, when it was absorbed by the Walkerville Cooperative Brewing Co. Haussen & Co. continued as owners of their various hotels, but contracted to that company (which despite its name was located at Southwark
Southwark ( ) is a district of Central London situated on the south bank of the River Thames, forming the north-western part of the wider modern London Borough of Southwark. The district, which is the oldest part of South London, developed ...
) for their supplies.
(Auguste John) Charles De Bavay (died 10 November 1962), son of Auguste Joseph Francois De Bavay OBE (1856–1944) was head brewer 1913, and introduced new methods and equipment.
Strutton & Trapmann
In 1876 Robert Strutton (died 1919) and Carl Wilhelm Ferdinand Trapmann (Mayor of Hindmarsh 1876–1877; died 1885) opened the "Kangaroo Brewery" on the site of the old Hindmarsh Brewery. The business closed in 1884, but the "Kangaroo Brewery" sign, and the informal name "Kangaroo Lane" (now Crawford Lane) persisted into the 20th century.[
]
Crawford family
Edward James Frederick Crawford (7 December 1809 – 15 May 1880) was a son of Captain Crawford of HMS ''Victorious''. He married Mary Ann Scott, emigrated aboard ''Dorset'', arriving in Adelaide January 1839 with daughters Ann Eliza and Elizabeth. Fate of mother (who may have died before embarkation) and daughter Ann not yet known. His first employment in the new country was in the office of The Southern Australian. His family includes:
*Elizabeth Crawford (c. 1837 – 2 May 1866) married John Flaxman (c. 1836–1901) of Melbourne on 12 May 1857, died at Warrnambool
He married Frances Mitchell ( – 1 April 1877) in Sydney on 31 July 1841. She was a sister of T. N. Mitchell of Anlaby station.
*James John Crawford (7 February 1848 – 17 October 1926), accountant, married Ruth Harding (1859 – 17 February 1946) of Whanganui, New Zealand, on 15 November 1879? 25 November 1880?, lived Koroit, Victoria
Koroit is a small rural town in western Victoria, Australia a few kilometres north of the Princes Highway, north-west of Warrnambool and west of Melbourne. It is in the Shire of Moyne local government area located amidst rolling green past ...
, then Brighton, South Australia. Prominent among their seven sons were:
:*Edward James Frederick Crawford ( – ) married Margaret Elizabeth Gray of Horsham, Victoria on 30 May 1907, lived at Buninyong. Named identically to his grandfather, he was manager of the National Bank at Koroit, Angaston, Eudunda, Strathalbyn, Wagga Wagga, Albury Bendigo and Prahran, playing organ at several of the earlier towns' Congregational churches. An identically named distant relative (1865 – 28 December 1941), see below, was health inspector and architect in Melbourne.
:*Lindsay Tremlett Crawford (27 April 1882 – 2 December 1973)
:*Sidney Crawford
Sidney Crawford (4 November 1885 – 14 May 1968) was a South Australian businessman born in Victoria.
History
Edward James Frederick Crawford (c. 1808 – 15 May 1880), at one time a prosperous brewer associated with the Hindmarsh Brewery. He wa ...
(4 November 1885 – 14 May 1968) married Elsie Mary Allen on 10 September 1920
:*Rev. Norman Crawford (died 1968?), psychologist and (Anglican) priest at Plympton and at Glenelg; a Howard League member noted for his opposition to the hanging of Max Stuart.
:*Arthur Crawford (c. May 1893 – ) bank clerk, served in France with the Motor Transport Service; married Estella Helena Mitchell, daughter of Lt.-Col. C. Ashmore Mitchell VD (1862–1941). Arthur was still alive 1946.
:*Francis "Doc" Crawford (c. March 1895 – 30 August 1913)
*Frederick Henry Crawford (16 June 1850 – 9 December 1915) married Jane Margaret Clugston on 1 June 1893 in Whanganui, New Zealand, where he was employed as a brewer
*Lindsay Crawford (9 April 1852 – 19 March 1901) died at Newcastle Waters, Northern Territory
*Frances Madeline Jane "Madeline" Crawford (1853 – ) married John Edward Kelsey in Katherine, Northern Territory
Katherine is a town in the Northern Territory of Australia. It is situated on the Katherine River, after which it is named, southeast of Darwin. It is the fourth largest settlement in the Territory and is known as the place where "The outbac ...
on 10 December 1886
Also on ''Dorset'' were his brothers James Field Crawford (1815 – 24 May 1906), Thomas George Tremlett Crawford (c. 1825 – 5 September 1911 in Brisbane), and (possibly) Sidney Malone Crawford (c. 1823 – 5 November 1864) who had arrived in SA by 1842 but not found on ''Dorset'' passenger list. He married Blakely Robson on 16 June 1849, was brewer at Sandhurst, Victoria, and had one son, Edward James Frederick Crawford (1865–1941), architect of Melbourne. Blakely married again on 21 December 1878, to Peter Tyson, squatter of Corrong Station.
Relationship (if any) to Hugh Archibald Crawford (c. 1824 – 6 October 1881), his son Robert Hugh Crawford (c. 1854 – 18 October 1930) and grandson Hugh John Crawford (c. 1883 – 21 March 1943), who owned Adelaide's major grocery, in Hindley Street and King William Street from 1852 to 1933, has not been established.
Another whose relationship has not been established is Capt. Henry Spencer Crawford ( – 14 November 1861), co-founder of Kent Town Brewery.
Haussen family
Henry Hermann Haussen emigrated aboard ''John'' with his parents Otto Carl and Maria Haussen, and siblings Otto Charles, Emily Rose and Emma, arriving in February 1840.
He married Rosa Catchlove (7 December 1840 – 23 November 1899), eldest daughter of Henry Catchlove, on 2 March 1858.[Rosa married again, to ]Frederick Estcourt Bucknall
Frederick Estcourt Bucknall (6 July 1835 – 4 June 1896) was an English-born publican, brewer and politician in the early days of the colony of South Australia.
Life
Bucknall was a member of the Estcourts of Estcourt, an influential old f ...
on 1 October 1874. She had three more children by Bucknall, who died in penury. Her children by Haussen were well provided for in his will, and prospered; the others lapsed into obscurity. She married once more, to brewer John Huxtable Wesley Peryman (c. 1837 – 13 February 1923), died at Mount Magnet, Western Australia Their children included:
*Emily Mary Haussen (4 May 1859 - 1914) married Harry Walker ( – 25 November 1886) on 20 April 1881
:* Fred Walker (5 January 1884 – 21 July 1935), chairman Fred Walker & Co., later Kraft Walker, manufacturers of Vegemite
*Rosa Henrietta Haussen (2 November 1860 – 29 November 1915) married brewer Arthur Wellington Ware (1867 – 29 January 1927) on 11 March 1884
*Ada Haussen (3 February 1864 – 29 December 1952) married William John Allsop Begg (c. 1866 – 29 September 1947)
*Henry Spencer "Spence" Haussen (3 September 1865 – 1942) Spence died in Wyong, New South Wales
*Amelia Haussen (26 January 1869 - ) married architect Arthur Dan Bendle Garlick (30 May 1863 – 27 June 1901) on 8 April 1890, died in Maryborough, Queensland
Maryborough ( ) is a city and a suburb in the Fraser Coast Region, Queensland, Australia. At the 2021 Census, Maryborough had a population of 15,287.
Geography
Maryborough is located on the Mary River in Queensland, Australia, approximate ...
. Garlick was a son of pioneer architect Daniel Garlick.
*Anna Hermanna Haussen (6 January 1871 – 14 March 1943) married solicitor George Andrew Greer ( – 1 May 1905) on 18 June 1890. She never remarried.
Catchlove family
Henry Catchlove (c. 1806 – 26 October 1867), a widower, and his son George Henry Catchlove arrived in SA June 1839 aboard ''Hooghly''.
*George Henry Catchlove (c. 1830 – 17 October 1892) married Amelia Sayers ( –1929) in 1853. They had no children.
Around 1840 he married Emma Filmer, who arrived with her parents and large family aboard ''Lloyds'' in December 1838. Their children included:
*Rosa Catchlove (7 December 1840 – 23 November 1899) married Henry Hermann Haussen on 2 March 1858[
*Nora Catchlove (1851– )
*Alice Maud Mary Catchlove (1854– ) married cousin Zechariah Sayers in 1873
*Alfred Harry Catchlove (1856– )
*Harry Charles Catchlove (1858– )
*Albert Henry Catchlove (1864– ) married Eva McCulloch of Prahran, Victoria, on 6 March 1890
Emma married again, to James James in 1876.
A brother Edward William Catchlove arrived in South Australia November 1836 aboard ''Tam O'Shanter''. His daughter Jane Catchlove married William Williams of ]Walkerville Brewery
Walkerville Brewery was a brewer of beer in Adelaide, South Australia, originally founded in the 1840s. The company became a co-operative, and grew by admitting hotel owners as shareholders, and absorbed smaller breweries. After several amalgama ...
on 25 October 1877. A granddaughter Mary Laura Williams (1845 – 13 November 1880) married Thomas Moseley, son of Henry Jackson Moseley, founder of the Pier Hotel, Glenelg, on 25 October 1877.
Other breweries
Other breweries operating in the late 1860s included:
* Kent Town Brewery;
* Union Brewery:
*Pirie Street Brewery
The Pirie Street Brewery was a brewery situated on Pirie and Wyatt Streets, Adelaide, in the early days of the British colony of South Australia. It was succeeded on the same site after a few years by the Adelaide Brewery. Its original address w ...
;
* West End Brewery;
*Morphett Street Brewery
The Morphett Street Brewery was a brewer of beer in Adelaide, South Australia.
History
John Reid ( – c. 24 November 1863) and Isaiah Reid (c. 1832 – 9 April 1877) had a licensed grocery shop on a half acre of land on Morphett Street near No ...
; and
*Walkerville Brewery
Walkerville Brewery was a brewer of beer in Adelaide, South Australia, originally founded in the 1840s. The company became a co-operative, and grew by admitting hotel owners as shareholders, and absorbed smaller breweries. After several amalgama ...
.
Notes and references
{{Reflist
1927 disestablishments in Australia
Beer brewing companies based in South Australia
Australian companies established in 1844
Food and drink companies established in 1844
Defunct breweries of Australia