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The Sunshine Harvester Works, Sunshine, Victoria, Australia
Image: View of the Sunshine Harvester Works
Source: Museum Victoria
Hugh Victor M
cKay assembled the first prototype of his famous stripper-harvester in a bush smithy on his father's farm at Drummarton, near Elmore in 1883-84. By 1888, he had moved to Ballarat, where he established his first manufacturing base in partnership with his brother John, modifying farmers' existing strippers to his patented harvester design that combined an elevator, thresher and winnower on the rear of the machine, enabling cleaned grain to be produced in a single process.In 1890, the bussiness was floated as a public company under the title The McKay Harvesting Machinery Company Ltd, but within two years was forced into liquidation as a severe ecomonic recession caused a decline in demand for harvesters and saw many struggling farmers default on their repayments for harvesters bought from the company on credit. McKay was fortunately able to repurchase his patent rights from the company and began manufacturing from a new manufacturing works, based in Yuille Street, Ballarat. He developed and extensively trialled an improved design of the harvester, which by 1895 he was selling under the "Sunshine" brandname. The Ballarat factory was soon known as the "Sunshine Harvester Works" and output expanded rapidly from 50 harvesters built for the 1895 season, to 501 produced in 1901. New product lines such as seed & fertilizer drills, horseworks and chaffcutters were also added to the output. When a drought in 1902 led to a sudden drop in demand, McKay turned to export markets and began selling harvesters to South Africa and Argentina, in order to keep the factory in production.
In 1904, McKay purchased the Braybrook Implement Works, a defunct manufacturing plant on the western outskirts of Melbourne near the railway junction where the two main lines to Ballarat and Benidgo diverged. McKay's interest in Braybrook was stimulated by the high rail freight he was paying to bring fuel and raw materials to Ballarat and then transport completed harvesters back to the seaboard for export or shipping interstate. He was also attracted by the vast open space available for future expansion at Braybrook and by the fact that being situated in a shire, any manufacturing works there would fall outside the jurisdication of the Factories Act and associated Wages Boards.
McKay reopened the Braybrook Implement Works in 1905, resuming production of the factory's previous range of stump-jump ploughs and cultivation equipment, strippers, winnowers and farm gates, which complemented his own product lines. In 1906, McKay began relocating his entire Sunshine Harvester Works from Ballarat to Braybrook, including manufacturing equipment and many of his Ballarat workers, in a process that would take 18 months to complete. H.V. McKay aspired to create the "Birmingham of the future", and used his entrepreneurial vision and industrial skill to create the largest industrial enterprise in the southern hemisphere. By 1910, the Sunshine Harvester Works was employing 1,300 workers and had given its name to the surrounding suburb, that was renamed from Braybrook Junction to Sunshine. By the 1920s McKay's factory employed over 3,000 workers and covered 76 acres (30.7 hectares), making it the largest manufacturing plant in Australia. Techniques of mass production reduced labour costs and increased McKay's competitive edge. The plant was completely self-sufficient and manufactured every item needed, including metal tubing, nuts and bolts, and even the bikes used by plant supervisors.
Despite his beligerent approach to trade union, McKay had a parternalist attitude to his workers' welfare and invested heavily in public infrastructure and amenitities. In 1906, he had purchased an estate of 300 acres on the opposite side of the railway line to the Sunshine factory and subdivided it to provide housing for his workers. Later when the factory installed it's own electric power generating plant, electricity was supplied to domestic customers in the surrounding suburb.
Related Narratives:
H.V. McKay Sunshine Collection
Sunshine Stripper Harvester
Origin of the 'Sunshine' Brandname
Hugh V. McKay, Agricultural Implement & Machinery Manufacturer, Ballarat & Sunshine, Victoria
H.V. McKay Massey Harris Pty Ltd, Agricultural Equipment Manufacturers & Importers, Sunshine, Victoria
Massey-Ferguson (Aust.) Ltd, Agricultural & Construction Equipment Manufacturers & Importers, Sunshine, Victoria
References:
1. John Lack, 'McKay, Hugh Victor (1865 - 1926)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, Vol.10, Melbourne University Press, 1986, pp 291-294.
2. The Argus, 6 Feb 1905, p.6, http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article9888735.
Items per page: 10 50 (showing 1 - 10) 19 items
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Plaque - Institution of Engineers Australia, H.V. McKay Smithy, 1985
Historic engineering marker plaque dedicated by the Institution of Engineers of Australia in recognition of the McKay smithy as a significant structure the history of Australian agricul ...
Images: 1 -
Crate - H.V. McKay Pty Ltd, to W. Anderson, Plaster Moulds of Relief Profile of H. V. McKa ...
Crate containing two plaster moulds of left hand side relief profiles of HV McKay by Wallace Anderson, made between 1926 and 1928. The crate appears to be a recycled travelling crate, o ...
Images: 16 -
Plaster Mould - 'Relief Profile of H. V. McKay', Wallace Anderson, 1926-1928
One of two plaster moulds of left hand side relief profile of HV McKay made by Wallace Anderson, between 1926 and 1928. The moulds would have been made after H.V. McKay's death on 21 Ma ...
Images: 8 -
Plaster Mould - 'Relief Profile of H. V. McKay', Wallace Anderson, 1926-1928
One of two plaster moulds of left hand side relief profile of HV McKay made by Wallace Anderson, between 1926 and 1928. The moulds would have been made after H.V. McKay's death on 21 Ma ...
Images: 7 -
Bust - H.V. McKay, by Wallace Anderson, after 1926
Bronze bust of H. V. McKay on a granite pedestal. Made by Wallace Anderson. It is not know when this bust was made. The inscription on the pedestal suggests that it was made following ...
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Farm Smithy Model - McKay Farm Smithy, Sunshine, 1954
In 1954 as part of the Sunshine 70th anniversary celebrations a farm smithy model building competition was held. The models were judged according to accuracy of dimensions, construction ...
From: Sunshine, Australia Images: 1 -
Stripper Harvester - H.V. McKay, 'Sunshine' Harvester, Ballarat, Victoria, 1906
The Sunshine Stripper Harvester is famous for combining in one machine the functions of the stripper and winnower. In one operation it could gather and thresh the ripe heads, separate ...
From: Ballarat, Australia Images: 10 -
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Plough Model - Disc, 'Sundercut', McKay Massey Harris, Sunshine, 1908-1936
5(10)-furrow stump jump disc cultivating plough. Model made by H. V. McKay Massey Harris Pty. Ltd., Sunshine, Victoria. Model. 1:4 scale. The 'Sundercut' was Invented by J.B. Garde, ...
From: Sunshine, Australia Images: 0 -
No Image Available
Plough Model - Disc, 'Suncog', H.V. McKay, Sunshine, pre 1915
Four furrow stump jump disc plough model. Made by H.V. McKay, Sunshine, Victoria, before 1928. This type of plough was manufactured at the Sunshine Harvester Works between 1915-1920. ...
From: Sunshine, Australia Images: 0 -
Plough Model - mouldboard, 'Sunlock', H. V. McKay, Sunshine, pre 1928
Model of 3- furrow mouldboard plough. "Sunlock" manufactured by H.V. McKay, Sunshine, Victoria, before 1928. Model made by H. V. McKay, Sunshine. This type of plough was first made at ...
From: Sunshine, Australia Images: 1



