Adelaide Chemical Works

Former South Australian chemical and fertiliser manufacturer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Adelaide Chemical Works was a chemical and fertiliser manufacturer in Adelaide, Australia. Established on a 5½-acre site at New Thebarton on 22 July 1882 by industrialist Robert Burns Cuming, the works manufactured sulphuric acid and, from mid-1884, superphosphate for South Australian agriculture; a second works was erected at Port Adelaide in 1900 to handle bulk rock-phosphate cargoes that began arriving in 1901.[1] [2] [3]

Company typePrivate
IndustryChemical
Founded22 July 1882
Quick facts Company type, Industry ...
Adelaide Chemical Works
Company typePrivate
IndustryChemical
Founded22 July 1882
FounderRobert Burns Cuming
HeadquartersTorrensville
Area served
South Australia
ProductsSulphuric acid
Superphosphate
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History

Robert Burns Cuming selected a rectangular 5½-acre site at New Thebarton on the River Torrens floodplain, and operations began on 22 July 1882 as South Australia’s first chemical works.[4][5][6]

Early output centred on sulphuric acid; by mid-1884 the works was producing “bone super” and then rock-phosphate superphosphate.[7]

Flooding in 1889 prompted a substantial rebuild, culminating in a new brick works whose foundation stone was laid by Mrs RB Cuming on 7 November 1896.[8][9]

To handle port logistics and rising demand, a second works was erected at Ocean Steamers’ Wharf, Port Adelaide, from early 1900; company offices opened in Currie Street the same year.[10][11]

The first bulk cargo of Ocean Island rock phosphate for the plant—about 3,350 tons—arrived in November 1901, enabling large-scale manufacture for the State’s wheat and pastoral districts.[12]

In 1902 the enterprise was registered as the Adelaide Chemical and Fertiliser Company Limited with £50,000 paid-up capital; by 1917 combined output from Torrensville and Port Adelaide was reported at roughly 45,000 tons a year.[13][14]

Operations were later rationalised through sector mergers, with the company’s records preserved in the Adelaide & Wallaroo Fertilisers (later Wallaroo–Mount Lyell Fertilisers) archive at the State Library of South Australia.[15]

References

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