Thomas Fulton (ironmaster)
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Born8 October 1813
Dundee, Scotland
Died18 February 1859 (aged 45)
Bendigo, Victoria
OccupationIron founder
Spouse(s)Elizabeth, née Black
Thomas Fulton | |
|---|---|
Thomas Fulton in 1872 | |
| Born | 8 October 1813 Dundee, Scotland |
| Died | 18 February 1859 (aged 45) Bendigo, Victoria |
| Occupation | Iron founder |
| Spouse(s) | Elizabeth, née Black |
| Children | eight children |
Thomas Fulton (1813–1859) was an iron foundry owner in Melbourne, Australia. He established one of the earliest foundries and engineering works in Melbourne in 1842 with Robert Langlands and laid the basis for the metal industry in the colony of Victoria.
Fulton was born at Dundee, Scotland, to a wrought-iron worker, Thomas Fulton (d.1866), and Isabella, née Wheelwright. He was apprenticed to a machine-maker but migrated in February 1842 to Port Phillip in partnership with Robert Langlands, whose brothers George and Henry had previously come to the colony to start a metal works.[1]