Hello
ODK History Lovers
The
Scott Bonnar Company sold more than lawnmowers. For example, the first business of the company
was
low pressure brassware, and in the first three years of the company, it would also be oxy and
arc welding. Lawnmowers would only start to play a role in the fourth year, that is, 1923.
By about
1927, I guess,
lawnmowers became the first product line, with brassware second, and then
other products - some seemingly 'out of character' for the firm.
In this post I would like to address what I call Scott Bonnar's
'Depression Ware' products.
These are the lesser known products that the Company sold in the
1930s, during the
Australian
Great Depression - part of the world-wide economic aftershock of the 1929 collapse of the American
economy. These were hard times and lawnmower sales were less than expected, particularly in the
early '30s when the Depression was at its peak. Signs of recovery began from about the mid-thirties.
Scott Bonnar started to manufacture fill-in products to aid the company's bottom line. The firm's
brassware line, named
ESBE (after Scott Bonnar's initials 'S' & 'B') was extended to include rotary
pumps and a kitchen bean slicer. In his 1971
Memoirs,
Malcolm Bonnar said this about those days:-
Malcolm's comments reflect the reality of the events of the thirties. The company moved from the
Depression, to Promise, and then Despair; with the intervention of that second, terrible World War.
I have little newsprint records for the
Esbe Rotary pumps; but I think this is because these were
hardware items that would have been advertised in the
Esbe Catalogues the Company produced for
retailers. Advertisements would have also appeared in Hardware catalogues of the day. In any case,
I do not doubt Malcom's words here that they sold well.
The
Esbe Bean Slicers - a kitchen product - was advertised more widely in newsprint, and I will
discuss them in the next part. To give you the idea of what these products looked like, here is
a photograph from member
Geoff N, the grandson of Scott Bonnar Factory Manager, Sid Bowditch:-
TO BE CONTINUED ...