Hugh Victor McKay CBE (21 August 1865 – 21 May 1926) was an Australian industrialist who is known for heading the company that developed the Sunshine Harvester, arguably the first commercially viable combine harvester. He subsequently established the Sunshine Harvester Works, which became one of Australia's largest manufacturers of agricultural equipment.

H. V. McKay
Born
Hugh Victor McKay

(1865-08-21)21 August 1865
Died21 May 1926(1926-05-21) (aged 60)
OccupationIndustrialist
Known forSunshine Harvester
ChildrenHilda Stevenson

Early life

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HV McKay Harvester on display at the Campaspe Run Rural Discovery Centre, Elmore, Victoria, Australia.

McKay was born the fifth child of a family of twelve near Drummartin, between Elmore and Raywood, Victoria. His parents were Irish Protestants from Monaghan in Ulster who arrived in Victoria in 1852. His father, Nathaniel McKay had been a stonemason and then a miner, before becoming a farmer around the end of 1845.

Hugh attended Drummartin Primary School, and received some education from his father Nathaniel, before returning to the farm at 13. In 1883 he read about combine harvesters in California. With his brother John and his father he built a prototype stripper-harvester by January 1885 and patented the Sunshine Harvester on 24 March 1885,[1] which revolutionised wheat harvesting and sold throughout the world. Although he lost a Victorian Government prize for the first working stripper-harvester to James Morrow in 1885,[2] he successfully commercialised his invention, and had them built under contract in Melbourne and Bendigo. In 1888, he opened a working factory in Ballarat. In 1891 he married Sarah Irene Graves.

He later acquired the Braybrook Implement Works, and renamed it the Sunshine Harvester Works after his Sunshine Harvester. In 1907, the residents of Braybrook Junction voted to rename the suburb Sunshine. The plant was expanded rapidly and at its peak employed nearly 3000 workers. It was the largest factory in Australia and as an example of entrepreneurship has probably not been surpassed in Australia.

Sunshine Gardens

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In 1909 the Sunshine Gardens were developed to provide an amenity for the employees of the Sunshine Harvester Works.[3] Designed by the assistant city engineer at Ballarat Mr F. A. Horsfall and laid out by head gardener S. G. Thompson, the eight-acre Gardens were sited alongside the factory and incorporated recreation facilities and popular horticultural displays.[3][4] According to Bill Bampton, the Gardens included tennis courts and pavilion, a bandstand, a bowling green, a substantial house for the head gardener, a conservatory and associated works areas.[4] Under inaugural curator Thompson (1909–27), and curators James Willan (1930–39) and Harold Gray (1939–50), the Gardens developed a reputation for its chrysanthemums and dahlias, attracting workers and their families, as well as other local residents.[3] In 1953, the management of Sunshine Gardens was handed to the newly established City of Sunshine. At this time, it was renamed the H.V. McKay Memorial Gardens.[3][4] In the 1990s, the garden was listed by the National Trust of Australia and in the Register of the National Estate. In 2007 the Friends of McKay Gardens was formed to help maintain the gardens.[4]

Harvester judgement

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A dispute between McKay and the unions representing the Sunshine workers was heard before the Commonwealth Court of Conciliation and Arbitration in Melbourne between 7 October 1907 and 8 November 1907. H. B. Higgins heard evidence from employees and their wives. In the Harvester Judgement, he obliged McKay to pay his employees a wage that guaranteed them a standard of living which was reasonable for "a human being in a civilised community", regardless of his capacity to pay. McKay successfully appealed this judgement, but it became the basis of the basic wage, which dominated Australian economic life for the next 60 to 80 years.

Later life

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McKay died at Rupertswood, a mansion in Sunbury, Victoria (notable as the birthplace of the Ashes) on 21 May 1926 and was survived by his wife, his daughter Hilda Stevenson and his two sons. His will was valued at £1,448,146; a codicil vested the income from 100,000 shares in the H. V. McKay Charitable Trust, chaired by George Swinburne. The trust's aims are to improve country life and aid charity in Sunshine.[1]

Honours

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He was made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1918.[5]

H.V. McKay Memorial Gardens are named for him.

References

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  1. ^ a b Lack, John. "Hugh Victor McKay (1865–1926)". McKay, Hugh Victor (1865–1926). Australian National University. Retrieved 12 March 2007. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  2. ^ Parsons, George. "James Morrow (1843–1910)". Morrow, James (1843–1910). Australian National University. Retrieved 12 March 2007. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  3. ^ a b c d Aitken, R; Looker, M, eds. (2002). 'H. V. McKay Memorial Gardens', in Oxford Companion to Australian Gardens. South Melbourne: Oxford University Press. p. 388. ISBN 9780195536447.
  4. ^ a b c d Bampton, B., 'H. V. McKay Gardens, Sunshine: an industrial garden 100 years on’, Australian Garden History, 21 (3), 2010, pp. 10–15.
  5. ^ "CBE". It's an Honour. 15 March 1918.

Further reading

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Serle, Percival (1949). "McKay, Hugh Victor". Dictionary of Australian Biography. Sydney: Angus & Robertson.