Adelaide Chemical Works
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.
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.Early output centred on sulphuric acid; by mid-1884 the works was producing “bone super” and then rock-phosphate superphosphate.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Operations were later rationalised through sector mergers, with the company’s records preserved in the Adelaide & Wallaroo Fertilisers archive at the State Library of South Australia.