John Stokes Bagshaw


John Stokes Bagshaw was an inventor and manufacturer of agricultural machinery in 19th century South Australia.

Career

Bagshaw was born in Chetwynd, Shropshire, the son of Edward and Margaret Bagshaw. He trained as a millwright, engineer and patternmaker and migrated to South Australia in 1838, arriving in the Eden at Port Adelaide in June 1837. He was involved in setting up flour mills at Noarlunga, Port Noarlunga and Encounter Bay. He set up a workshop in Elizabeth Street, Adelaide, making windmills. His first two sons, John Augustus and Thomas Henry joined the business. The business expanded into Crowther Street.
In addition to windmills, Bagshaw soon made horse ploughs, chaff cutters and corn crushers. In 1843 he won public recognition by building the world's first "stripper" harvesting machine for inventor John Ridley; it could strip of wheat a day. He then designed and produced the first winnowing machine in Australia. It became one of his company's specialities: more than two hundred were produced. Machinery for flour mills, pumping and drilling was gradually added to his firm's output. He also built baggers, elevators and mill machinery at his factory, which bore the name "Pioneer Works". In 1870, the company changed its name correspondingly.
Bagshaw's son, John Augustus Bagshaw, joined the business in 1852 and proved his father's equal in design and manufacture of farm machinery, taking out several patents and taking control of the company.
In 1893 the company demonstrated a greatly improved disk threshing header.
In 1910 a fire in the Adelaide factory forced the implementation of a long-planned move to Victoria Street, Mile End between King Street and Hilton Road, once a wheat paddock. In 1911 Thomas H. Bagshaw's two sons, Edward G. Bagshaw and Thomas Stokes Bagshaw, took over management of the company. With further expansion in its scope, the company manufactured wooden bodies of passenger cars for the South Australian Railways in 1919. In 1920, with the death of John A. Bagshaw, Vincent A. Zed, a long-time employee, was appointed governing director. In 1920 Bagshaws bought the Balaklava business of Illman and Sons. In 1924 the company was taken over by J.H. Horwood and Co. Ltd., and continued to operate as Horwood, Bagshaw Ltd.

Interests

Bagshaw helped to found the Ancient London Order of Oddfellows in Adelaide.
He helped to found [Holy Holy Trinity Church, Adelaide|Trinity Church, Adelaide|Trinity Church], later named Holy Trinity Church, on North Terrace, Adelaide.
He was elected to the Adelaide Municipal Council in 1870 and served as councillor for six years.
He was a member of the Royal Agricultural and Horticultural Society.

Family

Bagshaw's only brother, William Edward Bagshaw jr., was married to Ann and migrated to South Australia about 1860. In 1836 he married Jane Dale ; they arrived in South Australia on the Eden on 24 June 1838 with a daughter who was born in UK about 1837 and presumably died while young. Their home was "Chetwynd" in Franklin Street. Their children were: