Hello ODK history lovers, This is a story and there are stories within stories.
This first part is the story of the Cambridge Push Reel Mower as sold across Australia by a number of companies from the 1940s to the mid-1950s.
The Cambridge was a ‘traditional’ side-wheel mower but with one significant difference: it had a unique feature that permitted the direction of the reel to be quickly reversed for blade sharpening.
In advertising it was described as a “revolutionary self-sharpening mower”. That would be somewhat true …
The mechanism permitted the reel rotation to be reversed, enabling manual backlapping of the reel and bedknife.
The thing is that it is not clear who actually made the mower. There is clear evidence that the Cambridge was made by the `Cambridge Lawnmower Company’ of Sydney, but I have little evidence of that company. There are other clues, though …
In any case, it was rewarding to identify the actual inventor and his patents for this novel lawnmower.
PART TWO – The Inventor It was a chance find of a quality image on a 2013 auction sale that gave me patent numbers to research the inventor of the Cambridge push mower.
The surprise was that the Cambridge mower was an interwar design invented by … a New Zealand sheep farmer … and his name should be recorded – Allan Steward Cambridge.
PART FOUR – The Cambridge Made in Australia So, how did a New Zealand lawnmower design get to be made and sold by various agencies throughout Australia?
Of course, this is speculative but I think this is how events unfolded: -
The inventor, Allan Cambridge, formed a company with one Alfred Hubero and that company was registered on 16 September, 1940. The factory was located at 5 Chisholm Street, Darlinghurst. The company would be the Cambridge Lawnmower Company.
The thing is that a Queensland company was advertising the Cambridge mower for sale two months before company registration. That company was Queensland Pastoral Supplies [QPS].
I mention that fact because I feel there was some special relationship between the newly formed Cambridge company and the Queensland agent.
This might explain why QPS was an extensive advertiser for the Cambridge push mower, and might explain how QPS came to make a powered version of the push reel mower and also had a rotary mower under the Cambridge brand [see Related Reading].
PART FIVE – Clyde Industries Connection My reality is that many lawnmower makers could not make specialised major parts like castings. That seems to be the case here.
It was a chance find of an image from the Clyde Engineering Collection held at MAAS [Museum of Applied Arts & Sciences] that seems significant here. You decide.
The image depicts a component breakdown labelled as 'Cambridge Lawnmower Parts’. The date is … 1939.
PART SIX – Sellers The Cambridge manual push mower was sold by major outlets in key Australian states from the early forties to the mid-1950s.
Sellers included the great Department stores of Anthony Hordern’s and Knock & Kirby in NSW; Sandovers in WA; and Queensland Pastoral Supplies throughout Queensland.
PART SEVEN – The Final Years So, what happened to the Cambridge push mower?
The answer comes in late 1954 when Queensland Pastoral Supplies announced that it had been appointed “Sole Australian Manufacturers of the celebrated Lawn Mower, Cultivators, Seeders and other farm implements.” [see Gallery]
I guess The Cambridge Lawnmower Company was coming to an end. That was confirmed by a 1956 NSW Government Gazette entry that said the company had been struck off the register.
The significant thing about the 1954 QPS announcement is that QPS were free to develop the Cambridge brand … and that they did!
QPS went on to sell a powered version of the Cambridge reel mower, and also introduce Cambridge branded rotary mowers [see Related Reading].
The end of the Cambridge was due to history: the rotary revolution of the 1950s and the consolidation of rotary mower makers in the 1960s gave no space for the old, catalogue company that was QPS.
Both the Cambridge Lawnmower Company and Queensland Pastoral Supplies had run their course. The rest is history.