PART THREE - 1993 Newsprint - The Real Inventor of the VictaOne of the most important articles that gave credit to Lawrence Hall
appeared as part of a series, "
Made in Sydney", in the
Herald Sun of
December 28, 1993. The article, by Bob Beale, was split in two parts:
on page 1 and continued on page 4.
![[Linked Image]](https://www.outdoorking-forum.com.au/forum/uploads/usergals/2017/07/full-7392-35088-1993_article_hall_thumb.jpg)
The article is quite amazing in its breadth - with background information
on Hall, and quotes from the
Powerhouse Museum, and
John Longhurst (of Pace
Mowers fame) who was apprenticed to Lawrence Hall! It's an article worth a
careful read.
TRANSCRIPT:Lawrence Hall welded it all up at his Sydney workshop in 1948.
He used a disc from a plough, tin cans, steel pipe scraps and a
putt-putt boat engine: if you stood too close, its spinning blades
could take your toes off.
Today, it seems, that crusty machine devised by a forgotten
inventor still has the power to cut down a myth about the origins of
that icon of Australian suburban culture, the Victa lawn mower.
The man who started producing the Victa in his Concord garage in
1952 and went on to become a multi-millionaire, the late Mervyn
Victor Richardson, long ago won popular and textbook credit for
inventing Australia's first petrol-engined rotary mower.
The mower symbolised Sydney's postwar expansion, the
machine needed to tackle the larger lawns and rougher back-
yards of the new suburbs and "turn grass into lawn".
Mr Richardson certainly deserves credit for his insight into
the mower's potential - more than five million Victas have been made
and models have been exported to over 50 countries - and for his hard
work and innovative sales techniques, according to the curator of
product design and marketing at the Powerhouse Museum, Mr
Richard Wood.
But Mr Wood is now convinced that Mr Richardson copied Law-
rence Hall's 'Mowhall' mower. "Hall created the basic form and
devised the method of propulsion: he was the inventor and
Richardson was the innovator." he said.
Mr Hall was self-taught, a compulsive inventor who learned
his practical wavs in his south at Manilla, near Tamworth. He died
in 1979. His mower was powered by another of his inventions, a
three-horsepower marine engine. His family still runs the engineer-
ing business he set up at Five Dock, now Lawrence Hall and Sons of
Mortlake. The) attest that he invented his mower before Mr
Richardson's.
His son Walter remembers it being built to tame an overgrown
lawn and tennis court at his grandparents' home in Concord.
"Many's the time I pushed this thing and cursed like fury,"
Walter Hall said yesterday. "It was a heavy old monster and I
nearly cut my foot off with it."
Their claim is backed by one of Australia's richest men. John Lon-
ghurst, who built the Dreamworld park in Queensland. He clearly
remembers the day Mr Richardson first saw Mr Hall's invention.
Mr Longhurst was then a teenager apprenticed to Lawrence
Hall as a fitter and machinist and Mr Richardson was a
travelling salesman. Mr Richard-son called in one day to see Mr
Hall, who was fitting his mower with a "snorkel" to prevent its
engine being clogged with dust.
"I remember Merv walked in through the door and I heard him
say, "My, Lawrie, what a wonderful idea!," Mr Longhurst said.
They demonstrated the mower to Mr Richardson, showing how it
could cut even the longest grass. "He was staggered by the idea,"
Mr Longhurst said.
Mr Richardson asked Mr Hall if he could copy it and even used
scrap materials and borrowed tools from Mr Hall to make his much
lighter and more practical prototype Victa.
Soon Mr Richardson had quit as a salesman, was doing a roaring
trade in mowers and was back asking Mr Hall to supply 200 engines a week:
"I remember Lawrie laughed and said Merv had gone off his head - what
would he do with 200 engines a week?
"I guess he didn't realise the market was so big for mowers. But
even if he did I don't know that he would have wanted to do much about
it... As an engineer, in my opinion, he was a genius."
Mr Longhurst certainly saw the potential for mowers, though. At 22, he
sank his savings of $800 into his own business making the Pace rotary
mower. Within a few years he was making 1,000 a week, and his competi-
tion was so fierce that Victa bought him out in the 1960s for $500,000.
Even though Mr Hall's machine was for many years on public display
at the Concord Historical Society, accompanied by a sign declaring it to
be Mr Hall's invention and "the machine from which all modern
mowers were copied", Mr Richardson has continued to be given the
inventor's credit.
Mr Richardson himself did not apparently challenge that idea: "In the
end I think he almost believed he did invent it himself," Mr Longhurst said.
Victa's national marketing manager, Mr Peter Morison, disagrees.
He says there is evidence that the first petrol-driven rotary mowers were
invented in the US in the 1930s.
The Victa was highly original in its own way, and Mr Richardson
deserved credit for inventing many key refinements to the mower, he said.
TO BE CONTINUED ...