Historical information
Elgin Shoes Pty., Ltd., established a branch shoe factory in Beechworth in 1946. Managing director, Mr T Nagle Pitman, selected Beechworth as a suitable location for the factory due to the availability of labour in the town, particularly girls under sixteen years of age.
At its peak, the shoe factory employed thirty six women and girls, which also included post-war migrants. After the Second World War, Australia admitted increasing numbers of immigrants in order to fulfil labour requirements for a rapidly inflating demand of consumer goods. These migrants were largely from European Countries in line with the ‘White Australia Policy’. In 1954 Beechworth had 170 migrants from the UK, 102 from Hungary, and 63 from Germany.
The factory closed in 1961 as increased centralisation of both populations and industry in the larger nearby towns of Wangaratta and Wodonga lead to the closure of many factories in small towns in the 1960s and 1970s.
Significance
This photograph is historically significant as it shows the working conditions in a factory primarily staffed by women at some point between the late 1940s and early 1960s.
Physical description
Sepia rectangular photograph printed on matte photographic paper
Inscriptions & markings
Reverse:
14 /
AFGA /
6982 /
Subjects
References
- New Companies - Trove Daily Commercial News and Shipping List, Sat 10 July 1926, Page 4 The formation of Elgin Shoe Company
- Beechworth May have Shoe Unit Factory - Trove Border Morning Mail, wed 8 may 1946 Page 2, Shoe factory establishment in Beechworth, connects Pitman as managing director of Elgin Shoes
- Indigo Shire Heritage Study, Volume 1 Part 1, Jan 2002 Discusses factory dates, reasons for industry closure, bumber of employees
- The Peters family story - Bonegilla to Beechworth - National Archives of Australia Discusses migrant worker at shoe factory
- Migrant Employment Patterns in Australia: post Second World War to the present : AMES Discusses migrant employment
- White Australia policy - NMA Information about the White Australia Policy