Boiling down

Summary

Boiling down was the term used in Australia for the process of rendering the fat from animal carcasses to produce tallow. It was a common activity on farms and pastoral properties to produce tallow to be made into soap and candles for domestic use.

StateLibQld 2 15810 Woolscouring and Boiling Down Works, Longreach, 1898
StateLibQld 2 40883 Armstrong's Boiling Down Works, Charleville, 1898

Boiling down was industrialised in the 1840s, providing the rural sector with a valuable export commodity. It was particularly significant as it came during the 1840s economic depression when the pastoral industry was at a standstill and sheep and cattle otherwise had little value in the colonies.[1]

Beginnings edit

The export market for Australian wool suffered a severe price slump in the 1840s. Low demand for cattle and sheep to stock new pastoral runs and the small local market for beef, mutton or lamb meant cattle and sheep had little value in the colonies. Boiling-down works provided a vital source of income to the squatters when sheep were selling for as low as sixpence each. Pastoralist George Russell built a boiling works at Golf Hill Station, in the Western District (Victoria), and expressed his belief that, "melting down the Stock has been the salvation of the colonies."[2]

Henry O'Brien of Yass experimented with boiling down sheep in large cauldrons to extract the tallow (fat for soap and candle making). He publicised his experiments in an article that appeared in The Sydney Morning Herald on 19 June 1843. It was reprinted in various other colonial newspapers and is credited with kick-starting the production of tallow as a new export industry in rural Australia. Even when the wool price recovered, boiling down works helped maintain a minimum price for sheep of around five shillings per head.[3]

Langlands and Fulton operated an iron foundry at 131 Flinders St West, Melbourne, Australia, where Fulton developed a technique for boiling-down sheep for tallow around in 1843-44 when squatters slaughtered their otherwise worthless sheep in the thousands due to a rural depression.[4]

In Victoria, Joseph Raleigh is credited with one of the first large scale boiling-down works, when in 1840 he erected a plant near the Stoney Creek Backwash in Yarraville.[5] From a very small quantity of 50 tons of tallow produced in 1843, to 430 in tons in 1844, over 4500 tons, worth £130,000 were produced in 1850 in Victoria alone.[6]

Robert King opened the first boiling down works in the Bremer River area of Ipswich, Queensland in 1847, followed by John Campbell and John Smith, creating a self-contained village of Town Marie.[7]

Further reading edit

  • K. L. Fry, “Boiling down in the 1840s: A Grimy Means to a Solvent End,” Labour History No. 25 (Nov., 1973), pp. 1–18

References edit

  1. ^ Howard, Mark, "The export trade in tallow, 1843-1851," Investigator (Geelong Historical Society), 45 (4), December 2010, p.126
  2. ^ Brown, P. L. (1958) Clyde Company Papers, 1841-45, Vol III, Oxford University Press, p.519
  3. ^ Overlanders and Boiling Down, citing Nissen J.A., Creating the landscape: A history of settlement and land use in Mt Crosby, Master of Arts Thesis, U of Q, 1999 Archived April 23, 2013, at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ Cashman, Richard I., 'Langlands, Henry (1794–1863)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, accessed 17 September 2012
  5. ^ "Onmydoorstep, Raleigh's Boiling Down Works". Archived from the original on 2013-05-03. Retrieved 2013-06-17.
  6. ^ Robyn Annear, Bearbrass: Imagining Early Melbourne, Black Inc., 2005 - Melbourne (Vic.) p.158
  7. ^ BOILING DOWN WORKS, Ipswich Council Archived October 8, 2013, at the Wayback Machine