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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bradken
IndustryFoundry, manufacturing
Founded1920
FounderLeslie Bradford
Jim Kendall
Headquarters,
Australia
Area served
All
Key people
Sean Winstone (CEO) Sandra Davis (CFO)
ProductsMetal castings, mining consumables
Revenue$819 million (2016)
ParentHitachi Construction Machinery
Websitewww.bradken.com

Bradken is a manufacturer and supplier of differentiated consumable and capital products to the mining, transport, general industrial and contract manufacturing markets with operations in Australia, China, Canada, India, Malaysia and the United States. It is a subsidiary of Hitachi Construction Machinery.

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  • Bradken Adelaide Foundry - Kilburn, South Australia - McMahon Services

Transcription

History

In 1919/1920, BHP steelworks employees, General Manager Leslie Bradford and Chief Mechanical Engineer Jim Kendall and a group of their friends backed a racehorse named Jack Findlay that completed a remarkable sequence of five wins. With each win the group rolled-over their bets and by 24 January 1920 they had won a small fortune pledging their winnings to start a steel foundry business.[1]

On 28 April 1920, Bradford and Kendall used their winnings to establish the Alloy Steel Syndicate and build a steel foundry in Alexandria, Sydney. The syndicate was incorporated as Bradford Kendall Limited on 20 March 1922.[1][2]

In 1926 Bradford Kendall began to manufacture railway couplers and undercarriages. In the 1930s it entered the export market, manufacturing dredge buckets for use in Malaysia. In 1948 the company was listed on the Sydney Stock Exchange.[3] In the 1950s foundries were established in Adelaide, Brisbane, Fremantle and Wodonga. In 1970 a foundry was established in Port Hedland.[1]

In December 1974 the company changed its name to Bradken.[4] By 1978 Bradken was controlled by Australian National Industries (ANI) and Comeng. In 1982 ANI became the sole shareholder. In October 1990, the head office moved from Alexandra to Mayfield West. In 1995 the business was rebranded as ANI Bradken. The business was included in the January 1999 purchase of ANI by Smorgon Steel who sold the business to Castle Harlan Australian Mezzanine Partners.[1][5]

In August 2004 Bradken was relisted on the Australian Securities Exchange.[6] In November 2007 a new manufacturing facility opened in Xuzhou, China. In July 2009 the business of Americast Technologies in the United States was acquired.[1]

In July 2011 Norcast Wear Solutions in Canada and SwanMet in Malaysia were purchased. In March 2013 Bradken opened a greenfield foundry development in Xuzhou, China following the construction of a manufacturing facility on the site in 2007. In October 2016 Hitachi Construction Machinery launched a takeover offer for Bradken.[7][8][9] The transaction was completed in May 2017.[10][11]

On June 10, 2021, it was announced that White Industries had acquired the Ipswich site operations, a strategic decision by its parent company Hitachi Manufacturing to move its operations to offshore facilities.[12][13]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e History Bradken
  2. ^ Bradford Kendall Ltd Daily Commercial News & Shipping List 24 March 1922 page 4
  3. ^ Steel Founders' Share Parcel Sydney Morning Herald 28 August 1948 page 4
  4. ^ Sydney Railway Transportation December 1974 page 14
  5. ^ Smorgon Offloads Bradken in $185 Million Buyout Railway Digest December 2001 page 7
  6. ^ Bradken's strong start Railway Gazette International October 2005 page 645
  7. ^ Acquisition of Bradken Hitachi
  8. ^ Hitachi Construction to buy Australia’s Bradken for $528 million Mining.com 3 October 2016
  9. ^ Hitachi Construction to buy Bradken for $689 million Sydney Morning Herald 3 October 2016
  10. ^ Bradken Limited: Removal from Official List Australian Securities Exchange 16 May 2017
  11. ^ Hitachi shuts 70-year-old Bradken foundry Australian Financial Review 20 March 2019
  12. ^ "Dalby firm buys foundry site". Ipswich News Today. 8 November 2021.
  13. ^ "Bruce and Craig White on purchase of former Bradken's Karrabin foundry in Ipswich and hiring local workforce". The Courier Mail.
This page was last edited on 26 December 2023, at 16:21
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