Sunday History Photo / SA

Submitted: Sunday, Oct 21, 2012 at 04:32
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The Hills Hoist is an inexpensive rotary clothes line developed and marketed by Australian, Lance Hill in 1945.
A blacksmith's smithy at 262a Glen Osmond Road became the first factory for producing the hoists.
The Australian Patent 215772 was lodged on 22nd March, 1956. This was for the crown and pinion winding mechanism which allows the frame to be raised and lowered.





The Hills' Hoist was not the first rotary hoist of its kind. Around 1912, an inventor in Geelong called Gilbert Toyne, designed a rotary clothes hoist. By the early 1920s, Toyne's 'All-Metal Rotary Clothes Hoist' was being manufactured and advertised in Australia - about 25 years before the first 'Hills Hoist'. From 1925 Gilbert Toyne produced hoists with a wind-up mechanism in Adelaide but they were too expensive to become popular. In 1928 he licensed his South Australian and Western Australian rights to the Lambert brothers at Fullarton. Their hoists were made of wood, which limited size and durability, and they sold few.



Lance Hill was born on 15 December 1902 at Knoxville, Adelaide, second of four children of Alfred William Hill, slaughterman, and his wife Lillian Ethel, née Mott. Educated at Glen Osmond Public School, at 14 Lance joined the staff of the Hill family’s long-established bacon factory and meat cannery. He gained a steam engineer’s certificate and was put in charge of the boilers. In the 1920s he acquired skills in refrigeration and general engineering. He earned extra money at weekends by riding Indian and AJS motorcycles in dirt-track speedway races and by giving joy¬rides in speedboats from the Glenelg jetty. In the 1930s he left Hills Bros and opened a motor garage at Prospect

Closing his garage and enlisting in the Militia on 7 January 1942, Hill rose to acting warrant officer, class two, in September and transferred to the Australian Imperial Force in October. He remained in South Australia, instructing motor mechanics and motorbike despatch-riders. After his discharge from the army in August 1945 his wife complained that citrus trees in their backyard had grown so much that there was no room to hang out the washing on their single-wire clothes-line. To solve the problem he built a rotary hoist, using scrap metal and oxyacetylene equipment. After family and neighbours admired the result and placed orders he decided to earn his living making hoists.

Since 1905 several Australian firms had been manufacturing rotary clothes-lines. Many could not be raised or lowered and users pegged out washing by standing on a platform. Others were lifted hydraulically. Hill used only steel. His first small classified advertisement in the Advertiser in November 1945 drew six orders. Its successors brought an increasing flow. Most of the early customers were women. The price was ten guineas, plus £1 for delivery and installation, and five shillings extra if the hoist was set in concrete.

Postwar shortages posed a challenge. Damaged military aeroplanes became the main source of wire and anti-submarine mesh salvaged from Sydney Harbour furnished the stay rods. Hill’s father, Alf, straightened, cleaned and cut old pipes scrounged from many sources, and built a handcart to transport the hoists. Sherry Hill painted the finished product. By February 1946, struggling to meet demand, the Hills were working sixteen-hour days. Lance’s brother-in-law Harold Ling joined the business and took charge of accounts and marketing. Additional staff were recruited and production moved from the Hills’s backyard to leased land on Glen Osmond Road, Fullarton. Old army trucks were bought for deliveries. The first models were dubbed `chinwackers’, as they were raised by a lever that could fly from the operator’s grasp. Ling failed in attempts to buy a right to use Toyne’s patented winding mechanism and in late 1946 Hill designed and produced his own.




The first interstate branch was established in Sydney in 1947. To raise money for further growth, a company, initially called Hills Hoists Ltd, was formed in January 1948, with Hill as chairman. Its purchase of pipe-making and galvanising plants eliminated the need for painting. Modest prices and the `lifetime guarantee’ offered by Hill from the beginning enabled the Hills hoist to outclass competitors. By 1954, when most operations had moved to a 10-acre (4 ha) site at Edwardstown, sales had reached six hundred hoists a week and there were branches throughout Australia. The hoist became a national symbol. Hill developed additional products, including laundry trolleys, ironing boards and children’s playground equipment.

While on a trade mission in New Zealand in 1956 Hill suffered a major cardiac incident. On doctors’ advice, he resigned from the company. He sold his shares to Ling but stayed on as a consultant, assisting in crises at the factory and working on innovations. In retirement he became a keen angler and water-skier and, with his wife, enjoyed many caravan holidays to Queensland and Central Australia. Survived by his wife and their daughter and son, he died on 7 March 1986 at Largs Bay and was cremated. By then over one million Hills hoists had been sold.

Today Hills Industries is a public company. Chairman Bob Hill-Ling's father and uncle developed the hoist. His daughter Jennifer, a Sydney lawyer, is a director of the company.


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Reply By: Chris & Sue (Briz Vegas) - Sunday, Oct 21, 2012 at 07:24

Sunday, Oct 21, 2012 at 07:24
Another interesting piece of Australians, Doug. Thanks!

Hands up all those who've been chastised (or worse) by their Mother for swinging on the Hills hoist in the back yard?

:-)
AnswerID: 497048

Follow Up By: Chris & Sue (Briz Vegas) - Sunday, Oct 21, 2012 at 10:36

Sunday, Oct 21, 2012 at 10:36
That should have been Australiana, not Australians.

Serves me right for replying from a tablet with predictive text!
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Follow Up By: Life Member - Doug T (NT) - Sunday, Oct 21, 2012 at 22:42

Sunday, Oct 21, 2012 at 22:42
My hand is up...

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Reply By: Find A Park - Sunday, Oct 21, 2012 at 07:43

Sunday, Oct 21, 2012 at 07:43
Thank you for providing us with this interesting story. I am sure that the Hills Hoist is an essential part of every caravanners supplies.

David Holland,
The Find A Park Facebook Page
AnswerID: 497049

Reply By: Member - John G - Sunday, Oct 21, 2012 at 12:36

Sunday, Oct 21, 2012 at 12:36
Good onya Doug

I grew near the factory on Glen Osmond Road, and always thought that it was just an Adelaide-centric piece of kit, until moving interstate and realising that many aliens also had a Hills Hoist.

Cheers
John
AnswerID: 497070

Reply By: Bob R4 - Sunday, Oct 21, 2012 at 13:59

Sunday, Oct 21, 2012 at 13:59
Hi Doug.
I've just checked the Millswood address in the order book , and on photo maps (Nearmaps) you can clearly see the hills hoist and its shadow in the back yard. The house looks like it is still very original, so I'd suggest the above mentioned hills hoist is still in situ and still used.
I'll check the other addresses now.
Cheers, Bob
AnswerID: 497072

Follow Up By: Bob R4 - Sunday, Oct 21, 2012 at 14:08

Sunday, Oct 21, 2012 at 14:08
hills hoists at 76 Millswood cres Millswood, 15 Bideford ave Clarence Gdns, and 30 Malurus ave Lockleys. Bet they're all the original ones.
Bob
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Follow Up By: Life Member - Doug T (NT) - Sunday, Oct 21, 2012 at 22:40

Sunday, Oct 21, 2012 at 22:40
Bob

Thanks for your input, damn good idea, I didn't think of doing that.

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Reply By: lancie49 - Sunday, Oct 21, 2012 at 14:24

Sunday, Oct 21, 2012 at 14:24
The backyard Hills Hoist.
I guess some of you know that the winder mechanism is strong enough to lift a child weighing about 3stone from the ground to a height of some 3feet above said ground.

Do any of you know what happens when Windee then goes inside to watch Zorro, leaving Winded at that 3foot above ground level ?

Yep, Winded drops the 3 feet to ground and breaks an ankle................
Hey, ya reckon Windee got a kick in the bum from Dad when he got home..............

Thanks Doug for some fun memories of the backyard in Coburg ;-)
AnswerID: 497073

Reply By: Member - ACD 1 - Sunday, Oct 21, 2012 at 15:58

Sunday, Oct 21, 2012 at 15:58
Hi Doug

Great piece of Australiana as usual.

The picture of the Toynes add reminded me of a piece that I have in my junk collection - tried to include photo's but can't work out how to do it.

Years ago, I found what I thought was a child's toy clothes line at a local tip. I grabbed it thinking I would restore it when I had a daughter (no luck - two boys).

It is actually a working model of a Hills Hoist that was displayed on the counter of a shop/hardware store for customers to see how they worked.

It is about 55 cm x 80 cm. they arms rotate and the winding mechanism raises and lowers the arms. While it all still works, the clothes wires were missing.

If someone can mm me with instructions on how to add photos from an IPad, I will include them.

Cheers

Anthony
AnswerID: 497075

Reply By: SDG - Sunday, Oct 21, 2012 at 19:30

Sunday, Oct 21, 2012 at 19:30
My Grandmother had one of the first ones sold in Sydney. Still worked to the day she died about ten years back. And then it was ripped up and thrown in the tip, as it was not modern enough for the new people looking at buying the house....
AnswerID: 497087

Reply By: happytravelers - Sunday, Oct 21, 2012 at 20:52

Sunday, Oct 21, 2012 at 20:52
Hi Doug

My mother in law has one in her back yard in England, the only original Hills Hoist I've ever seen outside Australia. I don't know what it's story is as it was there when she bought the house back in the Seventies.

Jon
AnswerID: 497093

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