John Owen
- Born: Cal 1829, Liverpool
- Marriage (1): Elizabeth Aitken in 1858 in Victoria 1
- Marriage (2): Amelia Elizabeth Nott in 1867 in Victoria 2
- Died: 8 Feb 1882, High Street, Prahran 3
- Buried: 9 Feb 1882, St Kilda Cemetery, Melbourne, , Victoria, Australia
General Notes:
From ancestry.com Owen Family Tree
Family Members Parents Humphrey Owen 1804 \endash 1861 Sarah Higginbotham 1800 \endash 1868
Spouse & Children Elizabeth Aitkin 1836 \endash 1866 George Humphrey Owen 1859 \endash 1859 Janet Sarah Owen 1860 \endash 1931 Helen Owen 1861 \endash 1940 George Humphret Owen 1863 \endash 1863 Elizabeth Owen 1865 \endash 1865
Spouse & Children Amelia Elizabeth Nott 1840 \endash 1907 John Herbert Owen 1868 \endash 1945 Mabel Owen 1870 \endash 1941 Charles Frederick Owen 1872 \endash 1944 Ernest Owen 1874 \endash 1920 Horace Owen 1876 \endash 1943 Harry Humphrey Owen 1882 \endash 1954
Chronology:
MISC: Arrival in Victoria, Cal 1855. 4 Illustrated Australian News (Melbourne, Vic. : 1876 - 1889), Wednesday 22 February 1882, page 18, 19 Arrived in Victoria from NSW in 1855 and started business with G Heard in Elizabeth Street
Possible: Victoria, Australia, Assisted and Unassisted Passenger Lists, 1839\endash 1923 about John Owen Name:John Owen Estimated Birth Year:abt 1830 Age:24 Arrival Date:Jan 1854 Arrival Port:Melbourne and Sydney, Australia Departure Port:Liverpool Ship:Merlin Nationality:English
MISC: Ended connection to Owen, Dudgeon & Arnell, 23 Sep 1873. 5 The Argus (Melbourne, Vic. : 1848 - 1956) Wednesday 24 September 1873 Supplement: The Argus Supplement p 2 Advertising NOTICE is hereby given, that the PARTNERSHIP for some time past carried on by the undersigned John Owen, John Dudgeon, and Charles Carty Arnell, at Melbourne, in the trade or business of tobacco and snuff manufacturers under the style or firm of "OWEN, DUDGEON, and ARNELL," was this day DISSOLVED by mutual consent. The said John Dudgeon and Charles Cirty ArnellFix this text will discharge all debts and receive all credits on account of the said partnership concern. As witness our hands this twenty-third day of Sep- tember,1873. JOHN OWEN JOHN DUDGEON CHARLES CARTY ARNELL Witness to the ssigning hereof by the said John Owen, John Dudgeon, and Charles Carty Arnell - Geo. H. Oakley, clerk to A. W. Smalc, solicitor, Mel- bourne. In reference to the above we beg to notify that the business will he carried on by the undersigned, who most respectfully solicit a continuance of favours as hitherto enjoyed by the old firm. DUDGEON and ARNELL. September 23,1873.
The Argus (Melbourne, Vic. : 1848 - 1956) Thursday 7 September 1876 p 4 Advertising PUBLIC NOTICE-To avoid any misunderstanding in future, we beg to inform the public that Mr. JOHN OWEN has NOT been CONNECTED in any way with our firm since 1873. DUDGEON and ARNELL, Tobacco Manufacturers, 125,127, and 129 Lonsdale-street west.
He worked as a Managing Director from 1876 to 1878 and resided at 80 Lonsdale Street East, Melbourne. 6 The Argus (Melbourne, Vic. : 1848 - 1956) Thursday 14 June 1877 p 8 Advertising The SUMMER TURNOUT of the company's brands EUREKA and I X L is NOW READY, in splendid order.Fix this text VIRGINIAN TOBACCO COMPANY, 80 Lonsdale street east, opposite Hospital JOHN OWEN, Managing Director
MISC: 1876. THE VIRGINIAN TOBACCO COMPANY'S MANUFACTORY. MELBOURNE.Fix this text THE Virginian Tobacco Manufacturing Company's premises in Lonsdale-street east, opposite to the Melbourne Hospital, which form the subject of a series of illustrations, are the locale of a very important industry. The building, which, was erected some years since for a very different purpose, has an area of 200 feet by GO feet, and is lighted principally from the roof. The ventilation of the premises is carefully attended to, and thus the employes are not subjected to the dangerous effects of a sudden change of temperature when leaving the factory, as is too frequently the case in establish- ments of a like character. Passing into the immense room the visitor linds large piles of the fragrant weed, as imported from America, Turkey, and other tobacco-growing countries. The leaf tobacco is piled up in heaps several feet high, as much as from 80 to 100 tons of this raw material being frequently stacked there. To develop the nicotine in the leaf a portion has to be damped, and put through what is technically known as the sweating process ; and the work required for the manipulation of the raw material at this stage of the process is performed by the youngest boys employed. The next step is to remove the stalk from the centre of the leaf, and this is effected by boys, each of whom sits in a separate compartment, or bin, with his heaps of leaves, and two receptacles, one for the stalks, and the other for the useful part of the leaves. The picked leaf is next transferred to the skilled workmen, who make it up into small rolls, which by subsequent processes will become the figs or cakes in which it passes into the hands of the public. These workmou stand at a double rauge of tables partitioned off from each other. Taking a portion of the smaller pieces of the leaf the workman forms it into a roll, which is enveloped in the larger broad pieces. These rolls require considerable skill aud judgment iu their formation, as the material for each is not weighed, and yet it is essential that each should contain sufficient tobacco to make the average weight of the cake or piece of the size that is being made. It is hardly necessary to state that the goods manufactured embrace numerous varieties both of quality aud kind, to suit the various tastes of the consumers ; but it must be observed that, although goods of the highest class are manu- factured, those of very low or inferior quality are not pro- duced. In the premises there are numerous machines used for different parts of the manufacture, as, for instance, a spinning machine to turn out those ropes of tobacco known as pigtail, the delight of tobacco chewers. The cost of the I whole, including the horizontal steam engine, has been about £0000. At present there are 132 men and boys employed, the older hands having been trained under Mr. O wen, the managing director of the company, under whose active and untiring supervision every part of the numerous processes is continually passing. The employes are chiefly paid by results, and earn good wages, proportioned, of course, to their expertness and attention to work.
Death: 1882. By tho death of Mr. John Owen another old colonist has passed away. Tho deceased was an old Victorian, having arrived in Melbourne from Sydney in 1S55. In that j'car ho started business as a tobacco manufacturer with Mr. Heard, in Elizabeth-street, and, after uiider ! going much opposition, succeeded in catabliali i ing the industry. Ho waa, therefore, tho first successful manufacturer of tobacco in tlio colony. The, firm had developed in 1S73, when it was known aa Owon, Dudgeon and Amell. In that year Mr. Owun, under medical advice, retired from tho business. He then became actively connected with the largo con fectionery business now known as tho Victoriau Confectionery Cornpany. In 1S75, however, ho joined the Virginian Tobacco Company as ? managing 2'artner. This company was in July last amalgamated with the Messrs. Cameron Brothers nnd Company (Limited) trading under that jiameC Of this company Mr. Owen wns the manager and director, and continued to act until a few days before his death, As a com- '? missioner of the Melbourne International Ex hibition, Mr. Owen showed himself as ener getic and zealous in the interests of the public and the colony as he had always been in his own business. He was born and brought up in Liverpool, and waa about 53 years oE ago j His death waa certainly an unexpected one. I Although he had been ailing slightly for a fow days previously, his friends had no idea that his life was in danger.
John married Elizabeth Aitken, daughter of George Aitken and Unknown, in 1858 in Victoria.1 (Elizabeth Aitken was born Cal 1836 and died in 1866 in Victoria 7.)
John next married Amelia Elizabeth Nott in 1867 in Victoria.2 (Amelia Elizabeth Nott was born in 1840 in St Martins in the Field, Middlesex ( and died in 1907 in Malvern, Melbourne.)
|