Victa
Victa is an Australian manufacturer of outdoor garden equipment, including petrol, electric, and battery-powered lawn mowers, edgers, trimmers, and chainsaws. The brand is best known as a manufacturer of rotary lawn mowers. In the early 1960s the company also built light aircraft, notably the Victa Airtourer, and project homes.
Since 2008 and as of 2024[update] the Victa brand is owned by the American engine manufacturer Briggs & Stratton. In Australia and New Zealand, Victa products are sold through major hardware chains and specialist dealers, and some products are available through dealers in other countries.
History
[edit | edit source]The Victa company was founded by Mervyn Victor Richardson[1] in 1952.[2] The name was derived from his middle name.[3]
Lawn mowers
[edit | edit source]Mervyn's son Garry mowed lawns to earn money in university holidays. Garry borrowed Mervyn's Victa 14" cylinder-based power mower which was heavy to transport and to operate. Mervyn wanted to design a new mower for his son's business. Mervyn had seen Lawrence Hall's "Mowhall" rotary lawn mower demonstrated in 1948. The heavy Mowhall was not a very successful invention because it required two people to use it, one to push and one to pull.[citation needed]
The Victa rotary lawn mower was developed in August 1952 by Richardson, in his backyard at Concord, New South Wales.[4] Although not the first of its type, it was cheaper, lighter, and easier to use than earlier models.[5]
Although Richardson had developed rotating reel mowers for his son's business, in August 1952 he decided to make a rotary lawn mower similar to the Mowhall, using a Villiers two-stroke engine mounted on its side but utilising a lighter base plate, allowing use by a single operator. He wanted it to be cheaper, lighter and more powerful. It was called the "Peach-Tin Prototype", so named because it was made out of scrap metal with a peach tin used as a fuel tank.[citation needed]
Initially selling the mowers from his home,[5] by 1953, demand for the mowers was so strong that Richardson gave up his job and became full-time manager of his new company, Victa Mowers Pty Ltd.[1]
By 2002, 6.5 million Victa mowers had been sold in 30 countries.[5]
1960s diversification
[edit | edit source]In the early 1960s, the firm diversified into other industries: it manufactured the "red phone" (a private payphone system, for use in business premises), aircraft, and, for a short while, Victa project homes.[3]
In 1960, Victa Consolidated Industries, later renamed Victa Ltd, undertook to build 50 Victa Airtourers, a light monoplane designed by Henry Millicer, under Mervyn Victor Richardson, who had an interest in aeroplanes.[6] The company set up an Aviation Division at their Milperra base, and also produced the Victa Aircruiser and Victa Gyroplane.[7] Victa built 168 of the aircraft in Sydney before selling off the division to New Zealand company AESL in 1966.[8] The Airtourer proved very popular, boosted by Victa's purchase plan whereby owners could pay off the cost in instalments.[9]
Although certification was obtained, the Aircruiser was never put into production by Victa, as they withdrew that arm of their operations in 1966-7 after the government would not grant them a financial advantage to protect the local industry over imported aeroplanes.[10] The same fate befell the Victa R-2, a prototype single-engine four-seat light aircraft. Only one was built, which first flew in February 1961, but no production followed.[11]
In the 1960s, Victa produced a range of project homes in Australia.[12][13][14]
Company
[edit | edit source]In 1953 Richardson gave up his job and became full-time manager of Victa Mowers Pty Ltd. In 1958, the company had moved to a new factory at Milperra, New South Wales, and its 3,000 employees were building 143,000 mowers a year for export to 28 countries.[1]
From the outset, the company used marketing and advertising effectively. It was a pioneer in Australian TV advertising, and also advertised extensively in newspaper and print media. Victa set up a network of distributors, who were thoroughly trained in promotion and sales.[5]
In the 1960s, Mervyn's son Garry Richardson started playing a more important role in the company, becoming chairman in 1965.[3]
In 1970 Victa was acquired by Sunbeam Corporation Ltd.[15][3]
In 1994 the factory moved to Campsie, and the seven millionth Victa lawnmower was built in 1997.[3]
In 1996, the company was sold to GUD Holdings Limited,[16] who sold the Victa Lawn Care business to American-based Briggs & Stratton for A$23 million in 2008.[17][18][3] As of 2024[update] Briggs & Stratton owns the Victa brand.[19]
Today
[edit | edit source]While most design and manufacturing capability has remained in Australia, such as assembly, research and development, and parts manufacture, all engine products are sourced from Briggs & Stratton's Facilities in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.[citation needed]
Outdoor garden equipment, including petrol, electric, and battery-powered lawn mowers, edgers, trimmers, and chainsaws are sold under the Victa brand.[20]
Victa is also sold in limited quantities through specialist dealers internationally.[21]
Legacy
[edit | edit source]The Victa Lawnmower regarded by many as an Australian icon, and it was included in the opening ceremony of the Sydney 2000 Olympic Games.[3] A retro advertisement for Victa is on permanent display at Museum Railway Station in Sydney.[22]
The Richardson radial aero-engine, the Victa prototype lawnmower (1952),[3] the Victa Peach Tin prototype, and other important Victa lawn mowers were donated to the Powerhouse Museum in Sydney.[23] The Powerhouse held an exhibition entitled Victa – 70 years turning grass into lawns in 2023.[24]
The archive of Philip Larkin's work at University of Hull includes the blue Victa lawn mower involved in the incident that inspired his famous poem 'The Mower'.[25][26]
See also
[edit | edit source]References
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- ^ McDonald, Guy (2004). Cadogan Guide: England, p. 836. New Holland Publishers, Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
External links
[edit | edit source]Error creating thumbnail: File missing Media related to Lua error in Module:Commons_link at line 62: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). at Wikimedia Commons
- Official website (Australian website)
- Victa Lawn Mower patent at IP Australia website
- Cartoon drawing of "First Victa Lawnmower and First Ear Muffs" at the National Museum of Australia