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Born in 1909 the eldest of two
children to Richard Bowen
(q.v.), a timber merchant who co-founded “Bowen & Pomeroy Pty Ltd” (known
today as “Bowens, Timber and Building Supplies”), and his second wife Mary
née Poer. The untimely deaths of both co-founders within a space of
three months in the mid-1920s was a critical junction for the company; Bowen
senior’s will stipulated that his shares be held in trust until Jack reached
the age of twenty-five (“this proved a wise stipulation”). Educated at
Xavier, he longed to be part of the company and left school in 1926 aged 17
(“against his aunt’s advice”) and under the tutelage of two able deputies in
Jack Dowling (“the salesman”) and Charlie Barrass (“the practical timber
man”) bided his time working primarily in the office. Bowen could do little
but see the company weather the storm of the Timber Industry strike (“the
strike caused havoc at Bowen and Pomeroy”) and great depression of 1929 that
saw staff levels fall from 85 in 1929 to 30 in 1931; characters like Alf
‘Baldy’ Durbar (“highly skilled and cantankerous…a stickler for detail
[whose] only weakness was the Footscray football team”) who had been
employed for over 30 years were laid off. The company was in such dire
straits having suffered consecutive losses that led to the formation of a
new company “Bowen & Pomeroy Pty Ltd” to realise the timber stocks of the
old company (renamed “B & P Investments Pty Ltd”); Bowen emerged the
majority shareholder at the same time the Pomeroy family reduced their
interest. By 1933, the company had turned the tide but more importantly
emerged streamlined and a more efficient enterprise with a crop of
enthusiastic talented men who were to play a major role in the future. In
contrast with WWI, the outbreak of the Second World War saw a seemingly
insatiable demand for timber even though from January 1942 a total ban on
all private buildings had been enforced; timber merchandising was added to
the list of ‘protected industries’ allowing employees in the armed forces to
be released. The end of the war “heralded the beginning of a remarkable
period of prosperity” for the company that was to continue through to the
1960s fuelled by a back-log of work from six years of little building
activity, the return of servicemen and increased immigration. During
the post-war period, Bowen modernised the company by erecting a new joinery
shop (1947) and moulding mill
(1945), but the most significant decision was to branch into hardware retail
(1947) albeit in the traditional form of behind the counter service.
Described as “tall with broad shoulders and a commanding presence”, Bowen
was above all generous and through his initiative the company donated money
to various charities; he soon earned the respect of his peers in the
industry with a reputation for integrity (“he did not have the charisma of
his father”) and went on to serve on the executive of the Timber Merchants
Association for 32 years. In the 1960s, the company faced emerging
challenges with the introduction of new forms of substitutes of building
materials; the concentration of building activity in the outer suburbs; and
increased competition. But Bowen was an able strategist with a skill of
blending conservatism with progress; in 1960 the company introduced a formal
cadet training program that was acknowledged within the industry (“one of
the most interesting and progressive moves…in the field of personnel
training”); opened the first suburban branch at Mount Evelyn (1966); sold
land at North Melbourne to
finance
the establishment of
“Long Island Timber Company” (1970), a bulk timber supply outlet at
Hastings; and introduced the concept of accounting budgets then unheard of
in the industry (1963) (“Bowen and Pomeroy placed itself ahead of many of
its competitors”). Residing at 6 Cosham Street Brighton, Bowen died
suddenly from a heart attack on 9 May 1971 aged 61 after forty years as
managing director and was survived by his wife Marie née Hourigan whom he
married in March 1935; his eldest son John (b 1943) succeeded his father on
his death (“thrust reluctantly into the position”) in what is a rare example
of a family owned and controlled business founded over 100 years ago. |

(above) John Bowen
(Reproduced with kind permission of
Bowen & Pomeroy Pty Ltd)

(above) Monumental Headstone |