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Born on 15 December 1864 at the
gold mining settlement of
Springdallah, Victoria the
youngest of five surviving children (“a son with fair hair and blue eyes”)
to Irish born Patrick Bowen, a miner and his wife Catherine née
Mooney. After his
education at nearby Piggoreet local school, he left at the age of sixteen
and headed to Melbourne (“a place of fascination”) and quickly found work as
a labourer in the booming 1880s; he later worked on the construction of the
cable tram network. By 1892, Bowen was working in a scrap metal yard at
North Melbourne where he later became a partner (“a born entrepreneur”).
The firm branched into the second-hand timber trade through demolition
contracts which proved to be so lucrative the partners decided to go their
separate ways and Bowen leased premises next door at 127 Dryburgh Street
near the corner of Arden Street (“an ideal location for a timber yard”). He had
found his calling. Soon after he formed an enduring partnership with his
brother-in-law Redmond Pomeroy (d 1925) (Melbourne General Cemetery)
on 29 April 1894 as “Bowen & Pomeroy”; the partnership between the two
families would continue until 1954. Their personalities were in stark
contrast; Bowen a natural leader of men, generous and approachable who treated them equal; and Pomeroy quiet, gentle, steady and conservative, at unease
amongst the men in the timber yard. Amid the after effects of the bank
crash in 1893 (“the building trade was one of the worst hit”), the firm
weathered the downturn with the increased demand for cheaper second
hand timber. By 1899 they had branched into the supply of new timbers and
six years later second hand timbers had become “a minor position in overall
sales”. On the back of expansion the firm achieved record sales (“a
business on the rise”) until the onset of the Great War from £10,314 in 1906
to over £56,000 in 1913 serving some 200 different builders. During the
war, the building trade slumped and numbers fell from 102 to 59 as men
enlisted; returned soldiers were welcomed back into the company. In 1919,
“Bowen & Pomeroy” branched into timber production with the joint formation
of “St. Leonard’s Sawmill Company” at Toolangi to secure a guaranteed supply
of hardwood then difficult to obtain but the venture ceased in January 1924;
C. (Clarence) J. (James) Dennis (Box Hill Cemetery) the poet of “The
Songs of a Sentimental Bloke” (1915) was a shareholder. Amongst
the contracts for timber supplied include the Essendon Methodist Church
(1915), the Williamstown (1913) and Footscray Town Halls (1914), Trades Hall
in Carlton (1917), Menzies Hotel (1920s) and the Geelong North Ford factory
(1925) a turning point in the company’s fortunes as it enabled the firm to
compete successfully for contracts for large construction projects following
the installation of an imported Mershon roller recut bandsaw. On 9 February
1924, Bowen’s second wife, Mary née Poer (“a warm hearted, generous
women) whom he married on 16 July 1907 was killed in a car accident on the
Geelong Road outside Footscray while heading to Geelong to spend the
weekend; Richard escaped with minor injuries. Residing
at Springdallah - Chatsworth Avenue, Brighton he
died from myocarditis (heart disease) on 14 October that year aged 59 with
an estate valued for probate at £51,858 (£7,538 real estate and £44,320
personal property) survived by his two children who he adored;
John
(Jack) (q.v.) would rise to lead the company. On the day of his
funeral, employees gathered at the corner of Nepean Highway and North Road
as a mark of respect, a fitting tribute to a man who had been like a fellow
worker to all; an employee once remarked that “his word was his bond and he
treated men as his equal…he expected men to do the right thing and do a fair
day’s work [but] he paid his staff well and gave them extra if he know they
had earned it”. In July 1891 at St. Mary's Catholic Church in St. Kilda, he
married Mary Ann née Pomeroy nine years his senior (“a cultivated
women...accustomed to an independent lifestyle”); she died from a brain
haemorrhage on 2 June 1905. |

(above) Richard Bowen (c
1891)
(Reproduced with kind permission of
Bowen & Pomeroy Pty Ltd)

(above) Monumental Headstone (enlarge
image) |