William Mills (businessman)
William Mills (22 June 1866[1]: 77 – 8 October 1916[2]) was a Western Australian businessman, co-founder of the biscuit manufacturer Mills and Ware.[3]
Early life
Mills was born in Liverpool, England, on 22 June 1866. He was the son of Joseph Mills, and apprenticed as a baker. After completing his apprenticeship, he travelled to Australia by working as a ship's baker.[1]: 77 He arrived in Melbourne, Victoria in 1887, where he got married, and remained for about eight[1]: 77 or nine years.[3]
Western Australian goldfields
Mills came to Western Australia c. 1896.[3] He joined the gold rush around Kalgoorlie, where he worked as a baker, and likely earned more from that profession than from prospecting. While in the goldfields, Mills met Henry Ware who had also migrated from England, and may have been his school friend. Ware worked in the mines until health problems soon forced him to return to Perth.[1]: 77 Mills also returned to Perth by 1897.[4]
Business
Mills opened a bakery and patisserie shop in 1897, initially in Broome Road, Subiaco, and then in Fremantle Road, Cottesloe from 1898. His wife would sell cakes and biscuits door-to-door. By 1899, Mills bought a hand-operated biscuit-making machine, which increased their productivity so much that a larger building was required. They moved to South Fremantle, and Mills formed a partnership with Henry Ware, who provided financial support but was a "silent partner".[1]: 77 They operated the Swan Cake and Biscuit Factory,[1]: 77 and the business was known as Mills and Ware.[3]
Ware died in 1904, and Mills bought out his portion of the business, obtaining full control of the business.[1]: 77
Personal life and other interests
Mills married a daughter of Joseph Lee of London, England, and they had three sons.[3]
While at Cottesloe, Mills was a member of the first elected roads board, and retaining the seat for three years. He was a delegate to the first roads boards conference held at Bunbury, Western Australia.[3] He resigned when he moved to Fremantle in 1901. He represented the ratepayers for the South Ward on the Fremantle Council for five years until his resignation at the end of 1906. He then stood for East Fremantle Council's Central Ward, and was elected. He resigned after five years to focus on his business.[3]
Mills was chairman of the board of Fremantle Public Hospital, a Past Master of the Masonic fraternity, a member of the Chamber of Commerce, the Western Australian Chamber of Manufactures, the Fremantle Golf Club, the Commercial Travellers' Association, the East Fremantle Rifle Club, and also the East Fremantle Bowling Club, where he was the first president.[3]
Mills died on 8 October 1916. His funeral was held the next day, and he was buried in Fremantle Cemetery's Church of England section.[3]
Mills was recognised as one of the most influential Western Australian businesspeople in The West Australian's 2013 list of the 100 most influential.[4]
References
Attribution
This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain: "Late Mr. William Mills", in The West Australian, 11 October 1916[3]
Sources
- Booth, Shirley (January 1989). Frances, Rae; Scates, Bruce (eds.). "In the Factory: 'Burnt Fingers': Mills and Ware Biscuits 1898-1952" (PDF). The Murdoch Ethos: Essays in Australian History in Honour of Foundation Professor Geoffrey Bolton. Murdoch University: 76–93. Retrieved 10 February 2020.
- "DEATH OF MR. WILLIAM MILLS". The Daily News. Western Australia. 9 October 1916. p. 8 (THIRD EDITION). Retrieved 10 February 2020 – via Trove.
- "Late Mr. William Mills". The West Australian. Western Australia. 11 October 1916. p. 9. Retrieved 10 February 2020 – via Trove.
- Harvey, Ben; Hatch, Daniel (29 November 2013). 100 most influential: The business leaders who shaped WA – 1829-2013 (PDF). The West Australian. p. 33. Archived (PDF) from the original on 27 January 2020.
Further reading
- Ward, Kathleen (June 1993). "My career in a biscuit factory". Council 10 Bulletin. Geraldton, Western Australia: International Training in Communication: 8–10.
- Marshall, Mary (2018). The biscuit factory: stories of a Fremantle family. Mary Marshall. ISBN 978-0-646-98099-7.