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GOLDSBROUGH, RICHARD (1821-1886), business man,
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son of Joshua Goldsbrough, was born at Shipley, Yorkshire, in October 1821.
At the age of 14 he was apprenticed to a Bradford firm and became a wool
stapler. He began working for himself in a small way in 1842, purchasing clips
and sorting them for the manufacturers. His business was prospering, but feeling
that Australia offered him a wider field, he sailed from Liverpool in 1847 and
after a short stay at Adelaide went on to Melbourne. He began business there in
1848, and in 1853 went into partnership with E. Row and George Kirk under the
name of E. Row and Company. In 1857 he took Hugh Parker into partnership and the
business of R. Goldsbrough and Company was established. The building at the
corner of Bourke- and William-streets was begun in 1862, other partners were
admitted in later years, and in 1881 the business was amalgamated with the
Australasian Agency and Banking Corporation and formed into a public company, of
which Goldsbrough was chairman of directors. He died at Melbourne on 8 April
1886. His wife had died some years before and there were no surviving children.
Goldsbrough took no part in public life. He was essentially a business man,
always abreast of the times. He had much influence in the development of the
wool trade of Australia.
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