George McCulloch (mine owner)
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George McCulloch (born Glasgow,Scotland 23 April 1848 – died London, England 12 December 1907) was the mastermind behind the formation of the Broken Hill Mining Company, a precursor of BHP Billiton.
George's father died when he was one year old. As a young man George went to South America where his brother John was a stockman and then to Australia in 1872, where his cousin Sir James McCulloch was a prosperous merchant and politician.
About 1875, his cousin gave him a job as Manager and part share of the Mount Gipps Sheep Station in New South Wales. By chance, in 1883 one of his outriders, Charles Rasp, discovered mineral samples on the property and pegged out a claim. George McCulloch immediately held a meeting with the station hands and it was agreed to form a Syndicate of Seven pegging out a further six blocks which were amalgamated to form the privately owned 'Broken Hill Mining Company'. In 1885 this was floated into the Broken Hill Proprietary Mining Company Ltd.
George McCulloch retired to the UK a rich man about 1891. He married Mary Mayger in 1893 and they went to live at 184 Queens Gate, London.
Between 1893 and his death in 1907 George became an internationally known art collector and was a patron of the artist John Singer Sargent. At the time of his death he owned the finest collection of paintings by modern British artists in the world. He made it his rule not to acquire a picture unless it was painted in his own lifetime.
He died in 1907, the year before his son Alexander McCulloch won a Silver Medal in the Single Sculls at the London Summer Olympic Regatta in 1908.
[edit] References
1. The History of Broken Hill, Its Rise and Progress, compiled and edited by Leonard Samuel Curtis, Frearson's Printing House, Adelaide, South Australia, 1908.
2. The Times, Obituary, Mr George McCulloch
3. Into the Broken Hill Paddock, published by Jenny Camilleri, printed by Openbook Australia 2006, ISBN 0-646-46245-8