Fred Walker (5 January 1884 – 21 July 1935) was an Australian businessman and founder of Fred Walker & Co. (two incarnations, the first in Hong Kong, the second in Melbourne) and the Fred Walker Company in Melbourne. He also set up Kraft Walker Cheese Co. in partnership with American businessman James L. Kraft in 1926, in order to market Kraft's patented method of processing cheese.
Fred Walker & Co. is best known for creating Vegemite, a yeast extract-based food spread and Australian cultural icon. Kraft Walker Cheese Co. first manufactured a cheese known as Red Coon around 1931, which later became known as Coon cheese.
Early life and education
Walker was born on 5 January 1884 in Hawthorn, a suburb of Melbourne, and won a scholarship to attend Caulfield Grammar School.[1]
Career
Early career and army service
He worked in the food import and export industry, first for J. Bartram & Sons.[2] He went to China at the age of 19, when American goods were being boycotted there, and founded Fred Walker & Co. in Hong Kong in 1903, an import and export business.
In 1907 he returned to Melbourne,[2] and served in the Australian Military Forces from 1908, first in the Australian Garrison Artillery and then the 13th Infantry Brigade. However, despite a promotion to captain 1916, he did not serve in the Australian Imperial Force "because of the importance of the production of foodstuffs".
He founded the Fred Walker Company at 54 William Street (moving to Flinders Street in 1911). This company specialised in canned foods, especially dairy products, exporting them to Asia. It manufactured Red Feather canned foods (including butter and cheese) from around 1910.[2]
Family, later life and death
Walker married Mabel Ashton Perrin in 1913 and they had one daughter,[3] Sheilah.[7]
Walker was a Freemason.[18] He was initiated at Austral Temple Lodge No. 110 on 9 July 1919.[19]
In later life he served as the president of the Melbourne Rotary Club (1933–34), and he was also a director of the local YMCA. He died of heart disease on 21 July 1935.[3]
Kraft-Walker after Walker
Following Walker's death, Kraft Foods Inc. bought[3] the majority part of both Kraft Walker Cheese Co. Pty Ltd and Fred Walker & Co., amalgamating them to form the Kraft Walker Cheese Co. Ltd, with the American company holding the majority share.[2] Callister had become a director of the company in 1935, not long before Walker's death, and he continued to increase the numbers of laboratory staff, as well as closely supervising quality control and continuing to work on methods of processing food, in particular processed cheese and the use of Vitamin B1 (thiamine) in foods. Rations, including dehydrated food, were produced for the Australian and United States armies[12]
Kraft Walker Cheese Co. opened a vegetable dehydration factory at Port Melbourne in 1943, which became the most well-known Kraft factory in the state. In 1950 the company became Kraft Foods Ltd. and built a new plant at Fishermans Bend, where it remained into the 21st century.[2]
See also
- List of Caulfield Grammar School people
References
- Kraft Foods (2008). Fred Walker. Retrieved 9 April 2008.^
- Kraft Foods Ltd Private Revenue Perfins of Victoria, retrieved 15 January 2021^
- K. T. H. Farrer. Walker, Fred (1884–1935) Australian Dictionary of Biography, 1990, retrieved 14 January 2021