Sir Samuel Hordern KBE |
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![]() Hordern (right) with Justly Rawlings, c. 1924
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Born |
Retford Hall, Darling Point, Colony of New South Wales |
24 September 1876
Died | 3 June 1956 Babworth House, Darling Point, New South Wales, Australia |
(aged 79)
Occupation |
Businessman Animal breeder Philanthropist |
Title | Governing Director of Anthony Hordern & Sons (1909–26) |
Spouse(s) | Charlotte Isabel Annie See (m.1900–1952; her death) |
Children |
Sam Hordern Doreen Hordern Charlotte Audrey Hordern |
Relatives |
Sir John See (Father-in-law) Celia Winter-Irving (Granddaughter) |
Sir Samuel Hordern KBE (24 September 1876–3 June 1956) was an Australian businessman, animal breeder and philanthropist. Born into the prominent Sydney trading family, Hordern directed the family company of Anthony Hordern & Sons from 1909 to 1926.
Samuel Hordern was born on 24 September 1876 at Retford Hall, Darling Point in Sydney, the eldest son of Samuel Hordern and Jane Maria Booth. His father was the grandson of Anthony Hordern I, who established the eponymous store as a drapery shop in 1823, and his mother was the daughter of prominent Sydney produce merchant and later Alderman, John Booth. Educated at Sydney Grammar School and Bath College in England, Hordern returned to Sydney in 1895 to take up employment in the family business. On 4 March 1900, Hordern married Charlotte Isabel Annie See, daughter of Premier Sir John See, at St Jude's Anglican Church, Randwick and they would have one son and two daughters. In the same month, Hordern purchased the 1890 Federation Arts & Crafts house, "Tuxedo", in Albert Road, Strathfield, which became the family's residence until July 1914 when Hordern sold it for £3500.
On the death of his father in August 1909, Hordern took over management of the family company, which employed more than 4000 people in its store and mail-order business and imported, manufactured and sold a vast range of merchandise, in accordance with his father's will. In 1910, Hordern purchased the 1837 Darling Point mansion, "Mount Adelaide", from the family of Henry Mort, and commissioned architects Morrow & De Putron to design and build a Federation Arts & Crafts mansion, which he named "Babworth House" and which became his family's primary residence from 1915 until his death in 1956.
Hordern publicly listed the company in 1912 and restructured it in 1920. Hordern retired from the business in 1926, when he sold it to a public limited liability company for the sum of AU£2,900,000, described at the time as the "largest business sale that has ever taken place in the history of Australia".