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Advertisement for Hills products
Title : Advertisement for Hills products Advertisement for Hills products
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Source : Australian Women's Weekly, 4 May 1960, p. 14
Date of creation : 1960
Format : Magazine
Dimensions : 380 x 290 mm
Contributor : State Library catalogue
Catalogue record
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Copyright : This item is reproduced courtesy of Hills Industries and the Australian Women's Weekly. It may be printed or saved for research or study. Use for any other purpose requires written permission from Hills Industries and the Australian Women's Weekly and the State Library of South Australia. To request approval, complete the Permission to publish form.
Description :

An advertisement for Hills products, including the 'Supa-hoist' rotary clothesline.


In an Adelaide backyard, returned serviceman Lance Hill used scrap metal to develop a rotary clothes hoist in 1945. His wife had complained that the fruit trees were competing for space with the 'prop' clothes line.

The clothesline was popular with friends and family, so Hill and his brother-in-law Harold Ling established a business to supply the demand - the order book records early sales, when a hoist cost 10.10s and installation an extra 1.5s.

A rotary clothes hoist had been patented earlier by Gilbert Toyne, but Lance Hill's design was the first rotary clothes hoist to achieve national sales success.

The clothesline is now exported overseas and the 'Hills Hoist' has become an Australian cultural icon. Today, Hills Industries operates internationally and produces a wide range of products from building and industrial parts to play equipment.

This advertisement appeared in a May issue of The Australian Women's Weekly magazine; the theme is Mother's Day - the advertisement suggests that a 'Hills Family Benefit Product' is the perfect gift for to make Mother's washdays easier.

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Related names :

Hills

Coverage year : 1960
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