Alfred S. Cheadle


Alfred Stanley Cheadle was a wool merchant in South Australia.

History

Cheadle was born in of Bradford, Yorkshire, a son of Peter Cheadle and Eliza Cheadle, later Mellor,. His father was a manufacturer of woollen goods in Halifax, and the son had extensive experience in the wool trades in the Bradford mill founded by his grandfather, then two years in Roubaix, France.
He emigrated to South Australia aboard the clipper City of Adelaide with his mother Eliza Mellor, and step-father James Mellor, arriving 27 June 1880.
He worked for Thomas Elder, first at Beltana station, then for four years with Elder, Smith & Co.
He next worked as Adelaide manager for the wool and produce department of New Zealand Loan and Mercantile Company.
When that company closed their Adelaide branch in 1895, Cheadle and Roland Strachan took over that business under the style of Strachan, Cheadle & Co., which was taken over by Dalgety & Co., Limited, with Cheadle in charge of the wool department.
He then founded, with Arthur Vivian Crase, the woolbroking firm of Cheadle, Crase & Co., which merged into Bennett & Fisher, Limited in 1919.
Cheadle died after a long illness at Victor Harbor, where he had gone in the hope of a recovery.

Other interests

Cheadle was a member and served as president of the Adelaide Chamber of Commerce.
He served as examiner of woolclassing at the South Australian School of Mines and Industries
He was a member of St. Peters Town Council for some years, and served as mayor 1892–1894.

Family

Alfred Stanley Cheadle married Margaret Loutit, daughter of Thomas F. Loutit, of Mount Pleasant on 28 January 1886; they had two sons and three daughters:
They had residences at Medindie and "The Shay" Mount Lofty, sold 1922. Peter Cheadle had a holiday cottage nearby, dubbed "Little Shay".
Alfred Mellor of Melbourne, Emily Maud Mellor, Charles J. Mellor, and Arthur Mellor, were step-siblings.