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Home > About the Academy > Biographical memoirs
BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS
Ian Munro McLennan 1909-1998
By P.N. Richards
This memoir was originally published in Historical Records of Australian Science, vol.15, no.2, 2004.
Numbers in square brackets refer to the references at the end of the text.
Introduction
Very few people have been
privileged not only to live through a period of great industrial growth in
their country but to have been a major contributor to that growth. Sir Ian
Munro McLennan, KCMG, KBE was one such man. He died in Melbourne on 25 October
1998 aged 89 years. Some years earlier, at a retirement dinner given in
his honour by the Hoskins family in October 1977, Mr Ken Hoskins suggested that
the four decades of intense growth in the Australian iron and steel industry
spanned by Sir Ian's career with the Broken Hill Proprietory Co. Ltd (BHP) might
be called the 'McLennan Era'. Mr Hoskins was the grandson of Charles Henry
Hoskins who brought the early steel works from Lithgow to Port Kembla, New
South Wales, in the 1920s. These works later became Australian Iron and Steel
(AIS) and were acquired by BHP in 1935.
Ian Munro McLennan, son of Ruben
Beaton McLennan and his wife Claudia Octavia, neé Thomas, was born at Stawell,
Victoria on 30 November 1909 to a hard-working, country, Scottish Presbyterian
family. His early upbringing was in Mooroopna, a small town with a few thousand
people on the Goulburn River not far from Shepparton in north-eastern Victoria,
where he attended the Mooroopna Primary School. His father had a flour-milling
business in the town that he took over following the death of his older
brother William in the Great War in 1916. The family name is remembered by
McLennan Street off the Midland Highway. The mill was close to the family
house, an immaculately kept home with very tidy grounds and clipped lawns overlooking
the river. As the eldest of three children, McLennan would have had to do odd
jobs around the factory and, as a country lad, undoubtedly developed the degree
of neatness and independence he showed in later life. Both his younger brother
and his younger sister died before reaching adulthood. In his more mature years
he went to Shepparton High School followed by three years as a boarder at
Scotch College, Melbourne, where he was equal Dux of the School in 1927 and his
combination of academic ability and leadership foreshadowed his later career.
He is remembered by the school as a wonderful benefactor whose generosity
allowed them to establish the Sir Ian McLennan Chair of Design and Technology
through which they could attract outstanding teachers in the field.
McLennan completed his education at
Ormond College, University of Melbourne, graduating in Electrical Engineering
in 1932 just as the country was beginning to emerge from the Depression. In the
following year, he joined the Broken Hill Proprietary Co. Ltd as a cadet at
their works at Whyalla, South Australia, and at the nearby Iron Knob iron-ore
mine. He spent two years in this position, followed by six months at Hannan's
North Gold Mine in Kalgoorlie, Western Australia. Then came six months as
Superintendent of the company's Tasmanian limestone quarries, after which he
was moved to the BHP Head Office in Melbourne as assistant to the
Superintendent of Mines and Quarries.
On 3 August 1937 McLennan married
Dora Haase Robertson from Ivanhoe in Melbourne, whom he met while she was
working as a secretary at BHP. They subsequently had four children, Judith (b.
1941), Peter (b. 1942), John (b. 1947) and Louise (b. 1951). Soon after their
marriage came their first move as McLennan spent two and a half years as a
Special Cadet at BHP's Newcastle and Port Kembla steel works, with some time
spent in the collieries and at other company centres. As a 'Special Cadet' he
would also have come to the attention of, and his progress would have been
followed by, Essington Lewis, then General Manager of BHP.
With this valuable experience behind
him, McLennan was appointed Executive Officer at the Newcastle steel works in
February 1940 and, in 1941, was advanced to become Production Superintendent
there. He took an important part in the establishment of production facilities
for the new steel products that BHP had been called on to produce for the war
effort, many requiring novel methods of production where Australia lacked the
usual components. Typical of these were high-grade electrical steels for motors
and transformers and bullet-proof steel for Australian-built light tanks.
Essential new materials to be made at the Newcastle works that could no longer
be obtained from abroad included ferroalloys required to produce special
steels, magnesium for aircraft production and tungsten carbide for high grade cutting
tools.
During the first year of the war, an
upset for BHP management had occurred when the General Manager, Essington
Lewis, a strong, forceful leader, was appointed by the government of the day to
be Director General of Munitions as a war time-measure, with far reaching
powers over government and private manufacturing institutions. For the next few
years Lewis had little to do with the operation of BHP, throwing greater
responsibility down the chain of command in the Company. This had implications
for McLennan, whose rapid rise in seniority is indicated by his being asked to
support the toast at the farewell dinner that the Melbourne office gave Lewis
prior to his departure for America in 1944, at Prime Minister Curtin's behest,
on war-related business.
In 1943 McLennan spent several months
in the USA and Canada studying production of special steels related to the war
effort and, on returning, was appointed Assistant Manager of the Newcastle
steel works. A year later he was seconded to Head Office for a short period in
a managerial capacity. During this period in Melbourne he made the important
recommendation to Essington Lewis, by then Chief General Manager of BHP, that
the proposed Hot and Cold Strip plant should be installed at Port Kembla rather
than at either Newcastle or Whyalla. He further maintained that BHP should
'...commence the detailed planning for a hot and cold mill and tinplate plant at
Port Kembla...whilst it seems very difficult to envisage a complete installation
for a start, it can be taken in bites'.[1] Lewis supported this
recommendation with a paper to the Board of the company in August 1944 but it
was not until November 1946 that the Board announced that a Flat Products
Division would be developed at Port Kembla.
This was a difficult period in the
steel industry, requiring high production rates while plagued by continuing
labour shortage and unrest and with basic supply problems; BHP lost two
ore-carrying ships by enemy action which caused severe production hold-ups. It
was thus an ideal ground for developing initiative and leadership as well as
for gaining a complete understanding of business operations. To round off this
experience, McLennan was sent on a second overseas assignment in 1946, when he
visited steel works and associated enterprises in Great Britain, Europe and
the USA.
The year 1947 may have been one of
the most important in the career of Ian McLennan, for in April of that year he
was transferred to BHP's Head Office in Melbourne as Assistant General Manager,
BHP. At Head Office he became far more involved not only with the development
of the Newcastle plant but also with the great expansion of the Port Kembla
works; and when Cecil Hoskins, Manager of the AIS works in Port Kembla, went
overseas in early 1949, McLennan was appointed Acting General Manager of AIS.
This brought him face to face, not only with the major expansion taking place
at Port Kembla but with the post-war realities of a steel industry with production
problems due to coal shortages mainly caused by a lack of workers in the
collieries and with insufficient trained operators. At this time, Board
approval had been obtained also for a future major development of the Port
Kembla works of AIS, to be undertaken on a new green-field site embracing the
projected hot strip mill and associated plant together with a nearby
newly-dredged deep-water harbour and wharfing facilities. Management made an
important decision with regard to the harbour, which required extensive
dredging to be carried out by the New South Wales Department of Public Works to
a planned depth of 9.7 m. However, AIS could see that, in the very near
future, larger ships would be in use that would require greater depth, and
eventually McLennan obtained Government agreement for an increase in depth to
11 m at low water, on condition that AIS paid for the extra work. The
Government later agreed that the increase in depth was essential and paid half
the cost. As it turned out, this was a very important decision because some
years later an even greater depth became necessary for larger ore carriers.
McLennan had arrived in Port Kembla
towards the tail-end of the planning of the development programme approved
three years earlier, and he was recalled to Melbourne in 1950 when Lewis became
Chairman of BHP. However, for the next few years he spent about half his time
at Port Kembla and was instrumental in effectively bringing most of the strands
together, on time and within budget. A continuing problem he had to contend
with was a shortage of coal. In his words, 'Steel output has suffered due to a
shortage of coking coal. The Company's plants could manufacture another half a
million tons of steel if it could get the coal.'[1]
Around this time it had become clear
to both government and industry that a shortage of labour would be a
continuing problem because demand for steel continued to increase at a fast
rate while skilled and unskilled operators were hard to attract into the
industry. Some action was required urgently. Shortly after McLennan arrived in
Port Kembla, Prime Minister Chifley invited him, in 1949, to join the Immigration
Planning Council, formed to help co-ordinate immigration activities and resolve
some of the problems inseparable from the large-scale absorption of overseas
people into the Australian way of life. McLennan played an important role
through to 1967 and was Deputy Chairman of the Council. By the end of 1950 some
30% of workers at BHP were 'New Australians' and the Council assumed increasing
importance in the following years.
In 1950, Essington Lewis became Chairman of both BHP and AIS with
Mr Norman Jones as Managing Director of both companies. Shortly afterwards,
McLennan was appointed General Manager of BHP and returned to Head Office,
Melbourne All three men had been with the company since they began working and
now had established a firm line of administration and control that would allow
the expansion of the works to go ahead with fewer problems. On the other hand,
from the outside there was always the feeling that most approvals for
development had to be passed to the top for a decision, an impression
reinforced when Lewis stepped down from the position of Chairman to a more
executive role as Deputy Chairman
When a threatening international
situation prompted the Commonwealth Government to set up a National Security
Resources Board late in 1950, McLennan became a member, reflecting the steel
industry's importance to the national welfare. This Board, chaired by Prime
Minister Menzies, was to advise the Government on the best use of Australia's
resources in the interests of national security. A year later McLennan was also
made a member of the Materials Industry Advisory Committee. In the same year,
1951, he was elected President of the Australasian Institute of Mining and
Metallurgy (AIMM), delivering the Annual Address in May in which he made the
point that it was the fiftieth anniversary of Australian federation. After
reviewing industry progress during that time he then looked forward:
while we at
present are beset by many difficulties ...the next 50 years of our history will
reveal even greater progress than the first of this century...to meet the needs
of the country, the steel industry has many big developments in hand for the
expansion of production...these are projects of great magnitude and will add half
a million tons to the present capacity of 1¾ million...[2]
On 12 January 1951 McLennan was
appointed a Director and Assistant Managing Director of AIS. When he spoke at
the opening of the new large No. 3 Blast Furnace at Port Kembla on 27 August
1952, he again raised supply problems and advised: 'Completion of this furnace
is an important step in the Kembla Works development...but, this furnace could
not operate without adequate supplies of raw materials and the proper means of
their disposal'.[3]
On 11 March 1953, McLennan outlined
details of a steel mill to be established by BHP at Kwinana on Cockburn Sound
in Western Australia. as part of new arrangements with the Western Australian
Government. The mill was to have a production capacity of 50,000 tonnes a year
and an associated steel fence-post plant. The project would require a long
jetty to be constructed on Cockburn Sound to handle large ocean-going vessels
and would take some years to complete.
In 1953 McLennan also became a
Director of BHP. Two years later, in 1955, the hot strip mill was finally
commissioned at Port Kembla, the occasion beng marked by a large public
ceremony hosted in part by McLennan in his position as Assistant Managing Director,
AIS. The Prime Minister, R. G. Menzies, officially opened the line and in his
formal address observed:
This is a great
historic event. We are here this morning taking part in a vast development of
a great basic industry, an industry which is basic to almost every manufacturing
process in Australia, an industry the success of which makes possible the success
of hundreds of industries further down the line.[4]
This development, with necessary additional
plant, increased processing capacity by nearly one million tonnes per year, and
must be considered as one of the most important developments not only for BHP
but for the whole of Australian industry as it greatly increased the range and
quality of available flat steel products. While it was being consolidated,
consideration of a cold strip plant had been put on hold, mainly because the
Australian steel sheet producer, John Lysaght (Aust.) Ltd (JLA), had already
undertaken to install a cold strip plant at their Port Kembla works that also
became operational in 1955. The AIS hot strip plant was essential to produce
feed for the various steel qualities required by the JLA cold strip mills and
ultimately by the roofing, automotive and white goods industries in Australia.
The installation of the hot strip
mill required many major plant additions to match the capacity of the new mill,
including the opening of a new colliery, the complete reorganization and full
mechanization of three others, the erection of a battery of by-product coke
ovens, and the building of another blast furnace. Major decisions were required
of BHP management to ensure the right type and size of this new plant, that
the necessary skilled operators were available at the right time and that
financing would be available. McLennan's capacity for decisive action and firm
control were strongly in evidence. In 1956 he was appointed Commander of the
Order of the British Empire in recognition of his public service; he was
raised to Knight Commander of the Order (KBE) in June 1963 for services to
industry. During this period he held a number of important positions outside
the steel industry. He was a member of the Ormond College Council at the
University of Melbourne and also a member of the Council of the Australian
National University in Canberra.
In 1955 McLennan, as General Manager
of BHP and Assistant Managing Director of AIS, arranged and chaired the first
steel-industry University-Industry Conference at Port Kembla. Ten university
professors from a number of states were invited to attend over two days,
visiting the plant and having round-table discussions with senior steel
executives, many meetings being held on the verandah of 'Hillside', the
company's staff house overlooking Port Kembla where the visitors stayed. In a
later interview, Professor R. H. Myers, when asked the purpose of the
conference, said:
These University
Industry Conferences enable us collectively to view the developments and
ramifications of the expanding steel industry as well as having fruitful
interchange of ideas not only amongst ourselves but in open discussion with
industrial leaders.[5]
The meeting was very successful, well
accepted by the university visitors. It became an annual affair organized by
BHP, the meetings moving to different plants each year.
In June 1957, McLennan again delivered
the Presidential Address to the AIMM Annual Conference, held that year in
Newcastle. He recalled that he had also delivered the presidential address six
years earlier and now said:
You may recall
that we were then just beginning to emerge from the difficulties of post- war
reconstruction...of fuel and power shortages and greatly inadequate manpower for
the tasks facing us. ...How greatly has the scene changed, in 1951 Australia was
able to produce only 1.4 million tonnes of steel because of labour and material
shortages...we are now producing at a rate in excess of 2.8 million tonnes of
steel. ...The fact that the Australian economy is now geared to a high rate of
steel usage means that as we grow, the industries dependent on steel will play
an ever-increasing part in our economic life. Australia, having established
herself as a country well able to produce and consume relatively large
quantities of steel, as a country endowed with a high level of technological
skill and able to sustain a high standard of living, is destined therefore to
become a great manufacturing nation in the future.[6]
This was no idle statement but embodied McLennan's passionate
belief that the general welfare of Australia was intimately tied to the
successful development of the steel industry. While the earlier planned
expansion of BHP was moving towards completion early in the 1950 s, the nation
was suffering quite severe steel shortages and many manufacturers were forced
to import steel, generally at much higher prices, and both industry and
government were becoming critical of the steel industry. In part, the shortage
of product was due to a growing lack of steel-making capacity, the company
having under- estimated the comparatively high rate of economic recovery in the
country. However, a further considerable portion of the steel shortage was due
to labour problems within the steel works, in the coal mines and in transport.
In the main, the unions were dissatisfied with the level of wages and with the
company policy not to make over-award payments. In 1961 McLennan declared that
'The BHP Company is conducting its own recruiting campaign in Britain and
Western Europe to overcome a serious shortage of skilled labour'.[7] Shortly after, however, an unsympathetic government supported trade unions that
were concerned with possible loss of jobs, and placed an embargo on overseas
recruiting that lasted for nearly a decade.
Research and development
McLennan
was a strong supporter of proposals involving the installation of up-to- date
technology and processing, and ensured that senior staff visited overseas steel
and equipment companies at regular intervals. The essential place of scientific
research and development was well recognized by Essington Lewis who in 1948
appointed a renowned British scientist, Dr Frank Adcock, MBE, DSc, as Chief
Research Officer in the Newcastle works' research department. The work of
Adcock's team soon outgrew the space available. With the continued growth of
the works and the organization, new laboratories within the works were
considered. However, McLennan strongly supported their being developed at a
site outside the works precincts, and the new Central Research Laboratories
were finally opened at Shortland in March 1957 on a green- field site 10 km
from the works. Dr H. K.Worner, a highly regarded academic from the
University of Melbourne, had been appointed Director of Research in 1956 and
had input into the final design. In a very short time highly qualified staff
were working in three main areas of research, namely raw materials, processing,
and finished products.
With the increased scope of the company's
interests, the resignation of Dr Worner, and good research results from
Newcastle, McLennan thought it was time to extend the company's research
facilities. He appointed another eminent overseas scientist, Dr R. G.Ward, to
head the company's research effort as General Manager, Research at Head Office
and to develop a further laboratory at Clayton, Victoria; soon total staff
exceeded 300 scientists and technicians.
While the technical resources of the company were meeting many
problems associated with the installation and operation of new plant, the
company also needed new financing arrangements involving sums of money far
greater than previously required. The hot strip mill installation alone
required the investment of nearly $50 million at Port Kembla and the
following year the No.4 blast furnace, then the largest in the world, was
blown in which was another multi-million-dollar expense. Although these
financial matters were handled mainly at Board level, line managers were
becoming responsible for increasingly larger expenditure of capital. The
greater importance of financial matters and the increasing number of company
subsidiaries forced BHP to announce changes to the executive administration in
June 1959. A major change was the creation of a Finance Committee with the
Chairman of Directors, Mr C. Y. (later Sir Colin) Syme, as chairman and three other
Board members, Messrs Jones, McLennan and Newman, as members. McLennan became
Chief General Manager, and Newman became General Manager, Finance and
Treasurer, while Jones continued as Managing Director, all within BHP. Ten
other positions with the title General Manager were formed covering Operations,
Development, Commercial, Sales, Administration, Shipping, Raw Materials and the
Newcastle, Port Kembla and Whyalla steel works. These reflected the expanding
scale of the organization and its subsidiaries and the challenges of the age.
Such was the pace of expansion however that, within a few years, even further
modification would become essential.
Expansion was not confined to Port
Kembla. With McLennan's support, the Newcastle steelworks also carried through
many major developments including the introduction of basic oxygen
steel-making, then a new process that had only recently been developed overseas
and that was as yet in use only to a very limited extent. The process would
replace the open-hearth steel-making furnaces and, at the same time, should
produce steel of greatly improved quality at a lower price. In a far- sighted
move, McLennan obtained Board approval to invest in two large units for the
Newcastle plant, each of 200 tonnes capacity, making them the largest in use
anywhere at that time. In doing so, McLennan also demonstrated his faith in
the recommendations provided by his technical staff. The first units went into
service in 1962 and have been not only highly successful but absolutely
essential, bringing BHP to the forefront of world production and attention.
The era of gas and oil
When
McLennan joined the Board of Directors of BHP in 1953 and became Senior General
Manager in November 1955, his interests and responsibilities expanded to areas
other than steel-making. He had already had some experience in mining and had
followed the limited resources invested by BHP in the surveys for oil of the
Sydney Basin so that when, by 1957, no definitive results had been obtained, he
decided that firmer action had to be taken and a final survey made. He asked
one of his senior executives to find the best, experienced oil geologist available
to examine and report on the prospects of oil in the Sydney-Port Kembla area.
On his advice, BHP hired Lewis Weeks, a highly respected oil-geology consultant
recently retired from Esso, one of the biggest American oil companies. After a
few months examining the geology and surveying the area, Weeks gave as his
opinion that there was little prospect of oil in the area selected.
Before leaving Australia, Weeks went
to Melbourne for a final visit to BHP and was invited to lunch by McLennan, who
had become Chief General Manager, BHP in 1959 and who had been alerted earlier
by his geologists to the fact that Weeks had identified another area where oil
might be found but was reluctant to say more. Over lunch, McLennan asked in
general conversation: 'Well, is there any worthwhile oil anywhere in
Australia?' Weeks then explained that some years earlier, he was part of a
survey team examining the Gippsland area and was convinced that it contained
oil-bearing deposits. McLennan responded that they were steel men and had no
experience of oil, and asked 'what should BHP do now and can we hire you for
the next six months to advise us?'
Weeks stayed on in Australia,
initially with a verbal contract including a commission on each barrel of oil
recovered from Bass Strait. When McLennan asked of Weeks 'Will you rely on me
to do a fair thing?' (as regards a contract) the latter agreed and they just
shook hands.
This brief interchange seemed to sum
up the high regard and mutual respect that had developed between the two men on
a comparatively short acquaintance and that continued for many years. It was
also typical of the high respect in which McLennan was held generally, both
within the industry and in business circles more generally.
Preliminary costs for an initial magnetometric survey of around
$350,000, with three times the amount for an additional seismic survey, were
the initial figures that McLennan took to the BHP Board, on which he obtained
their agreement for the project to go ahead. Even at this stage it was a bold
adventure for both McLennan and the BHP Board for, even if drilling were
successful, there were real doubts as to whether the technology for working in
deep and stormy seas and harvesting oil had been proven sufficiently to justify
the huge investment that would be needed for a successful outcome. The Board
also agreed that, if the surveys looked promising, they would expect to go
ahead if a company with the right experience and financial resources could be
found that would be agreeable to entering into a partnership arrangement.
A major headache had been to find a
suitable partner with extensive experience, not only in drilling for oil but
doing so in deep ocean waters. It also proved difficult because McLennan
insisted that BHP retain a 50% share in the final company. This last point took
a great deal of skilful negotiating. However, in April 1964, BHP and an
American company, Standard Oil Company, announced that they had entered into
an arrangement to intensify the search for oil in the Gippsland Basin off the
coast of southern Victoria. An associate BHP company, Hematite Explorations
Pty Ltd, would work with ESSO Standard Oil (Aust.) Ltd to carry out the work.
This finally led to a decision to extend exploration to include drilling off
the southern coast.
The success of the joint company in
striking gas in 1965 and then oil in 1967 is now well known. Even with the
depth of experience behind ESSO Australia, drilling offshore in rough seas
proved difficult and dangerous, as was the final tapping of gas and oil. At the
later fields, Kingfisher and Halibut, the consortium drilled deeper than had
been attempted elsewhere around the world; these together with the later Tuna
and Mackerell fields gave Australia a degree of economic independence never
before experienced. It is difficult to estimate just how great the benefits
from oil and gas have been to the Australian economy, but the contribution by
Sir Ian McLennan cannot be overstated.
There were a number of direct
benefits that flowed to other parts of the company from the discovery of the
oil fields. The BHP shipyard at Whyalla managed to obtain the contract for
building an $8 million drilling vessel designed to drill either by
sitting on the ocean floor or as semi-floating and partly submerged. The
shipyards also were involved in the supply of tankers to transport oil and
later gas overseas; work later extended to the supply of roll on-roll off
vessels for transporting steel.
Ensuring iron ore supplies
Even up
to 1960 it was thought that Australia's reserves of iron ore in Australia were
very limited and were mainly associated with the Whyalla deposits. As a consequence,
the Commonwealth Government had placed an embargo on the export of iron ore,
leavig little incentive for BHP to spend too much time or money on prospecting.
When the export ban was lifted in 1960, general Australian exploration activity
increased and drilling programmes were undertaken by American companies, joined
later by Australian interests. In due course these companies invited BHP to
join them in a consortium to develop and market iron ore from deposits in the
Pilbara area in Western Australia. A new company, the Mt Newman Mining Co., was
formed in which BHP held a 30% interest through its subsidiary company, Dampier
Mining Co. The project became one of the largest open-cut mines in the world,
and required the mined ore to be transported by rail over 400 km for subsequent
loading into ore ships at Port Hedland on the north-west coast of Western
Australia.
As part of this mining enterprise in the north-west, BHP needed
to create a completely new township in an unpromising area with a very severe
climate. Not only were new air-conditioned houses, flats, schools and hospitals
to be built but amenities such as swimming pools, golf clubs and recreation
halls, all set out in a tree-lined environment were to be developed. Most were
completed by 1970 while McLennan was Managing Director.
Some years earlier, when the South
Australian government began applying pressure to BHP to develop steel making in
South Australia as compensation for its mining leases covering iron ore
deposits, McLennan thought it was time to make a positive move, particularly as
overseas steel makers were showing interest in investing in Australia. As a
consequence, BHP decided in 1958 to erect a blast furnace as part of a future
integrated steel works in Whyalla, where ship-building had already been
established. The agreement with the South Australian Government involved the
company spending $60,000 while some 1,500 houses were to be provided by the
Government. As part of the agreement, the company would be given the right to
take up additional iron ore leases. Similarly, as recounted earlier, Western
Australia had been exerting pressure for the establishment of steel production
in that state as recompense for leases to mine ore at Yampi Sound, and as early
as 1952 an agreement was reached via the BHP Steel Industry Act for BHP to construct
a steel rolling mill at Kwinana capable of producing 50,000 tonnes per annum.
By November 1960 a further agreement to establish an integrated steel works was
signed involving expenditure of some $160 million over eighteen years and
covering leases at Koolyanobbing and later Mt Newman.
Towards a new modern steel plant in Victoria
It was
becoming apparent that there was a further need for BHP to protect its steel-
making business from competition from overseas companies that might wish to
expand to Australia. It was known that the British company Guest, Keen and
Nettlefold (GKN), through its Australian subsidiary, JLA (uncoated and coated
sheet steel producer) was interested in establishing more firmly its supply of
raw products, whether as hot rolled strip coils, steel slab or raw steel.
To complicate matters, in 1965 the
New South Wales Minister for Mines invited overseas companies, including some
steel companies, to invest capital in Australia, leading to proposals from
American companies interested in the possibility of steel- making in the
Jervis Bay area of New South Wales. While these came to nothing in the end, BHP
management could see that it was now imperative for BHP to have clear
understandings with its major customer, JLA, whose business plan foreshadowed
quite rapid increase in demand for sheet steel products that would involve
significant capital expenditure by GKN/JLA. BHP also had plans for costly
developments and joint discussions on these future plans were held. As an outcome,
in a move largely organized by McLennan, a joint announcement was made on 4
March 1967 that the Boards of BHP, JLA and GKN were to put in hand a study of
the feasibility of establishing an integrated iron and steel works jointly
owned by BHP and JLA/GKN. The study, when under way would be looking primarily
at a wide range of flat rolled products, studying possible plant locations and
related market requirements and the types of processes that would be
appropriate. From a JLA point of view, it was clear that, whatever road was
taken, BHP would always play a major part in its supply line and that therefore
some more formal relationship with BHP was desirable for future stability. In
May 1969 it was announced that BHP would take a half share in JLA with the
British company GKN, and under a
Joint Venture Agreement it was proposed that JLA would establish
a hot and cold steel strip production plant at a new facility to be established
at Western Port Bay in Victoria, envisaging the eventual establishment by JLA
of an integrated steel plant in the same area. JLA became jointly owned by a
new company BHP/GKN Holdings Pty Ltd, with McLennan as Chairman. Some years
later on 4 December 1979, BHP acquired the 50% GKN holding in JLA, making the
latter company a wholly owned subsidiary of BHP. This was a major achievement
for BHP under McLennan's leadership because it eliminated a possible major
competitor with access to overseas capital support and, at the same time, BHP
gained a well organized company with sales of over one million tonnes of steel
annually, with important patents and with a number of overseas operations. It
would ensure for many years that overseas steel companies would be unlikely to
enter local production in competition with BHP.
 | Directors of GKN, BHP and JLA following the signing of the Joint Venture Agreement in 1969. From left to right, Mr J. Inch (GKN), Sir Raymond Brookes (Chairman, GKN), Sir Ian McLennan (Chairman, BHP), Mr E.B. Gosse (Chairman, JLA), Sir John McNeil (BHP), Mr F. Rowbottom (GKN), Mr H.J. Pearce (JLA). |
Staff training
For many
years BHP's training policy had been directed from Head Office in Melbourne,
where a head-office Staff Training Committee met periodically that consisted of
most senior officers with the Senior General Manager as Chairman. In December
1944 the first Combined Staff Training Conference was held in Melbourne, organized
and chaired by McLennan. This was a milestone in the development of the Staff
Training Scheme, begun seventeen years earlier. Seventeen staff from all
associated groups attended and discussed alignment of courses and future staff
needs; it became an important annual conference.
In 1956 BHP and its subsidiary companies introduced their 'Steel
Industry Scholarships' available to students at matriculation and undergraduate
level to cover a university course on a full-time basis. They carried a very
adequate living and book allowance and could be taken up at any university. The
company had also developed a 'Steel Industry Trainee Scholarship' scheme for
full-time technical training that operated for people who would initially
attend colleges part-time. It had also successfully operated training courses
at apprentice level so as to be assured of a continuing supply of well- trained
tradesmen, as well as technicians and graduates. The subject was one in which
McLennan took an active and continuing interest.
In some of the company's larger areas
such as Port Kembla in the 1950s, the facilities for university and technical
training were quite inadequate. In 1958 McLennan moved to obtain company
financial assistance of £150,000, to go towards developing adequate technical
and technological facilities and, in particular, Wollongong University College.
There would be further input from government. In 1961 as Chief General Manager,
BHP McLennan opened a new £500,000 apprentice training centre at the Newcastle
steel works, modelled on the best practice in Holland and Germany. He observed
then:
for all the
skilled occupations involved in the industry, whether at the works, on the
ships or in the mines, we have tried to develop training schemes to help the
young men to fulfil their tasks...we realise that today's apprentice or trainee
is tomorrow's skilled tradesman, engineer, draughtsman, designer,
superintendent or manager.[8]
He later observed:
the whole question
of training in industry was one of tremendous importance to Australia. BHP was
training 583 apprentices in the steel works and another 2000 in associated
companies and the training of this number of young people must make a tremendous
contribution to this country.[9]
This was a theme McLennan expressed
in public on every suitable occasion.
The conditions of employment of
people in training changed over the years but always the student was paid
adequate wages and allowed often generous time during the day to attend courses
(although training also involved some attendance at classes in the trainee's
own time). As regards other labour activities, BHP had difficult relations with
the various unions over some years, particularly between 1950 and 1965,
generally in connection with wage levels and over-award payments. When
industrial awards were finally governed by the Arbitration Commission, the
Company refused to make over-award pay rates. In later years McLennan is
reputed to have claimed this to be essential, for otherwise it would put undue
pressure on smaller companies to meet the higher rates when they were unable to
afford them. In the late 1960s and '70s, with the much larger company spread
over a number of divisions, attitudes to wage levels altered considerably, but
BHP was never at this time a trend-setter on wages and salaries.
Throughout his service with the company,
McLennan had followed Essington Lewis in being very concerned with all aspects
of safety and tidiness around the works. He placed great emphasis on observance
of rules for safe working. Training, he insisted, was the essential starting
point:
Plant tidiness and
cleanliness are always in the forefront of our thinking. So too is safe working
practice. Since 1946 our overall safety performance has been improved by more
than 50%.[10]
In 1958 a further training course was
introduced with the objective of establishing more effective control of the
factors that lead to accidents. At the start of each course the general manager
stressed that one of the company's most inflexible policies was that the safety
of the individual took priority over all else. The course was generally of
five days' duration.
A reorganization
Particularly over the two
decades from 1950, BHP and its associated companies grew extensively requiring
a number of organizational changes to meet the needs of the interests of
different divisions and the increasingly expanding product market, both at home
and abroad. Steel- making was no longer the main business. Oil and gas,
iron-ore mining and export, and the business of associated companies were all
requiring different approaches to administration and remuneration. Following
recommendations by American consultants who examined the structure of the
company in 1967, the BHP organization was divided into five groups or business
profit centres, Steel Division, Oil and Gas Division, Minerals Division, Group
Subsidiaries, and Rheem Australia. The staff heading these divisions were to
have a considerable degree of independence and to be responsible for their
divisions as profit centres. Each would have the appropriate staff functions
so as to deliver the required service and would operate largely as separate
entities. Collectively they reported to Sir Ian McLennan (appointed Managing
Director in February 1967), as did a number of special groups such as Engineering,
Research and Development, and Finance. In addition, at Board level, two new
committees were established, the Finance Committee (reactivated from an earlier
reorganization) chaired by the BHP Chairman, then Sir Colin Syme, and an
Executive Committee of four members led by McLennan.
A problem that arose with the new
organization was that it tended to highlight differences in annual profits
between divisions, allowing outside shareholders to apply pressure to break
the company down into separate business entities with the expectation of higher
returns on investments. This was an aspect that had faced BHP for a number of
years, particularly as the returns on assets employed from steel- making
activities were always low when compared with those of other groups. McLennan
and others in the company were reluctant to lift steel prices, although this
was seen as the only way to improve returns. However, by 1973, inflation in
Australia had reached very high levels and a new Labor government was in office
with E. G. Whitlam as Prime Minister. A serious outcome for the Company
occurred when the new government withdrew a number of industry concessions such
as a 20% investment allowance on capital equipment and also introduced a
Prices Justification Tribunal to monitor price increases. At this time, with
McLennan now Chairman, BHP applied for a 7.1% steel price increase but was
allowed only 3% by the Tribunal. As the Annual Report for 1973 showed, the
return on funds invested in iron and steel had dropped to a critically low
2.1%, whereas shareholders might reasonably expect 10%. In spite of this low
return, McLennan and his Board resisted the many cries to separate steel from
oil and gas. The next year in his Chairman's Report, while dealing with
expenditure on proposed major developments, McLennan stated:
this will involve
extremely large expenditure investment which can only be justified if there
are reasonable grounds for belief that the company will be able to earn a fair
rate of return on the investment over its life.[11]
Over his years with the company,
McLennan maintained the firm conviction, restating it often, that 'from
Australia's point of view, surely if the climate is right for a company like
BHP to develop and prosper, the climate is right for the growth of other
activities in Australia'.
Directorships
In April 1971 McLennan was
appointed Chairman and Director of Administration, BHP, positions he held until
his retirement in 1977, when he reached the compulsory retiring age for BHP
directors. Thus, in less than forty years he had moved through the company
ranks to the most senior position, and had been the guiding force behind the
extraordinary changes in BHP, particularly during the previous two decades. In
the early 1960s, Helen Hughes observed that
The Broken Hill
Propriety's monopoly has inevitably influenced its decision making, not in the
direction of unduly high prices or profits...but rather in its failure to promote
an adequate rate of growth, its failure to take risks and to show enterprise.[12]
In fact, since the 1950s,
shareholders' funds had been increasing by nearly 14% per year; by 1975 annual
steel output had increased to over 7.5 million tonnes; the raw products used
came from BHP mines and were transported in BHP ships; and it mined and
exported ore and coal, oil and gas. It also had eighteen subsidiary companies
and thirteen associated companies and in acquiring or associating with these,
vision was needed and risks had been taken showing the great and expansive
change that had occurred during the 'McLennan Era'
Between 1969 and 1975 Sir Ian
McLennan was Chairman of the government's Defence (Industrial) Committee and
in its first year led a successful Australian Government Defence Industries
Mission to the USA. Within the BHP group, he was also Chairman, Australian Iron
and Steel Pty Ltd; Chairman, Australian Wire Industries Pty Ltd, and Chairman,
Hematite Petroleum Pty Ltd; and from 1970 to 30 June 1979 he was Chairman,
BHP-GKN Holdings Ltd after which date BHP became the sole owner of the company,
thus bringing together the major sheet manufacturing groups in Australia.
Apart from BHP companies, McLennan
held directorships in a number of local and overseas companies including ICI
Australia Ltd (1976-1979) and Henry Jones(IXL) Ltd (1980-1985). He was
Chairman, Interscan Australia Ltd, 1978-1984; and with the ANZ Banking Group he
became a Director in May 1976 and was Chairman, 1979 to 1982.
In 1979 he was made a Knight
Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George for services to youth, community
and industry.
Science and education
McLennan's
lifelong interest in science applied to industrial problems showed itself in a
number of ways. For example, towards the end of its first decade, the
Australian Academy of Science recognized that there was a need for greater
interaction between the Academy, industry and commerce and organized a
discussion group to promote the idea, inviting senior industrial leaders to
meet with a number of Academy Fellows. In a farsighted move, they invited
McLennan, then Senior General Manager of BHP, to chair a meeting in May 1964,
at which some forty industry leaders and scientists discussed how best to
increase and improve interactions between the various groups in order to best
serve the nation. Sir Ian's final remarks in his summing-up included his
understanding that future closer interaction would be supported by many in
industry, and this served to ensure continuing action on the part of the
Academy.
Over the ensuing 24 months the Council of the Academy organized
further discussion groups, at one of which McLennan gave a paper entitled
'Scientists and Industry'. The final outcome from these discussions was a
proposal to establish a National Science and Industry Forum, the first meeting
of which was hosted by CSR Ltd in Sydney on 18 March 1967. Subsequent meetings
covered a broad range of subjects and resulted in a number of reports, and were
extraordinarily successful in improving mutual understanding and
collaboration between scientific and industrial leaders in the nation. From
1967 until the fifty-seventh and last meeting on 7 November 1996, some 300
papers and discussions were delivered covering a great variety of subjects;
McLennan delivered two papers, in September 1974 'An industrialist's view of
China' and in 1976 'National priorities in the exploitation of inventions'.
In 1972 Sir Ian McLennan warmly
supported a number of eminent scientists, technologists and industry leaders
who were working towards establishing a new Australian Academy of Technological
Sciences and was happy to accept the role of President of the Provisional
Committee that was set up. He would have been particularly pleased because one
of the committee members, Professor Howard Worner, had also been a member of
the first steel industry University-Industry Conference that he had chaired at
AIS in 1955. After the Australian Academy of Technological Sciences was finally
incorporated on 6 November 1975, McLennan was elected its first President on
21 November 1975, when he inducted the first of the Academy's Honorary
Fellows, Sir Mark Oliphant, then Governor of South Australia. Shortly after this,
with the support of the Fellows, the words 'and Engineering' were added to the
title of the Academy.
Many of the early activities of the
Academy, which became increasingly important, were influenced and supported by
the President, including the now well-established pattern of holding annual
symposia on topics of importance to Australia. In 1982 the Academy signed a
memorandum of understanding with China's State Science and Technology
Commission and this was followed up by McLennan leading a delegation of Fellows
to China. The delegation discussed with their Chinese hosts the direction that
future liaison between the two organizations could take, and it must have been
gratifying for McLennan to see, in later years, that further important
exchange visits had taken place with benefits to both countries. Again, the
Academy's aim of providing advice and assistance to both state and federal
governments was helped materially by the presence of the President at many
meetings. He was a driving force within the Academy until his retirement in
1983, and he maintained a close relationship with it in the following years At
the Annual General Meeting in 1983 it was agreed that he be accorded the title
'Foundation President' which he was pleased to accept. Later, when the Academy
purchased the Ida Scheps Wing of International House from the University of
Melbourne in 1987, the new home of the Academy was called 'Ian McLennan House'
as a fitting tribute to him.
In 1980, McLennan became a Fellow of
the Australian Academy of Science by special election under the Academy's
statute that allows for election to the Fellowship of a limited number of
people who have 'rendered conspicuous service to the cause of science or whose
election would be of signal benefit to the Academy or to the advancement of
science'. The citation noted 'his leadership in expansion and modernisation in
the Australian iron and steel industry' and referred to his establishment and
subsequent support of BHP's research division, his influence on 'the
modernisation of all process control measurements throughout the Company's
works', his founding role in the Clunies Ross Memorial Foundation (on which
see below), and his involvement in the Academy's Science and Industry Forum
and support for various other Academy activities.
Sir Ian McLennan was President of the Australasian Institute of
Mining and Metallurgy in 1951, 1957 and 1972 and was elected an Honorary Member
in 1979. He was President of the Institute of Production Engineers, Australia
in 1962. He was elected a Fellow of the International Academy of Management in
1978; a Foreign Associate of the (US) National Academy of Engineering in 1978;
an Honorary Fellow of the Institution of Engineers, Australia in 1982; a
Foreign Fellow of the Royal Swedish Academy of Engineering Sciences in 1982;
and a Foreign Member of the Fellowship of Engineering (United Kingdom) in 1986.
In 1986 he was a Director and member of the Executive Committee of the
International Iron and Steel Institute (Great Britain). He was also a Member of
the Australian Institute of Metals, the Institute of Directors and The Metals
Society (Great Britain).
Between 1973 and 1979 he was a member
of the International Council of the Morgan Guaranty Trust Company of New York
and from 1978 to 1983 a member of the General Motors Advisory Council.
Community activities
McLennan
had many diverse interests in the community but particularly important were
those dealing with education, engineering and technology. The Australian
Mineral Development Laboratories (AMDL) in South Australia were initially
established as the Research and Development Branch of the South Australian
Mines Department and acquired a unique reputation in its fields of research. In
an arrangement between the Commonwealth, the South Australian Government and
the Australian Mineral Industries Research Association, the interest in the
Laboratories was vested in the latter group so that they could operate on a
national basis to offer a contract service for the investigation of problems
relating to the development, processing and use of minerals in Australia. The
Australian Mineral Industries Research Association is an association of
various companies engaged in the mineral industry. In February 1960, at a
ceremony performed by the Prime Minister, R.G. Menzies, to mark the transfer,
control was passed from the South Australian Government and documents that
signified the transfer of the laboratories were passed to McLennan, who then
became the first Chairman of the Laboratories' Council. In accepting the
documents, McLennan announced the appointment, after a world-wide canvass, of
Dr L Coffer as the first Director of the AMDL. His final remarks were
characteristic: 'We will get down to the job with vigour, and a determination
to discharge the trust placed in us'.
On 17 June 1964, McLennan attended
the official opening of Elrington Engineering Pty Ltd which occupied the
surface facilities of a former Elrington Colliery near Singleton, New South
Wales, that had been forced to close due to poor economic conditions for coal
in 1962. The colliery had been jointly owned by Boral Ltd and BHP. McLennan had
been actively associated with it and was well aware of the problems the
closure would bring to the district. He conceived the idea of using the mine's
surface buildings and facilities as an engineering enterprise, and this was
supported by both Boral and the State Government as well as by BHP. Within two
years a new company employing many of the miners was up and running successfully
with 33 employees.[13]
He was Governor and Chairman in 1966
of the Ian Clunies Ross Memorial Foundation and with three others, Sir Archie
Glenn, Sir John Holland and Sir Bernard Callinan, founded the Melbourne
University Engineering Foundation in 1983. He was the first Chairman of the
latter Foundation which, among other things, was to assist the Council of the
University in matters associated with the encouragement and promotion of excellence
in education, study, teaching and research in the Faculty of Engineering.
Further, it was to foster the development of close relationships between
persons in industry, commerce and the Faculty including both students and
staff and to assist in bringing to the University visiting lecturers who had
made outstanding contributions in relevant fields.
In October 1985 McLennan became
Honorary Chairman of the Joint Committees of the Australia-Japan Business
Cooperation Committee and the Japan- Australia Business Cooperation Committee,
and in 1986 he became Patron of the Australia-China Business Cooperation
Committee. Also in 1986 he became Chairman of the Advisory Committee for the
National Bicentenary Science Centre. He was a long-serving Councillor of the
Board of the Royal Agricultural Society of Victoria, 1978-1992. For some years
he was a Councillor of the Australian Mineral Industries Research Association,
and a member of the Executive Committee of the Australian Mining Industry
Council.
Over the years many high distinctions
were conferred on McLennan including Honorary Doctorates of Engineering, University
of Melbourne and University of Newcastle, both in 1968; Honorary Doctorate of
Science, Deakin University 1988; and Honorary Doctorate of Laws, University of
Melbourne, 1988. He was appointed a Knight Commander of the Order of St Michael
and St George for services to youth, community and industry in 1979. Other
awards included the James N. Kirby Medal of the Institute of Production
Engineers, 1964; the Peter Nicol Russell Memorial Medal of the Institution of
Engineers, Australia, 1968; and the Kernot Memorial Medal of the University of
Melbourne, 1970. From overseas came the Charles F. Rand Memorial Gold Medal of
the American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical and Petroleum Engineers and the
prestigious Bessemer Gold Medal of The Metals Society (Great Britain) in 1981.
In 1986 he received 'The First Class Order of the Sacred Treasure' from the
Emperor of Japan.
Sporting and leisure interests
It is all
too easy to concentrate on Sir Ian's immensely successful technology and
business accomplishments and to overlook his interest in various forms of sport
in which he participated when possible.
At a tennis afternoon in February
1944, the opportunity was taken by Newcastle Works Tennis Club, of which he had
been president, to farewell him because he was moving to Melbourne. The large
number present, 44 plus four children, demonstrated the esteem in which the
members held their president who not only took an active interest in the club
but was also an excellent player.
More generally, he took great trouble
to support the development of sporting clubs where the initiative had been
taken by a group within one of the works. Thus, on 14 September
1957, and in his role as General Manager of BHP, McLennan officially opened
the Illawarra Leagues Bowling and Recreation Club's new bowling greens and
clubhouse. His doing so represented a new departure in that the honour for such
an opening was usually given to the president of the Royal New South Wales
Bowling Association. The change had been made in recognition of the assistance
given by the Company to the Illawarra Leagues Club and the Illawarra Bowling
Club. Following the opening, McLennan was given a civic reception where he
observed:
only eight years
ago in 1949 some people had been sceptical of the decision to develop further
the steel industry at Port Kembla, but, today, with employment at the steel
works over 11,000 and production running at 1,800,000 tons of steel a year, the
faith of the industry, in the district, and in Australia has been justified.[14]
McLennan was also Foundation Patron of The Grange Golf Club near
Port Kembla, which began when employees at various BHP collieries that supplied
coal to AIS formed the Southern Collieries Social Golf Club in 1960. The Club
wrote to the Chief General Manager, BHP requesting a lease covering unused
company land to develop into a golf course and McLennan replied in March 1963
that AIS would co-operate in the project. After much voluntary labour and
company help, the first nine holes of the course were opened in March 1964 with
the remainder completed by the official opening on 21 March 1965 when Sir
Ian unveiled a plaque and presented the McLennan Cup to the club as a perpetual
trophy for the Club Champion. He is remembered also by the nearby McLennan
Park. There is a story told locally that, on the day when he performed the
opening ceremony for the new golf course, he had the 'honour' on the first tee
and well out-drove the club champion who followed.
In an interview he gave on retirement
in 1977, McLennan remarked that he had played tennis and golf until 1966. At
that time he purchased an 80-hectare property called 'Oatlands' at Narre
Warren, Victoria, where a Victorian homestead was renovated and a Hereford
stud established. This and an extensive garden, orchard and rose garden became
his great interest and pride and what he claimed to be his refuge. Improving
the breed of his Hereford cattle was a further interest until, in the 1980s,
the area was re-zoned and the property subdivided for housing. His clubs were
the Melbourne Club, the Athenaeum, the Australian, and the Royal Melbourne
Golf Club.
Sir Ian McLennan was, above all, a
most eminent Australian citizen, a strong leader with a clear vision of where
he and the Company should go and with the will to see his vision succeed.
Within the Company, he was demanding and exacting but always ready to support
staff while expecting their loyalty. Instinctively, he was prepared to take
chances, to support long- term development projects and more basic research
where it converged finally on company interests. His great industrial and
personal achievements in promoting the advancement of his industry to the forefront
of world-best practice, leading to great economic benefits to the nation, are
probably less well known to those outside the steel industry. If asked to
identify his major business achievements, perhaps one would choose the early
installation of the hot strip mill in Port Kembla, his major involvement in
BHP's entering into gas and oil prospecting and its successful outcome, and
finally the development of iron ore mining in Western Australia.
After relinquishing most of his
business and technical interests Sir Ian moved closer to family, particularly
his grandchildren and his gardens, interspersed with outings to his clubs. His
thoughtful counsel is greatly missed by industry and community interests alike.
References
1. BHP Journal 2/78, 1978, p.23.
2. The BHP Review vol. 28, no. 4, 1951, p.16.
3. ibid., vol. 29, no. 4, 1952, p.12.
4. ibid., vol. 32, no 3&4, 1955, p.6.
5. ibid., vol. 33, no. 3, 1956, p.18.
6. ibid., vol. 34, no. 5, 1957, p.22.
7. Newcastle Sun, 8 March 1961.
8. The BHP Review vol. 38, no. 6, p.16.
9. Newcastle Sun, 12 April 1961
10. The BHP Review vol. 34, no. 5, 1957, p.24.
11. BHP Annual Report, 1974.
12. Helen Hughes, The Australian Iron and Steel Industry, 1848-1962. (Melbourne, 1964) p.192.
13. The BHP Review vol. 41, no. 5, 1964.
14. ibid., vol. 35, no. 1, 1957.
P.N. Richards, Newcastle.
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