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Authority record
Hadfield, Anthony
Person · 1915-1981

Anthony Butler Hadfield was born in London, England on 25 Apr. 1915. After earning a law degree, Hadfield served in the British Army from 1939 to 1948, rising to the rank of Captain. He entered the automobile association business in 1948 as manager of the Bournemouth office of the Royal Automobile Club in Hampshire. In 1952, Hadfield accepted the job of provincial secretary for the Ontario Motor League (part of the Canadian Automobile Association). He represented Ontario during the opening of the Trans-Canada Highway. He moved to Richmond, Virginia in 1969 and became administrative vice-president of the Automobile Association of Virginia. Hadfield died on 18 May 1981.

Hadfield, Ruth
Person · 1922-2011

Ruth Dyson Hadfield was born in Oldham, Lancashire, England on 18 October 1922 and was trained as a nurse at the Royal Halifax Infirmary. She wrote poetry in her later years and cared for rescued poodles. She died in Henrico, Virginia on 26 Apr. 2011.

Moffatt, Fred
Person · 1912-2006

Frederick E. “Fred” Moffatt, industrial designer, was born in Toronto in 1912. He left Central Technical School at the age of 16 to pursue a career as an illustrator. His first job was at Southam Press, cutting French rubber plates for water colour tinting. He then joined Rapid Grip, a photo engraving company, as an apprentice, but was let go in 1931 due to the Depression. Moffatt started his own company and built up business by drawing sketches for advertising agencies to promote the products of Carnation, General Foods, General Motors, Kodak, and other companies while taking night classes at the Ontario College of Art. His clientele grew to include Canadian General Electric Company Limited (CGE) and Pitney-Bowes, the postage meter company. Despite suffering a nervous breakdown due to overwork, Moffatt was enjoying success as a designer and was developing his contacts with CGE. The company asked Moffatt to work with an engineer at Canadian Motor Lamp, CGE’s lamp factory, who had combined a chromed headlight shell with a heating element to create a prototype electric kettle. Moffatt reconfigured the handle and spout to prevent spillage and scalding, improvements that also reduced production costs. The model K42 kettle was introduced to the marketplace by CGE in 1940 as the world’s first electric kettle. It was a great success, leading the company to request a more advanced model to deter copies. Moffatt produced an oval, streamlined version in 1941, and continued to work on kettle designs until 1980. The scope of Moffatt’s work with CGE expanded in the 1950s to include one of the first electric lawnmowers, a floor polisher that won national awards, and a teardrop floor heater that won a design competition in Milan. Moffatt was a freelance contractor, working on a handshake agreement that he would design only for CGE and that CGE would engage no other industrial designers. After Black & Decker Canada Incorporated bought CGE’s small appliance division in 1984, Moffatt and his son Glenn worked for two years converting graphics, packaging, and other design elements to Black & Decker’s brand. The line was launched at Ontario Place in 1986. Two weeks later, Black & Decker terminated Moffatt’s contract as it had its own design department in Connecticut. Moffatt worked with other commercial clients in the ensuing years, often in collaboration with Glenn. Fred Moffatt died on 2 Aug. 2006.

Moffatt, Glenn
Person · 1944-2023

Glenn Murray Moffatt, industrial designer and teacher, was born in Toronto on 23 May 1944 to Fred and Roma Moffatt and grew up in Thornhill. After graduating from the Ontario College of Art and Design in 1967, Moffatt began a successful career designing consumer and industrial products. He ran his own business, Moffatt Associates, while occasionally collaborating with his father. His most successful project was an electric hair setter designed within a year of graduation, which sold between 2 and 3 million units for Samson-Dominion, its Canadian manufacturer. Moffatt worked on a wide variety of products that ranged from the GT Snow Racer and Noma Snowthrowers to amplifiers and public address systems, industrial paint spraying equipment, and a paint store colourant dispenser carousel. He continued his father’s work on electric kettles, developing a plastic kettle for Black & Decker Canada Incorporated in 1984 and updating the designs of Superior Electrics of Pembroke, Ontario, Canada’s last manufacturer of steel kettles which also introduced a plastic model designed by Moffatt. He designed packaging graphics for Black & Decker from 1984 to 1987. Moffatt was a member of the Association of Chartered Industrial Designers of Ontario and served as a Professor of Industrial Design and Coordinator of Special Projects at Humber College from 1995 to his retirement in 2022. Moffatt died on 9 July 2023.