George-Emile Eberhard (1865–1936) was a Swiss watchmaker and industrialist who founded Eberhard & Co..
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George-Emile Eberhard was born in 1865 in Saint-Imier, the son of a prominent Bernese family tracing its origins back to the 10th century.[1] The Eberhard family had been instrumental in the early development of the wiss watchmaking industry.
George-Emile's father initated him to the art of watch making. Eberhard was only 22 when he moved to La Chaux-de-Fonds, the historic birth place of the watch-making industry,[2] where he founded its own factory, Eberhard & Co.
Eberhard's watch-making genius and sense of business turned his factory into one of the largest Swiss watch manufacturers by 1909. Symbolic of its success was the group's new headquarters inaugurated that year. The buildings take an entire block at the very center of rue Leopold Robert, La Chaux-de-Fonds's main avenue. The Parisian-like five-storey building was designed in distinctive Beaux Arts style with a round tower topped by an impressive eagle sculpture that has become one of the city's wellknown landmark, and its highest construction until the 1960s.[3]
In 1919, Eberhard passed the company's executive leadership to his sons, George and Maurice.
In his later life, Eberhard became the patriarch of one of the wealthier and most prominent industrialist family of Switzerland. By the time of his death, his children and grand-children had married into several of the elite industrialist families of the Swiss watchmaking industry, the Blums, Vogels and Ditisheims, and thus were in an ownership position of many of the largest brands of the industry: Eberhard & Co., Ebel, Movado, Vulcain, Solvil et Titus or Paul Ditisheim.