Otto Wolff

Otto Wolff AG was a German steelmaker founded in Cologne by the industrialists Otto Wolff and Ottmar E. Strauß in 1904. One of the largest business in pre-war Germany, it exists today as an independent subsidiary of the ThyssenKrupp group.

History

Otto Wolff Eisengroßhandel was founded in Cologne in 1904 by Otto Wolff and Ottmar E. Strauß as a steel trading and steel wrecking company.[1] The business expanded following World War I, acquiring a share in Phoenix AG für Bergbau und Hüttenbetrieb (Mining and Iron Works) in 1917 and taking a 50% share in the Russo-German joint venture, Deutsch-Russische Handels-AG (Russgertorg) in October 1922 which was promoted by Lenin himself.[2] By means of this largest Soviet joint venture he could proove that the foreign trade monopoly was not that kind of handicap as his opponents claimed. The latter project ended after 15 month as trade with the Soviet Union came under stricter state control. In the 1920s, the firm was the nucleus of a group of metals, coal, and electrical companies employing around one million men.[3] Its chief rival at that time was a similar trust controlled by industrialist Hugo Stinnes.[3] In the negociations with MICUM Wolff did not support Stinnes' commission of six but decided to make some kind of “separate peace” with the French delegation.[4]

Under the new National Socialist regime in 1933, Strauß was expropriated, being forced to sell his shares underpriced to Otto Wolff. Strauß died in the US in 1940. Following Wolff's death the same year, the company came under the control of his son, Otto Wolff von Amerongen. During World War II, the company had success as producer of armaments for the Nazi-Wehrmacht.

Control passed to trustees after the Allied invasion of Germany in 1945, but Otto Wolff von Amerongen would resume control in 1947 following an internment of one year. The legatees of Ottmar Strauß tried to get back the shares they once owned in the company, but were unsuccessful. Several years and lawsuits later, they received seven million Deutsche Marks, a fraction of the original value.[5]

The partnership became a public limited company in 1966, with Otto Wolff von Amerongen continuing as chairman until 1986.

The company was acquired by Thyssen in 1990.

References

  1. ^ Dieter Mechlinski: Geheimer Regierungsrat Ottmar E. Strauss (PDF) (viewed on June 30th, 2009)
  2. ^ Hubert Schneider, Das sowjetische Außenhandelsmonopol 1920−1925, Cologne, Verlag Wissenschaft und Politik 1973, p. 89−90
  3. ^ a b "Otto Wolff, 59, an Industrialist; Leader in Germany During and After War Was Second to Stinnes--Dies in Essen". The New York Times. January 23, 1940. http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=FB0A1FFF355A177A93C1AB178AD85F448485F9. 
  4. ^ Boris Gehlen, Paul Silverberg (1876-1959). Ein Unternehmer, Stuttgart, Vierteljahresschrift für Sozial- und Wirtschaftsgeschichte. vol. 194, 2007, p. 256
  5. ^ Phoenix (german TV-channel): Das Erbe der Väter – Wie der Otto Wolff-Konzern arisch wurde (the legacy of the fathers – how the Otto Wolff-concern became arian), documentary film by Gert Monheim and Jürgen Naumann, 2005 (page viewed on June 30th, 2009)

External links