Alfred Oppenheim

Alfred Oppenheim (3 November 1878 in Berlin – 14 May 1943 at the same place) was a German chemist and gas mantle manufacturer.

Advertising of the Berlin company Dr. Alfred Oppenheim.[1]

Life and work

Family

Oppenheim's father Adolph (1839–1913) worked as a merchant in Berlin during the German Empire. His mother Johanna, née Goldstandt (1851–1920), came from a wealthy family in Löbau. In 1919 Alfred Oppenheim married Frieda Gehrmann (*1896), 1930 his daughter Ilse Lore was born.

Education

After preschool education Oppenheim attended the Köllnische Gymnasium in Berlin (1887–1896). Right after his Abitur he studied at the Berlin Institute of Technology, at the Bergakademie Berlin, and at the Humboldt University of Berlin Chemistry, Physics, Botany, Bacteriology, Mineralogy, and Philosophy. During this time Blasius, Dilthey, Finkener, Hermann Emil Fischer, Gabriel, Günther, Jacobus Henricus van 't Hoff, Jahn, Klein, Adolf Lasson, Ernst Pringsheim, Sr., Rosenheim, Warburg, Wichelhaus und Witt were among his docents.

Oppenheim took his final doctoral examination in Berlin. Simon Schwendener did the examination in Botany, Max Planck in Physics, Wilhelm Dilthey in Philosophy, and Siegmund Gabriel in Chemistry. In 1900 he published his thesis Ueber ß-Benzoylisobuttersäure und einige zugehörige Pyridazinderivate.[2] A review of his dissertation was published in the Chemisches Zentralblatt[3] Oppenheim itself commented his thesis in a contribution for the well-known Berichte der deutschen chemischen Gesellschaft.[4]

Chemist and Manufacturer

Richard Feuer & Co.

After his graduation Oppenheim worked as an analyst in gas mantle factories. Since 1901 he worked for a chemical company in Berlin called Richard Feuer & Co., later part of the Auergesellschaft. One year later, he was appointed director of operations.

Allgemeine Glühlichtwerke Dr. Alfred Oppenheim

In 1903 Oppenheim founded his first own company called Allgemeine Glühlichtwerke Dr. Alfred Oppenheim & Co. G.m.b.H., in which he shared the management with Julius and Rosa Rosenfeld.[5] The company soon had 300 employees and produced about 30,000 gas mantles a day.

Aktien-Gesellschaft für Gasglühlicht

Advertising of the Berlin company Dr. Alfred Oppenheim from 1905.[6]

Due to the high competition pressure, the Allgemeine Glühlichtwerke and similar companies merged to the Aktien-Gesellschaft für Gasglühlicht in 1905. Oppenheim was member of the managing board next to Alfred Salomon, Julius Janz, Fritz Saulmann, and Julius Norden.[7]

Poster stamp of the Berlin company Dr. Alfred Oppenheim, advertising for a gas mantle called "Herz" ("Heart").

Factory and Laboratory Dr. Alfred Oppenheim

After finishing his work for the joint-stock company, he founded (1910/1911), again trading under its own name, another factory called Dr. Alfred Oppenheim, which was connected with a chemical laboratory.[8] The company mainly supplied government agencies and was well known for its railway lighting products. Mid-1930s there were about 100 people employed.[9] The company's focus was the manufacture of gas mantles. The best-known product was a trademark called Herz (Heart), that was produced in different versions.[10] Further lamps had proprietary names such as Edelstein (Jewel), Topas (Topaz), and Veilchen (Viola). But also chemical and pharmaceutical products were manufactured, for example Self-filtering Tablets.[11]

Takeover of the Erste Rixdorfer Glühkörper-Fabrik Alschweig & Co.

In 1922 Oppenheim took over a company called Erste Rixdorfer Glühkörper-Fabrik Alschweig & Co., which had been founded ten years ago. As well as his own company, it was specialized in chemical products and gas mantles.[12]

Author

Oppenheim was not only an entrepreneur, but also active in journalism. For many years, he was listed as an employee of a trade magazine for the lighting industry called Licht und Lampe (Light and Lamp).

Surveyor and Association Work

Hansabund

In 1909 Oppenheim was among the founders of the liberal Hansabund. The union was an economic advocacy for German merchants and industrialists with about 200,000 members (1913). Oppenheim was presidium member of this association as well as chairman of the local group for Greater Berlin.

Verband unabhängiger Glühkörperfabrikanten (Association of Independent Gas Mantle Manufacturers)

1912 Oppenheim was among the founding leaders of the Verband unabhängiger Glühkörperfabrikanten, which he directed and chaired until the end of the Weimar Republic. From the beginning, the union was well accepted and dealt with all relevant issues of the gas mantle industry.[13] Initially, the focus was on the improvement of purchasing conditions for association members. Above all, the association had the goal to counter the lighting industry monopoly under the leadership of the Auergesellschaft.[14] In the aftermath of World War I the association addressed the revival of the export business as well as questions concerning the regulation of workers and employees.[15]

Sworn Expert

Since July 1921, Oppenheim worked as publicly appointed and sworn expert for gas mantles and gas burners.[16] In addition, he was an expert working for the Berlin Kammergericht and for the Berlin Land Court's jurisdictional areas I, II and III.

Art Lover and Collector

At the beginning of the 20th century, Oppenheim gave concerts with pieces by Johann Sebastian Bach, Alexandre Guilmant, Jules Mouquet und César Franck in his private apartment. He played on an Art Harmonium that came from the company of his friend Alphonse Mustel (1873-1936). As Oppenheim was a successful entrepreneur, he could follow his passion as a collector of art and books. He had a preference for paintings of the Dutch Golden Age. The art historian and specialist in Dutch painting, Max Jakob Friedländer, advised him to build his collection with works by Thomas Wijck, Adriaen van de Venne and Jan Steen.[17] After the Machtergreifung of the Nazis Oppenheim's collection was disbanded. It has to be attributed to the so-called looted art. Parts of it went on sale, parts disappeared in foreign ownership.

The end

After his marriage in 1919, Oppenheim officially withdrew from Judaism. This did not prevent the Nazi rulers to stop his jewish business in the context of the Aryanization. The company Dr. Alfred Oppenheim ceased to exist at the end of 1939. The next year, the liquidation of the Erste Rixdorfer Glühkörper-Fabrik Alschweig & Co. was completed.[18] In 1940 - under massive pressure from the Nazis - the so-called miscegenation with his Protestant wife Frieda was annulled. In the final years of his life Oppenheim was forced to Unfree labour in a Berlin chemical factory. He died in the Jewish Hospital in Berlin and was buried in the Weißensee Cemetery on 20 May 1943.

Notes

  1. From the Berliner Adressbuch 1931, part 2, 1931, p. 220.
  2. Alfred Oppenheim, Ueber ß-Benzoylisobuttersäure und einige zugehörige Pyridazinderivate. Inaugural-Dissertation zur Erlangung der Doctorwürde von der Philosophischen Facultät der Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität zu Berlin. Berlin 1900.
  3. Chemisches Central-Blatt, vol. 73, part I, 1902, p. 212–213 Online.
  4. Alfred Oppenheim, Zur Kenntniss der Pyridazine. In: Berichte der deutschen chemischen Gesellschaft, vol. 34, no. 3, 1901, p. 4227–4234.
  5. Verzeichnis der in dem, die Amtsgerichtsbezirke Berlin I und II, Charlottenburg und Rixdorf umfassenden, Handels-Register des Königlichen Amtsgerichts I zu Berlin eingetragenen Einzelfirmen und Gesellschaften aller Art, sowie deren Vertreter, Berlin 1905, p. 1099.
  6. From the Journal of Gas Lighting, XC, 1905, p 747.
  7. Verzeichnis der in dem, die Amtsgerichtsbezirke Berlin-Mitte, Berlin-Schöneberg, Berlin-Tempelhof, Berlin-Wedding, Charlottenburg, Gross-Lichterfelde, Lichtenberg, Pankow, Rixdorf und Weissensee umfassenden, Handels-Register des Königlichen Amtsgerichts Berlin-Mitte eingetragenen Einzelfirmen und Gesellschaften aller Art, sowie deren Vertreter, Berlin 1907, p. 1165.
  8. Handels-Register des Königlichen Amtsgerichts Berlin-Mitte. Verzeichnis der in den Amtsgerichtsbezirken Berlin-Mitte, Berlin-Schöneberg, Berlin-Tempelhof, Berlin-Wedding, Charlottenburg, Berlin-Lichterfelde, Berlin-Lichtenberg, Berlin-Pankow, Neukölln und Berlin-Weißensee domizilierenden eingetragenen Einzelfirmen und Gesellschaften aller Art sowie deren Vertreter, Berlin 1913, p. 648.
  9. Wenzels Adreßbuch und Warenverzeichnis der Chemischen Industrie des Deutschen Reiches, vol. XVIII, Berlin 1935, p. 235.
  10. Licht und Lampe. Zeitschrift für die Beleuchtungsindustrie, Berlin 1912, p. 93.
  11. Pharmazeutische Zeitung, vol. 61, no. 22, Berlin 1916, p. 183.
  12. Licht und Lampe. Rundschau für die Beleuchtungs-Industrie und Installation, Berlin 1922, p. 455.
  13. Licht und Lampe. Zeitschrift für die Beleuchtungsindustrie, Berlin 1912, p. 347.
  14. Volkswirtschaftliche Chronik für das Jahr 1912, Jena 1913, p. 304–305.
  15. Licht und Lampe. Zeitschrift für die Beleuchtungsindustrie, Berlin 1920, p. 206–207.
  16. Licht und Lampe. Zeitschrift für die Beleuchtungsindustrie. No. 17, Berlin 1921.
  17. See the entries in the Lost Art Internet Database of the Koordinierungsstelle für Kulturgutverluste.
  18. On the subject see Christoph Kreutzmüller: Ausverkauf. Die Vernichtung der jüdischen Gewerbetätigkeit in Berlin 1930–1945. Metropol Verlag, Berlin 2012, ISBN 9783863310806.

Patents and utility model

Part from patent no. 165609.

Secondary literature

External links

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