Bruno Salzer

Summary

(Franz) Bruno Salzer (13 May 1859 – 28 May 1919) was a German entrepreneur. Salzer was one of the leading entrepreneurs in Chemnitz around the start of the 20th century and the company he established was the biggest factory in Chemnitz before the Great Depression.[1]

Life edit

Franz Bruno Salzer was born in Stollberg on 13 May 1859 as the son of stocking knitter Johann Gottlieb Salzer (1817–68) and grandson of Oberschlema innkeeper Ephraim Salzer. In 1880 he moved to Chemnitz, where at first he worked as a locksmith for Wirkmaschinenfabrik Hilscher. After his wedding in 1882 to Marie Anna Unger (1858–1925), he opened up a small workshop in 1883 together with fellow locksmith Carl August Schubert, who had previously worked for Maschinenfabrik Kappel. This workshop produced stocking knitter machines and expanded in 1885 after the success of a new model of Flachwirkwerklen for stockings (named System Paget). 1887 the two fellow entrepreneurs reformed their company into a stock corporation under the name "Chemnitzer Wirkwaren-Maschinenfabrik vormals Schubert & Salzer".[2]

In 1892 Schubert left the ever-expanding company. After Salzer established himself as the sole technical engineer the company obtained the right to build automatic stocking machines (Rundstrickwerklen in System Standard) and developed the Petinet-Cottongrät, which not only revolutionised the stocking knitter technology in the Ore Mountains, but was exported to numerous manufacturers all over the world. After World War I the company was the world's biggest seller of Flachstrickwerklen, while also experimenting with the production of bicycles and other machinery under the brand "Salzer & Co. GmbH" from 1896 to 1906.

Salzer committed suicide in Chemnitz on 28 May 1919.[3]

Legacy and tributes edit

  • Bruno-Salzer-Straße (since 1997)

References edit

  1. ^ "Deutsche Biographie - Salzer, Bruno". Deutsche-biographie.de. Retrieved 2018-12-16.
  2. ^ "Details | Industriekultur in Sachsen". Industriekultur-in-sachsen.de. Archived from the original on 2018-12-17. Retrieved 2018-12-16.
  3. ^ Deutsche Biographische Enzyklopädie (DBE) (2nd ed), Bd 8, Poethen-Schlüter, p. 687 (ed. Rudolf Vierhaus). K G Saur Munich 2007 (online version, retrieved 6 December 2019)