Eugen de Haën explained

Carl Johann Eugen de Haën
Birth Date:1835 12, df=y
Birth Place:Duisburg, Germany
Death Place:Hanover, Germany
Alma Mater:Heidelberg University
Doctoral Advisor:Gustav Kirchhoff
Robert Bunsen
Gustav Leonhardt
Academic Advisors:Carl Remigius Fresenius
Known For:founder of the E. de Haën chemicals factory

Carl Johann Eugen de Haën (December 26, 1835 – November 16, 1911), often known as Eugen de Haën or Eugen de Haen,[1] was a German chemist and entrepreneur. He was founder of the chemistry factory E. de Haën & Co.[2]

Education and career

De Haën studied in Heidelberg University under the supervision of Gustav Kirchhoff in physics, Robert Bunsen in chemistry and Gustav Leonhardt in mineralogy, receiving a PhD in 1856. Afterwards, he worked in several chemical factories. At the Silesia Verein Chemischer Fabriken in Saarau (Lower Silesia), Eugen de Haën became involved in 1860 in the chemical laboratory of Julius Knoevenagel (1832 – 1914) in Linden near Hanover, with whom he initially founded the small Chemische Fabrik Dr. Eugen de Haen & Cie in 1861. at Falkenstrasse 9.[3]

In 1861, he founded the E. de Haën company in Linden and later in List, two small villages close to Hanover. The railway and the possibility to have access to the Mittellandkanal he changed the location of his company to Seelze east of Hanover in 1902.

As early as 1862, he moved to List, a suburb of Hanover, where he produced high-purity salts and oxides in the larger E. de Haen Chemische Fabrik List GmbH. Due to the upswing after 1870/1871, the company expanded in Fabrikstrasse, later renamed Liebig Strasse. The laboratory was headed by Johannes Skalweit as a young university graduate. In 1886, on its 25th anniversary, the company has already employed 170 people.

Hanover's residential development in the immediate vicinity was growing rapidly but there was no rail connection. Therefore, the company had to look for a new location and finally found one at a favorable price in a 120-acre site with good rail connections in the village of Seelze. In 1902, the company relocated to Seelze. The old company site was transferred to the descendants in the course of the early succession and was finally demolished at the expense of the heirs.[4] All development costs for the future building land contractually concerned the heirs, and the "construction of an ornamental and playground" was therefore dedicated to the benefactor as de Haën Square.[5]

After significant expansion the company, J. D. Riedel bought the company in 1926 and changed the name of the combined companies to Riedel-de Haën. The company changed owners several times in his long history, but chemicals are still produced in Seelze.[6]

Timeline of de Haën's chemical factory

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Biographie . Deutsche . Haen, Eugen de - Deutsche Biographie . 2022-05-16 . www.deutsche-biographie.de . de.
  2. Web site: Geschichte des Chemiestandortes Seelze Honeywell Seelze German . 2022-05-16 . www.honeywell-seelze.de.
  3. Web site: Albert Gieseler -- A. Knoevenagel Maschinenfabrik, Eisengießerei u. Kesselschmiede . 2022-05-11 . www.albert-gieseler.de.
  4. Web site: Bericht zur vertieften Recherche für "Chemische Fabrik Eugen de Haen" in Hannover List . 2022-05-11 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140914134924/http://www.hannover.de/content/download/223804/3514907/version/1/file/Bericht-zur-vertieften-Recherche-de-Haen.pdf . 14 September 2014 . dead.
  5. Web site: Chronologie eines Behördenversagens - Teil 1 . 2022-05-11 . www.altlasten-hannover.de .
  6. Web site: History - About Us - Honeywell Seelze . 2022-05-11 . www51.honeywell.com.
  7. Book: Hannover Chronik : von den Anfängen bis zur Gegenwart : Zahlen, Daten, Fakten . 1991 . Schlütersche Verlagsanstalt . Klaus Mlynek, Waldemar R. Röhrbein . 3-87706-319-5 . Hannover . 24468337.
  8. Web site: Albert Gieseler -- J. D. Riedel A.-G. . 2022-05-11 . www.albert-gieseler.de.
  9. Web site: Zwangsarbeiter/innen und Kriegsgefangene in Seelze und Letter während des 2. Weltkriegs .