Franz Saurer | |
Birth Name: | Franz Saurer |
Birth Date: | 6 October 1806 |
Birth Place: | Veringendorf, Grand Duchy of Baden, German Empire |
Death Place: | Arbon, Thurgau, Switzerland |
Occupation: | Industrialist |
Known For: | Founding and leading Saurer |
Spouse: | |
Children: | 6 |
Franz Saurer (October 3, 1806 - November 28, 1882) was a German-born Swiss industrialist who founded the company which ultimately became the Adolph Saurer concern. He was also responsible for the positive economic development of the Arbon region. Through his estate his descendants endowed funds to build the city park of Arbon. He was the patriarch of the Saurer family.
Saurer was born likely around October 3, 1806 in Veringendorf, Grand Duchy of Baden to farming parents Johann Nepomuk and Agatha (née Blum). His family was very poor which led him and a younger brother to move to Switzerland around 1821 aged 15. He initially went to Laufen am Rheinfall where he had a half-sister and was able to complete an apprenticeship as locksmith.[1]
See main article: Adolph Saurer AG. In 1827 he moved to Wülflingen near Winterthur where he was an employee at the mill construction firm Wimmersberger. In 1832, he found further employment at the machinery shop of Michael Weniger in Tablat near St. Gallen. In 1833, Saurer spent one year in Vienna, Austria.
On March 9, 1834, Saurer married Maria Catharina (née Kunz; 1813–1861) with whom he had six sons;
Most of the sons of his first marriage died very young. After his wife died in 1861, Saurer decided to marry again, already in 1862. On August 11, 1862, he married Maria Paulina Theresia Stoffel (née Frei; 1821–1888), who was previously married to Franz Xaver Stoffel and was sole heir to his estate. Stoffel operated a machinery plant and also had substantial land holdings in Arbon which were integrated into the Saurer company.
Saurer died on November 28, 1882, in Arbon aged 76.
After his death, the descendants of Franz Saurer, endowed funds from his estate in order to construct the city park of Arbon.[4] [5] Today there are still landmarks/statutes of the founders of Saurer to be viewed.[6] [7]
https://www.e-newspaperarchives.ch/?a=d&d=LBP18830306-01.2.9&srpos=1&e=------188-en-20--1--img-txIN-Franz+Saurer-------0-----