Albert Bolte

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Albert Bolte (born May 20, 1868 in Kassel ; † April 10, 1944 ) was a German entrepreneur who, as a mine director, had specialized in coal trading and was President of the Leipzig Chamber of Commerce and Industry until 1933 .

Life

Leipzig Chamber of Commerce and Industry - Albert Bolte's office

After attending secondary school in Kassel through to secondary school , Albert Bolte began a commercial apprenticeship. After that he worked as an assistant and traveled to different countries. In 1891 Albert Bolte became an authorized signatory at various companies in the coal industry in Kassel, Mainz , Iserlohn and, most recently, again in Kassel. In 1900 he was appointed managing director of a GmbH in the coal industry in the Saxon residence city of Dresden . In 1904 he was elected to the board of the Saxon Brown Coal Factory Sales Association. From 1909 he was also a board member of the Central German Brown Coal Syndicate. In 1913 Albert Bolte became a director of the Mitteldeutsche Braunkohlen-Werke and in 1917 a member and later Vice President of the Chamber of Commerce and Industry (IHK) in Leipzig. In September 1931 he was elected President of the Leipzig Chamber of Commerce. He held this office until June 1933.

Albert Bolte was also a member of several supervisory boards, chairman of the school board of the public higher commercial college in Leipzig and a member of the Leipzig section of the German Alpine Club. In 1924 he had a villa built for himself at Platnerstrasse 15 in Leipzig. In 1935 he was based in Leipzig-Gohlis , Luisenstraße 6.

family

Albert Bolte had been married to Johanna nee Goetz since March 17, 1894. From this marriage the children Elisabeth (* 1895) and Erich (1897–1979) emerged. The latter became known as a manufacturer of high pressure fittings.

Honors

  • Honorary Senator of the Leipzig Graduate School of Management

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. The archive. Reference work for politics, economics, culture , 1944, p. 71.
  2. ^ The Public Trade School in Leipzig 1831-1950. Festschrift [...] , p. 71.