Industry Club Hanover

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Industrie-Club eV Hannover is an association of leading personalities in business and public life, which has been in existence since 1887 and is based at Schiffgraben 8 in Hannover .

history

The association was founded on November 30, 1887 in the Kingdom of Hanover as the "Manufacturers Association Hanover-Linden" by the secret councilor Wilhelm Berding , Eduard Meyer, Ernst Meyer, Berthold Körting and D. Königswarter, Dir. Breul, Christian Jänecke, Heinrich Prinzhorn , Fabr. Schwarz founded. Berding became the first chairman.

In 1889, together with the Association for Voluntary Poor Care and the Association Against House Begging and Homelessness, the Central Office for Proof of Work in Hanover, a private employment agency, is founded.

In the statutes around 1903 the protection of the association members against unjustified demands or efforts of the workers is emphasized. In October 1906 the factory owners 'association transferred "all measures for a fruitful cooperation between employers and workers" to the Hanover industrial employers' association.

1908 belong to the manufacturers association around 86 members, including the Continental Caoutchouc- and gutta-percha Compagnie that Vereinsbrauerei Herrhausen , the guild brewery , the tram Hannover and Günter Wagner ink and paint factory , the paint factory Jänecke and snowman and Brothers Körting AG .

There were close ties with the Hanover Chamber of Commerce and the same people were often at the top of the Chamber. In addition, there was the same address as the Palais Simon at Brühlstrasse 1.

On September 14, 1917, the house of Hannoversche Industrie GmbH was founded together with the Association of Metal Industries. The factory owners' association changes its headquarters to Sophienstrasse.

In 1924 the name of the factory owners' association was changed to the trade association of Hanoverian industry.

At a shareholders' meeting on February 26, 1935, Ludwig von Tschirschnitz decided to rename it to the non-profit fund of Hanoverian industrialists.

After the Second World War, the members of the association decided on September 18, 1946, to give up the name of the non-profit fund of Hanoverian industrialists and to rename themselves to Industrie-Verein Hannover and the surrounding area.

In 1972 the company was renamed Industrie-Club Hannover e. V.

In 1985 it was opened to members not only in the manufacturing industry but also in all branches of the economy, especially for the ever-growing group of service companies.

In 2017 the industry club had around 220 member companies. The full-time managing director is Gudrun Benne.

Board

The board currently consists of chairman Wolfram von Fritsch , his three deputies Marina Barth, Carsten Kuhlgatz and Andreas Sennheiser.

Previous chair

Wolf-Rüdiger Reinicke, who was managing director of the Hanover Industry Club until 2013;
here in 2018 at the civic brunch of the civic foundation Hannover

literature

  • Dieter Tasch (red. Ed.): From the factory owners' association to the industry club. A Century of Hanoverian Economy 1887 1987 , ed. from Industrie-Club Hannover eV on the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the association in October 1987, 1987
  • Industrie-Club Hannover eV: 1887 - 1987 , speeches and lectures of the events on October 30, 1987 and February 10, 1988 on the occasion of the 100th anniversary in literal reproduction, Hanover: Industrie-Club, 1988; contents
  • Rainer Ertel : Industrie-Club Hannover eV In: Klaus Mlynek, Waldemar R. Röhrbein (ed.) U. a .: City Lexicon Hanover . From the beginning to the present. Schlütersche, Hannover 2009, ISBN 978-3-89993-662-9 , p. 315f.

Web links

Commons : Industrie-Club Hannover  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. http://www.industrieclub-hannover.de/der-club/historie/
  2. http://www.regjo.de/download/anders/RegJo-Hannover-2012-4.pdf , p. 13
  3. ^ Hanover economic service - current business news from the Hanover region, issue 06/2017 of March 24, 2017, p. 1