Heinrich Tuschke

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Heinrich Tuschke (born July 23, 1868 in Eickendorf near Haldensleben , † October 15, 1935 in Hanover ) was a German bricklayer, merchant and canning manufacturer .

Heinrich Tuschke (senior)

Heinrich Tuschke was born the son of a farmer . At the time of the German Empire, he first learned the craft of a bricklayer. During the years of traveling after his apprenticeship, he also came to Hanover, where in 1898 he opened a grocery store in the then still independent town of Linden on what was then " Köthner Holzweg 45 " , where he also traded briquettes and offered his customers the services of a hot ironer . In 1911 he joined his company to process white cabbage into sauerkraut . Due to the great demand for prepared white cabbage, Tuschke set up a branch for the production of sauerkraut on Nieschlagstrasse in the middle of the First World War .

At the time of the Weimar Republic , Heinrich Tuschke expanded in 1926 with a further branch, this time in Großgottern in Thuringia , in order to be able to supply its Central German customers faster and with less transport costs from there .

The Tuschke company continued to grow and was soon one of the first canning factories that could now offer delicatessen cucumbers in 10-liter cans instead of the pickled cucumbers that had previously only been supplied in barrels .

The former celluloid goods factory Dr. P. Hunaeus in the Lindener Leinaustrasse

In 1931 Heinrich Tuschke enlarged his company again due to the good market situation and technical progress by building the former " Celluloid -Waaren-Fabrik Dr. " in Lindener Leinaustrasse. P. Hunaeus ”bought and rebuilt for his purposes.

Heinrich Tuschke junior

After Heinrich Tuschke's death in 1935 - it was now the time of National Socialism - his son Heinrich Tuschke junior, who was born in Linden and who has been with the company since childhood, took over . (Born January 14, 1901; † October 29, 1954 in Hanover) and his brother ( died 1945) the company. From 1937 on, the Tuschke company was seen on the economic market as a trailblazer for sauerkraut in 1-liter cans.

During the Second World War , the company buildings were badly damaged by the air raids on Hanover . After the war damage had been repaired and extension buildings were erected in the 1950s and 1960s, the Tuschke company soon became one of the largest sellers of pickled preserves in what was then the Federal Republic of Germany , especially with the branded items "Thuringian pride" delicacy gherkins and the "gold pheasant" -Sauerkraut .

In 1968 Tuschke started a cooperation ; however, the partner company had to file for bankruptcy in 1974 . In 1977 Tuschke finally closed production in Hanover and moved its location from Leinaustraße to Barsinghausen-Stemmen . From there, which is family-owned since (as of 2002) in the third generation as sales conducted since 1986 as the "golden pheasant, pickled - Klaus Borges eK ". The company's location is (as of 07/2014) "Am Rittergut 1 in Barsinghausen / Stemmen"

literature

Web links

References and comments

  1. a b c d e f g h i j Waldemar R. Röhrbein: TUSCHKE, Heinrich (see literature)
  2. Compare the information under the GND number of the German National Library
  3. Note: Deviating from this, the collector and hobby historian Andreas-Andrew Bornemann has an "advertisement from Heinrich Tuschke |." On his postkarten-archiv.de page 1941 “, which shows the year of foundation 1897, compare its subpage Lindener Gewerbe-Handel und Industriebetriebe from 1880-1899 , last accessed on July 6, 2014
  4. ^ Klaus Mlynek : Linden. In: Stadtlexikon Hannover , p. 406ff.
  5. a b c d e Waldemar R. Röhrbein: Tuschke, canned cucumber ... (see literature)
  6. Compare the documentation at Commons (see under the section Weblinks )
  7. Compare the company's website