Johann Christoph Dubbers

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Johann Christoph Dubbers (born December 4, 1804 in Bremen ; † September 7, 1877 there ) was a German businessman and entrepreneur . He was the owner of the JH Bachmann commercial forwarding company in Bremen and a member of the Bremen citizenship .

Life

Johann Christoph Dubbers belonged to the Bremen merchant family Bachmann / Dubbers, which has been owned by the Bremen forwarding and trading company J.H. Bachmann (JHB) was.

Dubbers was the cousin of Johann Hinrich Bachmann , the son of the company founder who died in 1814 and who has since been the owner of the JH Bachmann commercial forwarding company in the second generation. In 1832, after the early death of his cousin, Dubbers took over the family business, also in the second generation and as the third owner . He later married his cousin's widow. He did not change the company name that his cousin had given the company in 1825.

Overall, the company remained in the possession of the "Bachmann / Dubbers" family for more than 220 years and until the end it carried the company name JH Bachmann , which goes back to the company founder and his son Johann Hinrich Bachmann ; even after the sale in 1996 and then under changing owners until the transfer of the company to the Danish logistics group DSV A / S in 2006/07 .

Dubbers was involved in class and local politics; Among other things, he belonged to the citizenship of the Free Hanseatic City of Bremen from at least 1857 to at least 1866 . He had been elected by the members of the merchants' convention and the Chamber of Commerce and was thus based on the eight-class electoral law of the new Bremen constitution of the "2. Class "(" Merchants with Chamber of Commerce suffrage ") of the citizenship deputies.

Dubbers had a country residence on the border with Lower Saxony, in the beautiful landscape of Bremen Switzerland . For his son Johann Friedrich "Fritz" (1834–1907) the Villa Waldwiese was built on one part .

In Lübberstedt his son Johann Christoph Eduard Dubbers (1836–1909) kept his own hunt. The forest was called Dubbers Park.

Honors

Adjacent to the former country estate is the Dubberskamp street in the Burglesum district in the St. Magnus district

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Gravestones - Bremen-Riensberg cemetery. In: grabsteine.genealogy.net. 2008, accessed on July 15, 2020 (see under: 5th photo of the family grave).
  2. a b Employee and customer magazine Imperial News : information on JH Bachmann . In: Imperial News . tape 2000/1 , 2000, pp. 4-9 .
  3. a b c Corinna Laubach: "For us, Bremen is the center of the world" . In: The world . August 17, 2000 ( welt.de ).
  4. ^ State calendar of the free Hanseatic city of Bremen. Bremen 1857, p. 5: The members of the citizenship ; Text archive - Internet Archive
  5. ^ Legal Gazette of the Free Hanseatic City of Bremen. Schünemann, Bremen 1867, p. 143: "Elected by the II. Class"; Text archive - Internet Archive
  6. Kathrin Aldenhoff, Milan Jaeger: Wolfsschlucht, fish ponds - and a castle: the forgotten forest in Lübberstedt. In: Website Weser Kurier. April 24, 2016, accessed July 15, 2020 .
  7. Dubberskamp. Google Maps, accessed March 12, 2020 .