Theodor Amsinck

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Johannes Theodor Amsinck (born December 10, 1868 in Hamburg ; † March 8, 1950 there ) was a German entrepreneur .

Life

Abteistraße 25, 1905/6

As a member of a patrician family , like his ancestors, including Arnold Amsinck of the same name , he was dedicated to shipping . His father was the shipowner Martin Garlieb Amsinck and the shipowner and entrepreneur Arnold Amsinck was his younger brother. He joined his father's company in 1895, became a member of the board two years later, from 1903 a board member and later director of the Hamburg-South American Steamship Company and continued the tradition of his father's shipping company. With new CAP ships, his shipping company became the leader in trips to South America. He lived in Hamburg, Holzbrücke 8, Abteistraße 25, and in Aumühle near Hamburg , Bismarckallee.

Theodor Amsinck died on March 8, 1950 and, like many of his ancestors, was buried in the Old Niendorfer Friedhof in Hamburg.

family

He was married to Käthe nee Böhl.

literature

  • Herrmann AL Degener : Degeners Who is it? , Berlin 1935, p. 21.
  • Amsinck, Theodor . In: Robert Volz: Reich manual of the German society . The handbook of personalities in words and pictures. Volume 1: A-K. Deutscher Wirtschaftsverlag, Berlin 1930, DNB 453960286 , p. 24.
  • Industrial representatives of German work in words and pictures. Biographical collection , Berlin, Adolf Eckstein Verlag, 1919.
  • Caesar Amsinck, Otto Hintze: The Dutch and Hamburg family Amsinck: an attempt at a family history . 1. From the middle of the 14th century to the beginning of the 18th century (1886), 2. From the beginning of the 18th century to the beginning of the French Revolution (1891), 3. From the middle of the 18th century to the present (1932). , 1st volume ( MDZ online )
  • Walter Linden (Ed.): Dr. Gabler's Verkehrs-Lexikon , 2013, p. 59.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Detailed family tree in the State Archives of the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg, cf. here [1] .
  2. Herrmann AL Degener : Degeners Who is it? , Berlin 1935, p. 21.