Winthir pharmacy

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Winthir pharmacy
legal form Retail trade; e. K.
founding 1826
Seat Munich
management Hermann Vogel jun., Owner
Number of employees 15 (December 31, 2013)
Branch pharmacy
Website winthir-apotheke.de

The Winthir pharmacy was built in Nymphenburg in 1826 as the first pharmacy in what was then the "District Court of Munich on the left of the Isar" and in 1878 it was relocated to Neuhausen at today's Rotkreuzplatz in Munich. The Winthir pharmacy is the oldest pharmacy in Neuhausen and the oldest existing company on Rotkreuzplatz.

history

Alois Hofmann, the former regional court pharmacist in Dachau and owner of the Löwen pharmacy in Munich from 1815 to 1830, received approval in 1826 to set up a branch pharmacy in Nymphenburg. This was located in the southern round wing (the second cavalier building of the southern castle round) of Nymphenburg Palace . His successor Joseph Reuther also took over the provisional manager Johann Nepomuk Hillebrand, who was responsible for the branch in 1831. Before that time, the latter was a pharmacist in Inderstorf. In 1832 Joseph Reuther's brother-in-law, Joseph Sutor, acquires the pharmacy and closes the branch with the Löwen Apotheke. The pharmacy becomes independent in 1832 and the location for the pharmacy is consolidated through the acquisition of the premises in 1837. After Josef Sutor took over the Löwen Apotheke in the center of Munich after the death of his brother-in-law, he sold the pharmacy to Anton Gulielmo in 1840. The latter was born in Mühldorf am Inn in 1805 and was the tenant of the pharmacy in Murnau from 1830 to 1836 before he took over the pharmacy and the house in the Nymphenburg roundabout in 1840. Anton Gulielmo died in Nymphenburg in 1872. After his death, his son, Joseph Gulielmo, born in Nymphenburg in 1841, took over the pharmacy. Because Neuhausen's population exceeded that of Nymphenburg several times, he moved the pharmacy to Rotkreuzplatz in 1878. At that time it was given the name Winthir Apotheke, named after the patron saint of the Neuhausen district. In 1882 Heinrich Buchner took over the Winthir pharmacy. He was born in Munich in 1849 and was the owner of the pharmacy in Tölz from 1877 to 1881. In the years 1896/97 he built a new pharmacy building at the corner of Nymphenburgerstrasse and Leonrodstrasse, which, with its distinctive tower, has become Neuhausen's landmark. The mint tower of Hall in Tirol served as a model . The architect commissioned by him was Leonhard Romeis . In the last years of his life and after his death until the death of his widow Marie Buchner in 1941, the Winthir pharmacy was leased a total of four times. The tenants were Josef Selmayr (1920–1928), Alfred Dax (1928), Max Craemer (1928–1939) and Georg Frietinger (1939–1941).

In 1942, the Munich pharmacist Dr. Hermann Vogel for the license of the Winthir pharmacy that has become free; He was born in Munich in 1893, was a pharmacist and qualified economist († 1963). The takeover of the pharmacy in 1942 was followed by an air raid on October 4, 1944.

After the Winthir pharmacy was destroyed, Hermann Vogel took over the pharmacy in Pfronten. In 1948 the Winthir pharmacy was reopened in the rooms at Nymphenburgerstrasse 154. In 1951 the Winthir pharmacy moved back to its original location at Nymphenburgerstrasse 160, where it is today. After his sudden death in 1964, his son of the same name, Dr. Hermann Vogel (* 1934) ran the Winthir pharmacy until his mother's death in 1985. After his mother's death in 1985, Hermann Vogel took over the Winthir pharmacy as the owner and handed it over to his eldest son, Dr. Hermann Vogel Junior (* 1965).

The Winthir pharmacy has been rebuilt several times in order to meet the current scientific and technical requirements.

Hermann Vogel has been the owner of the Winthir pharmacy since 1996. The pharmacy has been operated with a computerized inventory management system since 1997, is QMS-certified and has had an automated warehouse since 2013 ( Rowa automation systems ).

Since 2017, the operator has been trying to warn competitors who use the Amazon sales channel on the grounds that they would violate data protection.

literature

  • Hermann Vogel: 150 years of Winthir Pharmacy 1826–1976; small anniversary gift . 1st edition. Dr. Hermann Vogel, Munich 1976, OCLC 174445831 , p. 1-36 .
  • Heinrich Horn: Neuhausen past and present . 1st edition. Heinrich Hugendubel Verlag, Munich 1998, ISBN 3-88034-455-8 , p. 63-65 .
  • Hermann Vogel jun .: 175 years Winthir Apotheke 1826–2001; 175 years in the service of health . 1st edition. Dr. Hermann Vogel, Winthir Pharmacy Munich, Munich 2001, OCLC 248297100 , p. 1-20 .
  • Hermann Vogel: 175 years of Winthir Pharmacy Munich . Issue 1/2 edition. Pharmaceutical newspaper , 2002, ISSN  0031-7136 , p. 62 .
  • Hermann Vogel: 175 years of Winthir Pharmacy . Issue 1/2 edition. Deutsche Apothekerzeitung , 2002, ISSN  0011-9857 , p. 144 .
  • Franz Schröther: The Winthir pharmacy has been around for 180 years . Issue 17 edition. Neuhauser Werkstatt-Nachrichten, 2006, ISSN  1436-5987 , p. 56-60 .
  • Barbara Six: The architect Leonhard Romeis (1854–1904) . 14th edition. LMU Publications / History and Art Studies, Munich 2005, p. 24 ( uni-muenchen.de [PDF]).

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Lothar Klein: Warnings: Pharmacist wants to stop Amazon. In: apotheke-adhoc.de. June 19, 2017. Retrieved June 22, 2017 .