Hugo Dieter Stinnes

How are you related to Hugo Dieter Stinnes?

Connect to the World Family Tree to find out

Share your family tree and photos with the people you know and love

  • Build your family tree online
  • Share photos and videos
  • Smart Matching™ technology
  • Free!

Hugo Dieter Stinnes

Also Known As: "King of Coal"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Mülheim/Ruhr, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
Death: April 10, 1924 (54)
Berlin, Germany (Complications, double pneumonia)
Immediate Family:

Son of Hermann Hugo Stinnes and Adeline Catharina Sophie Stinnes
Husband of Cläre Stinnes (Wagenknecht)
Father of Hugo Hermann Stinnes; Clärenore Stinnes-Söderström; Hildegard (Hilde) Käthe Fiedler; Ernst Stinnes; Else Stinnes and 2 others
Brother of Heinrich Stinnes; Gustav Ernst Stinnes and Anni Fischer

Managed by: Odd-Wiking Rahlff
Last Updated:

About Hugo Dieter Stinnes

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugo_Stinnes

Hugo Stinnes was on the 3rd weekly cover of Time magazine (March 17, 1923, Vol.1, No3)):

Time Magazine: The Ruhr: Saturday, Mar. 17, 1923

"Hugo Stinnes. Crafty, potent, indurate, Herr Hugo Stinnes, coal magnate, multimillionaire, present " All-Highest " of Germany, plots a coal victory in the Ruhr. His aim is the control of the European steel industries, and, like all mysterious figures who move in the no-man's-land of international politics, he stands to win whichever side comes out on top.

At present it suits Stinnes to back his own country. The establishment of a great coal and iron industry in Germany has obvious advantages to himself. It insures..."


Time Magazine: GERMANY: Nach dem Tote

Apr 28, 1924

"The will of the deceased Hugo Stinnes, "King of Coke," was read but not published. According to report his entire fortune was left to his widow, Frau Klaire Stinnes, nee Wagenknecht; but the direction of his vast estate was placed in the hands of his two eldest sons, Dr. Edmund Hugo Stinnes and Hugo Hermann ..."


Stinnes wurde als zweiter Sohn von Hermann Hugo Stinnes (1842–1887) und Adeline Stinnes (1844–1925), geborene Coupienne, in eine wohlhabende Mülheimer Unternehmerfamilie geboren, die bereits seit Anfang des 19. Jahrhunderts im Handel und Bergbau tätig war. Die Familie Stinnes gehörte spätestens seit der erfolgreichen Unternehmensgründung von Hugo Stinnes’ Großvater Mathias Stinnes, der 1808 mit dem Transport von Kohle und anderen Gütern auf dem Rhein zwischen Köln und Amsterdam begonnen hatte, zu den angesehenen und wohlhabenden Familien Mülheims. Bereits 1839 begann die Familie, in Bergbaubeteiligungen zu investieren. Die Handelsaktivität der Familie war in der Mathias Stinnes KG gebündelt, die Bergbaubeteiligungen umfassten die Kuxmehrheiten an den Zechen Victoria Mathias, Graf Beust, Friedrich Ernestine, Carolus Magnus und Mathias Stinnes. Seit 1895 war Hugo Stinnes mit Cläre Stinnes, geborene Wagenknecht, verheiratet. Gemeinsam hatten sie insgesamt sieben Kinder: Edmund (1896-1980), Hugo Hermann (1897-1982), Clärenore (1901-1990), Otto (1903-1983), Hilde (1904-1975), Ernst (1911-1986) und Else (1913-1997).

Fra http://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugo_Stinnes :

Hugo Stinnes (født 12. februar 1870 i Mülheim an der Ruhr, død 10. april 1924 i Berlin) var en tysk industrimagnat og politiker. Hans konsern for bergverksdrift, industri og handel, ble grunnlagt i 1893 og vokste betydelig spesielt etter første verdenskrig. Stinnes var en av de mest innflytelsesrike personligheter i det tyske keiserrike, frem til begynnelsen av Weimarrepublikken i 1918. Fra arbeidsgiversiden kom han i det vesentlige til enighet med arbeiderbevegelsen gjennom Stinnes-Legien-avtalen. Stinnes profiterte sterkt på etterkrigsinflasjonen gjennom en aggressiv fremmedfinansiering og ble også omtalt som «inflasjonskongen» (Inflationskönig).


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugo_Stinnes

view all 11

Hugo Dieter Stinnes's Timeline

1870
February 12, 1870
Mülheim/Ruhr, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
1896
March 23, 1896
Mülheim, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
1897
October 16, 1897
Mülheim/Ruhr, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
1901
January 21, 1901
Mülheim an der Ruhr, NRW, Germany
1903
April 7, 1903
1904
1904
1911
1911
1913
1913
Mülheim, Düsseldorf, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany