Is your surname Metzger?

Research the Metzger family

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!

Otto Metzger

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Nuremberg, Bavaria, Germany
Death: March 31, 1961 (75)
Enfield, Greater London, United Kingdom
Immediate Family:

Son of Geh. Kommerzienrat Ludwig Metzger and Gretchen Metzger (Guldmann)
Husband of Sofie Metzger
Father of Kurt Metzger; Hildegard Watson; Randolph Mercer ( Metzger) and Gabriele A. Metzger Grinton
Brother of Paul Arthur Metzger and Betty Bancroft / Bamberger

Occupation: "Dipl. Ing." = Engineering degree, or scientist
Managed by: Jonathan G Freund
Last Updated:

About Otto Metzger

http://www.rijo.homepage.t-online.de/pdf/EN_NU_JU_metzge2e.pdf

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Otto_Metzger

From Wikipedia:

Otto Metzger was a German-British engineer, and inventor of an impact-extrusion process for forming seamless zinc and brass cans.

Family

Otto Metzger was the son of Jewish parents: Ludwig Metzger (1852–1931) and Gretchen (Guldmann) (1864–1943).[1][2]

Otto Metzger grew up in Nuremberg, Germany, where he met his wife, Sophie (Josephthal) (1894–1998).[3]

First World War

Otto Metzger had previously served as a reserve officer in the Bavarian Engineers and so, at the outbreak of the First World War, he was immediately conscripted. He served in the Imperial German Army on the Western Front, and rose to the rank of lieutenant, and was awarded Iron Cross medals (1st and 2nd class).[4]

Engineering Career in Germany

After his early schooling at the Neues Gymnasium in Nuremberg, he continued his studies at the Technical University of Munich, and obtained a Diplom-Ingenieur degree in mechanical engineering at the Berlin-Charlottenburg Technical Academy.

Otto Metzger then spent several years travelling and gaining engineering experience both in Germany, and also in Austria, France, Britain, USA and in Mexico.

On his return to Nuremberg in 1912, he took a post with a local metals company, Schmidtmer & Co, first as an engineer, and then becoming a partner. After the First World War, he returned to his previous work; the company (then called Süddeutsche Metallindustrie) was taken over by Vereinigte Deutsche Metallwerke AG in 1926, and in 1930 became a subsidiary of the conglomerate Metallindustrie AG.[4] He was to stay with that company in various engineering and management positions until 1938, during which time he developed and patented inventions related to impact-extrusion of zinc, brass and other non-ferrous metals.[5][6][7] Typical products for these patents were seamless cans for zinc-carbon batteries, brass shell casings, and containers for foodstuff and for drinks.

Nazi Persecution and Emigration

Starting in about 1933, the persecution of Jews in Nazi Germany intensified.

This reached a climax on 9 November 1938, when Jews were attacked in their homes and businesses during the night of Kristallnacht. Otto Metzger was returning from Britain, where he had just concluded a licensing agreement with a British company, Enfield Rolling Mills Ltd, to use his patented impact-extrusion technology. He was arrested by the Gestapo at the German border, on his way home to Nuremberg, and imprisoned in the Dachau concentration camp. Meanwhile his wife, having had their home and belongings invaded and smashed by Nazi stormtroopers and having spent the night wandering the streets of Nuremberg, waited in vain for Otto’s return.[4]

Otto Metzger was released from Dachau on 15 December 1938, and returned home to Nuremberg. By late-March 1939, he had managed to obtain the necessary travel documents to leave Germany, and he and his wife left for Britain. Otto had been unable to obtain documents for his mother Gretchen (who by that time was aged 74); she remained in Nuremberg, and was transported by the Nazis to Theresienstadt concentration camp, where she died in 1943.[2]

Later life in Britain On arrival in Britain in early 1939, Otto Metzger was immediately employed by Enfield Rolling Mills Ltd. He stayed with the company until his retirement in 1958, rising to the position of Managing Director.[4]

During the Second World War, Otto Metzger was not interned as an enemy alien, as were most German immigrants; the British Government valued his expertise for the war effort.

Otto Metzger died of a heart-attack in 1961. Otto and his wife Sophie are commemorated by adjacent rose bushes, planted in the Willesden Jewish Cemetery in London.

References Jump up ^ "Ludwig Metzger". Geni.com. Retrieved 2017-02-18. ^ Jump up to: a b "Gretchen Guldmann". Geni.com. Retrieved 2017-02-18. Jump up ^ "Sophie Josephthal". Geni.com. Retrieved 2017-02-18. ^ Jump up to: a b c d Berlin, Ludwig (2001). "Biography of Otto Metzger" (PDF). Nuremberg: Rijo Research. Retrieved 2017-02-18. Jump up ^ US patent 1918858, Otto Metzger, "Matrix for extruding metals", issued 1933-07-18 Jump up ^ US patent 2099449, Otto Metzger, "Method of making dry cells", issued 1937-11-16 Jump up ^ US patent 2117738, Otto Metzger, "Packing for perishable victuals", issued 1938-05-17

_________________________________________________________________

See photos and document under the "Media" tab

view all

Otto Metzger's Timeline

1885
November 24, 1885
Nuremberg, Bavaria, Germany
1915
January 16, 1915
Nuremberg, Middle Franconia, Bavaria, Germany
1916
February 11, 1916
Nuremberg, Middle Franconia, Bavaria, Germany
1919
July 11, 1919
Nuremberg, Middle Franconia, Bavaria, Germany
1922
January 6, 1922
Nuremberg, Middle Franconia, Bavaria, Germany
1961
March 31, 1961
Age 75
Enfield, Greater London, United Kingdom