Oscar Wassermann
Oscar Wassermann | |
---|---|
Born | Oscar Angelo Wassermann 4 April 1869 |
Died | 15 October 1972 |
Occupation(s) | Banker Bank director |
Spouse(s) | 1. Margarethe "Grete" Fürst (1892-1924) 2. Katharina "Käthe" Niemann/Haupt (1882-1942) |
Children | 1. Hedwig "Heddy" Wassermann (1912-1939) Karin "Käthe" Wassermann/Grunebaum (1918-1958) |
Parents |
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Oscar Wassermann (born April 4 1869 in Bamberg; died September 8 1934 in Garmisch) was a German-Jewish banker.
Life
Oscar Angelo Wassermann's grandfather Samuel Wassermann (1810-1884) came to Bamberg from Regensburg and opened a bank, A. E. Wassermann, which his son Emil (1842–1911) and brother Angelo ran after his death. Emil Wassermann married Emma Oppenheimer in Frankfurt am Main. Their son Oscar was the oldest of nine or ten children; his youngest brother was German banker Sigmund Wassermann (1889-1958).[1]
After completing a training in banking at Munich and Paris, Oscar Wassermann started work at the important Berlin subsidiary of the family bank in 1889, the year of his mother's death. In 1900 he took over the control of it,[2] jointly with his cousin Max Wassermann (1863–1934).[3] Meanwhile, in 1898 he had become a member of Gesellschaft der Freunde , a long established Berlin-based Jewish welfare support organsation of which, from 1924 to 1934, he would serve as president.
The value of the business undertaken by the Wassermann Bank's Berlin subsidiary soon surpassed that of the head office branch in Bamberg, largely on account of Oscar Wassermann's profitable securities trading. Biographers suggest that the relationship between the branch director cousins, Max and Oscar Wassermann, became fractious, however.[3] In 1912 Oscar Wassermann suddenly transferred to Deutsche Bank in Berlin. A switch from a regionally based family bank to the mighty Deutsche Bank was highly unusual, if not unprecedented.[2] Wassermann was offered and accepted a place on the Deutsche Bank executive board, taking over responsibility for the bank's stock exchange trading business jointly with co-director Paul Mankiewitz,[3] who was probably the man who persuaded Wassermann to make this career defining move.[4]
After the First World War Wassermann accepted an invitation to become a member of the German Standing Finance Commission, established under the leadership of Max Warburg. It was intended by the government that the commission should negotiate the post-war financial settlement with the French, British and American governments. It turned out that the foreign governments, for their own domestic reasons, were more interested in crushing a commercial and political rival than in negotiating a financial settlement, and the German Financial Commission had little involvement in the Versailles negotiations except as a critic. The involvement nevertheless seems to have burnished Wassermann's credentials as an internationally well-connected member of Germany's banking establishment.[3] He took a lead in the handling of Deutsche Bank's international relations, also becoming, in 1925, a member of the 14 member General Council responsible for administering the Reichsbank (the central bank of the) German Republic through years of exceptional economical challenge. [5] As a respected Reichsbank board member he exercised significant influence over German monetary policy, especially during the later years of the German Republic.
Meanwhile, in 1922, at the request of Chancellor Cuno he prepared a report and plan to deal with the crisis created by the unaffordability of the reparations requirements imposed on Germany at Versailles in 1919. The plan foundered, primarily in the face of French intransigence, although elements of it turned up soon afterwards in the (American) Dawes Plan, intended to address the same concerns.[6]
Between 1923 and 1933 Oscar Wassermann acted as spokesman ("Sprecher") for the Deutsche Bank executive board. The term is sometimes translated in English language sources as "CEO", which can be misleading: he was a leading member of the board, but there would have been no question of implementing significant strategic changes without the support of senior colleagues, some of whom made no secret of their objections to his (it was said) autocratic manner, and were also also known to give vent to concerns over the the extent to which Wassermann's spare time and (by this time very considerable) personal wealth were used on behalf of Jewish organisations.[2][3][8] He was succeeded in the role, briefly, by the banker Georg Solmssen.[9]
In 1929, he was a leading figure in the fusion of Deutsche Bank with Berlin's Disconto-Gesellschaft. The boards of both banks justified the move on the grounds of the "pressures to rationalise" which they faced. Agreement was announced, to sidespread astonishment within and beyond the banking establishment, in September 1929 and the merger took effect on Tuesday 29 October 1929, long before the nature and extent of the backwash in Germany (and elsewhere) from the Wall Street Crash could be foreseen.[2] The development turned out to be straingely prescient, given the remarkably synergistic structures of the two banks. Disconto-Gesellschaft came to the union exceptionally well capitalised, and with a long-established well diversified portfolio of profitable investments in Germany's industrial giants and more widely across Europe. Deutsche Bank had been established more recently and had grown more rapidly, although it was also well integrated in the German industrial economy and well capitalised by the criteria of the time. The rolling banking crisis that followed the Wall Street Crash peaked in German speaking central Europe after the Vienna-based Creditanstalt (bank) failed in May 1931. During the ensuing series of bank runs as investors rushed to withdraw their davings, the well capitalised fusion of the Deutsche Bank and the Disconto-Gesellschaft (rebranded only in 1937 as the "Deutsche Bank") survived the turmoil without ever needing to approach the government for financial support. In 1934 it was indeed Deurtsche Bank that at the end of the 1930s took over what was left from the wreckage of the Creditanstalt.[2][8]
Early in April 1933 Oscar Wassermann, aged 64, was persuaded to resign from Deutsche Bank.[10]
Dennoch war der Aufsichtsratsvorsitzende Franz Urbig wenig begeistert von Wassermanns Agieren und äußerte: „Wo war der primus inter pares, der die Übersicht über und den Einfluß auf das Ganze wahren mußte?“
Personal
Oscar Wassermann married firstly Hungarian-born Margarethe "Grete" Fürst (1892-1924) and secondly Katharina "Käthe" Haupt (1882-1942), the widow of Prof. Dr. Albert Niemann (1880-1921).[11] By the first marriage two daughters were born, in 1912 and 1918: Karin Wassermann and Hedwig Wassermann. The family lived at Tiergartenstraße 8d in Berlin-Mitte from 1925 to 1933.[12] After his death in 1934, his wife and children used the auctionhouses of Alfred Berkhahn and Paul Graupe to sell some of the paintings in his private collection.[13]
References
- ^ "Bamberg (Oberfranken/Bayern) ... Im Jahr 1869 wurde Oscar Wassermann als eines von neun Kindern des Bankiers Emil Wassermann in Bamberg geboren". Aus der Geschichte der Jüdische Gemeinden im deutschen Sprachraum. Klaus-Dieter Alicke, Winsen (compiler-publisher). Retrieved 26 April 2021.
- ^ a b c d e Christoph Kreutzmüller, Institut für Geschichtswissenschaften, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin (20 July 2005). "Oscar Wassermann und die Deutsche Bank. Bankier in schwierigen Zeiten von Avraham Barkai". book review. Historisches Fachinformationssystem e.V. c/o Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin. ISBN 3-406-52958-5. Retrieved 25 April 2021.
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: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ a b c d e Avraham Barkai (2005). Eintritt in der Deutsche Bank. C.H.Beck. ISBN 978-3-406-52958-0.
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ignored (help) - ^ Jürgen Jeske [in German] (23 August 2005). "Jüdischer deutscher Patriot (Rezension)". Oscar Wassermann war eine der drei großen Führungspersönlichkeiten der Deutschen Bank, die im Kaiserreich und in der Weimarer Republik das Profil des Geldhauses geprägt haben. Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. p. 6. Retrieved 26 April 2021.
- ^ "Oscar Angelo Wassermann, Bankier: * 4. April 1869, ✝ 8. September 1934". Projekt: Kritische Online-Edition der Tagebücher Michael Kardinal von Faulhabers (1911-1952). Institut für Zeitgeschichte München-Berlin. Retrieved 26 April 2021.
- ^ H.J. Rupieper (6 December 2012). The London Conference. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 43–50, 44. ISBN 978-94-009-9284-9.
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:|work=
ignored (help) - ^ "Família judia tenta reaver pintura que faz parte do acervo do Masp". O Globo. 2014-03-13.
- ^ a b "Deutsche Bank 1870 - 2010" (PDF). Deutsche Bank AG. Retrieved 26 April 2021.
- ^ Frankfruter Rundschau.de: Interview zum 150. Jubiläum der Deutschen Bank mit Historiker Alexander Nützenadel, March 10, 2020
- ^ Wolf Gruner (executive editor); Caroline Pearce (co-pordinator of the English-language edition) (15 April 2019). Doc 66: In late July 1933 a member of Deutsche Bank's supervisory board, Franz Urbig, reports on the dismissal of bard members Theodor Frank and Oscar Wassermann. De Gruyter. pp. 234–243. ISBN 978-3-11-043519-1.
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has generic name (help);|work=
ignored (help) - ^ Antje Yael Deusel (co-compiler); Ortwin Beisbart (co-compiler); Franz Fichtl (co-compiler). "Gedenkbuch der jüdischen Bürger Bambergs" (PDF). Opfer des nationalsozialistischen Terrors 1933–1945. Herausgegeben vom Verein zur Förderung der jüdischen Geschichte und Kultur Bambergs e.V. Retrieved 26 April 2021.
- ^ Berliner Adreßbücher 1925–1933.
- ^ "Lost Art Internet Database - Einfache Suche". 2016-03-05. Archived from the original on 2016-03-05.
Literature
- Avraham Barkai: Oscar Wassermann und die Deutsche Bank. Bankier in schwieriger Zeit. Beck, Munich 2005, ISBN 978-3-406-52958-0.
- Joseph Walk (ed.): Biography of Wasserman in: Kurzbiographien zur Geschichte der Juden 1918–1945. Munich : Saur, 1988, ISBN 3-598-10477-4, p. 379