Hoesch AG
German steel and mining company / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Hoesch (/hɜːrʃ/; German: Hoesch AG; formerly also Eberhard Hoesch & Sons and Hoesch-Werke) was a German steel and mining conglomerate headquartered in Dortmund and several subsidiaries across the Ruhr region and Siegen. Founded in 1871, by Leopold Hoesch, it employed over 30,000 people by 1938 and was among the largest companies in Nazi Germany.[1]
Native name | Hoesch AG |
---|---|
Company type | Private |
Industry | Conglomerate, steel manufacturing, Mining |
Predecessor | Baroper Walzwerk Dortmund-Hörder Hüttenverein Friedrichshütte Köln-Neuessener Bergwerksverein |
Founded | 1871; 153 years ago (1871) in Dortmund, German Empire |
Founder | Leopold Hoesch |
Defunct | 1992 (1992) |
Successor | ThyssenKrupp |
Revenue | DM 2,358 billion |
Owner | Hoesch family |
Number of employees | 48,600+ (1965) |
In 1972, the prominent steel producer merged with the Dutch Hoogovens steel company to form Estel.[2] Hoesch was formerly the largest employer in Dortmund.[2] In 1982, the merger with Dutch company Estel was stopped by Detlev Karsten Rohwedder, and Hoesch became again an independent company.[3] In 1991, German competitor Krupp (presently ThyssenKrupp) bought Hoesch and the merger was completed by 1992.[4]