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Archival description
Staatsarchiv Bremen (STAB), 3-R.1.g. · Fonds · 1886 - 1955
Part of State Archives Bremen (STAB) (Archivtektonik)

Content: Colonial Policy - Colonial Legislation - Protectorate Act - Reichskolonialamt - Colonial Service - Colonial Procurement - Schutztruppe - Togo, Cameroon, D e u t s c h - S ü d w e s t a f r i k a, D e u t s c h - O s t a f r i k a - Herero Uprising - Railway Construction - Colonial and Settlement Societies - Kiautschou/Tsingtau - Caroline Islands, Palau Islands and Mariana Islands - Colonial Policy and Research under National Socialist Rule - Position of Bremen in the Colonial Movement, especially Institute of Colonial Research

Staatsarchiv Bremen (STAB), 16,24/1 · Fonds · 1893 - 1902
Part of State Archives Bremen (STAB) (Archivtektonik)

Explanation: Documents from the possession of the leader of the indigenous movement against the German colonial rule in today's Namibia, at that time German South West Africa, Hendrik Witbooi (ca. 1830-1905) had fallen into the hands of the Bremen merchant August Engelbert Wulff in 1895 in the course of military conflicts in Gibeon, Namibia. In 1935 he sold it to the then German Colonial and Overseas Museum. The documents were handed over to the National Archives of Windhoek in 1995 after reproductions had been made for the State Archives of Bremen and the Übersee-Museum. Content: Correspondence

Witbooi, Hendrik
Staatsarchiv Bremen (STAB), 2-M.6. · Fonds
Part of State Archives Bremen (STAB) (Archivtektonik)

Content: Foundation of the North German Confederation, also election to the first Reichstag, 1866-1871 - Emperor and Imperial House 1868-1902 - Constitution 1866-1885 - Trade and traffic conditions 1867-1875 - Postal conditions, in particular post and telegraph facilities in Bremen, 1867-1910 - Railways 1868-1897 - Customs 1866-1900 - Stock Exchange Act 1891-1904 - Shipping to sea 1867-1901 - Seamen's Association and Seamen's Regulations 1867-1902 - Maritime Marks, Reichskanzler 1867-1901 - Bundesrat, in particular Bremischer Bevmächtigter beim Bundesrat, 1867-1933 - Reichstag, in particular Reichstag elections in Bremen, 1867-1918 - Various matters in the fields of legislation and administration, in particular passwords 1867-1871, civil status and marriage 1868-1891, Insurance 1877-1903, measures and weights 1868-1897, emigration 1891-1903, trade regulations 1867-1908, statistics 1867-1900, labour law 1914-1928 - Franco-German War 1870/71, in particular measures to protect the Weser and claims for compensation for angry ships, 1870-1897 - Colonialism 1885-1907

Staatsarchiv Bremen (STAB), 2-Q.9. · Fonds
Part of State Archives Bremen (STAB) (Archivtektonik)

Content: Origin and development of Bremerhaven 1825-1862 - Acquisition and expansion of the port area 1824-1845 - Border regulations, sovereignty issues and expansion of the area 1827-1876 - Battery (Fort Wilhelm) and other military rights of Hanover and Hanover respectively Prussia 1820-1872 - Relations to Lehe, transit traffic and road construction between Bremen and Bremerhaven through Hanoverian territory 1827-1873 - Land acquisition and settlement for the establishment of a port at the Geeste estuary by Hanover 1817-1830 - Organisation, construction and extension of the port facilities: Old Port 1826-1878, New Port 1845-1872, Imperial Port 1871-1900, Imperial Port II and III 1900-1908 - Deputation at Bremerhaven, Deputation for the ports and port facilities, Deputation for the ports and railways, in particular protocols 1827-1891 - Accounting books of the Deputation and the Office of Bremerhaven, Budgets and accounts 1828-1920 - Port inventory lists, lists of ships lying in port 1833-1842 - Port staff, in particular Port Director Jacob Johann van Ronzelen and Carl Friedrich Hanckes, Hafenmeister, Schleusenmeister und -knechte, Hafenlotsen 1827-1902 - Amtmann und Amtsassessor, especially reports of the Amtmänner Johann Heinrich Castendyk, Johann Thulesius, Georg Wilhelm Gröning und Friedrich August Schultz 1827-1904 - Rechnungswesen und Visitationen des Amts 1829-1887 - Amtsschreiber, Police commissioners, police dragons, tax collectors and other officials 1827-1898 - lawyers, notaries, consuls and consular agents, auctioneers 1831-1904 - laws and regulations 1826-1901 - taxes and duties 1834-1874 - port authorities, Port regulations, port dues 1827-1902 - Public land, buildings and facilities, including the office building and port house, ferries and bridges, shipyards and ship berths, emigration centre, fire brigade, water supply, road construction and sewage system, gas station, cemetery 1829-1910 - settlement, Cultivation and trade, in particular allocation of building sites, basic letters, trade supervision, guilds 1827-1925 - administration of justice and police, including criminal investigation of the dynamite attack against the steamship ''Mosel'' (1875) 1827-1902 - municipal constitution and administration, Community Citizenship, Accounting 1837-1902 - General Church Relations 1827-1866, Unierte Gemeinde 1833-1903, Meiergefälle from Walle and Gröpelingen 1758-1852, Lutheran Community (Kreuzkirche) 1862-1902, Catholic community (Marienkirche) 1849-1902 - school system 1827-1897 - poor system 1836-1881 - medical system 1827-1901 - markets 1852-1890 - death and support funds, associations, municipal savings bank 1862-1907 - military conditions, quartering 1869-1884

Staatsarchiv Bremen (STAB), 2-Ss.4. · Fonds
Part of State Archives Bremen (STAB) (Archivtektonik)

Content: Foreign duties 1423-1864 - Mitteldeutscher Handelsverein 1828-1834 - Prussian-Hessian, later Deutscher Zollverein until 1850 [individual pieces lost] - Steuerverein (Nordwestdeutscher Zollverein) 1835-1853 - negotiations on the unification of the German states for the protection of trade and shipping interests 1842-1852 - Bremen's position on the German Customs Union and the German Reich in customs matters in general 1851-1896 - connection of parts of Bremen's territory to the Zollverein territory 1869-1885 - inclusion of the entire territory of Bremen in the customs borders 1877-1898

Staatsarchiv Bremen (STAB), 2-W. · Fonds
Part of State Archives Bremen (STAB) (Archivtektonik)

Content: Lübeck 1533-1898 - Hamburg 1405-1896 - Lower Saxony, especially Braunschweig-Lüneburg, Electorate, Kingdom and Province of Hanover as well as Duchy of Braunschweig 1503-1902, East Frisia 1295-1884, Cities Braunschweig 1581-1705, Lüneburg 1539-1641, Münden 1579-1737, Hameln 1587-1757, Verden 1577-1616, Emden 1532-1756 - Bishops of Münster, in particular occupation of the Duchy of Bremen by troops from Münster 1675, 1516-1680 - Lippe 1579-1872 - Minden 1571-1667 - Bentheim-Tecklenburg 1543-1664 - Schleswig-Holstein 1549-1831 - Brandenburg-Prussia 1645-1902 - Duchy, Electorate and Kingdom of Saxony 1575-1892 - Magdeburg 1605-1668 - Halberstadt 1535-1703 - Frankfurt a. M. 1623-1873 - Hesse-Cassel 1539-1889 - Nassau 1615-1864 - Hesse-Darmstadt 1827-1884 - Waldeck 1647-1868 - Bavaria 1779-1868 - Baden 1838-1866 - Württemberg 1619-1870 - Denmark with Oldenburg 1548-1794 - England 1445-1821 - France 1592-1894 - Netherlands 1446-1794 - Poland 1574-1671 - Russia 1525-1683 - Switzerland 1588-1872

Staatsarchiv Bremen (STAB), 4,29/1 · Fonds · 1919 - 1960
Part of State Archives Bremen (STAB) (Archivtektonik)

Content: Main registries (1933-1953): Administrative matters - Building industry - Building materials and building materials industry - New building materials and construction methods - Reconstruction and other building projects - Clearing and recycling of rubble - Real estate - Housing - Settlement - Building construction - Town planning - Surveying - Mechanical and heating engineering - Civil engineering - Motor vehicles and transport - Garden and parks, nature protection, cemetery and funeral services - Sewerage and drainage, street cleaning - Allotment garden and small settlement services - Wartime operations department: Administrative affairs - Construction industry and supply of building materials - Air raid shelters and other construction projects important for the war - Labour input, etc. a. by foreign workers and construction companies and prisoners of war - accommodation and care of workers - motor vehicles and transport - air raids, repair of aircraft damage

Staatsarchiv Bremen (STAB), 5,1/1 · Fonds · 1868 - 1938
Part of State Archives Bremen (STAB) (Archivtektonik)

Content: Administration of services, personnel, cash management and accounting - Collection of legal provisions and decrees, including judicial decisions on postal, telegraphic and telephone services - International postal agreements and treaties with individual states - Supervision and regulation of postal services, organisation of subordinate postal and telegraph institutions - German postal institutions abroad, especially in German New Guinea, on the Caroline Islands, Mariana Islands, Palau Islands and Marshall Islands, on Samoa and in Shanghai - relations of the Oberpostdirektion with shipping companies, railway companies and forwarding agents - postal statistics - postal traffic with overseas countries, also establishment of postal steamship lines - air and rail postal services - radio and radio broadcasting

Staatsarchiv Bremen (STAB), 7,1025 · Fonds · 1820 - 1990
Part of State Archives Bremen (STAB) (Archivtektonik)

History of the inventory creator

The North German Mission was founded in Hamburg in 1836 by six missionary associations as one of the oldest German missionary societies. It has been based in Bremen since 1851 and today is a joint work of four German and two African churches. After initial activities in New Zealand and the East Indies, the North German Mission also sent missionaries to West Africa from 1847. The missionary work in West Africa, which has been carried out continuously since then, has resulted in two independent churches: the Evangelical Churches of Togo and the Evangelical Presbyterian Church of Ghana. In these two countries, the North German Mission still focuses on its missionary and, today, development policy activities. In over 150 years of presence in Africa, the North German Mission has experienced all the ups and downs of German-African relations in its West African mission centers. This includes the pre-colonial presence, the colonial period following the founding of the colony of German Togoland in 1884 and the difficult post-colonial development from the First World War to the present day. Recruited throughout Germany and sent out from the headquarters in Bremen, generations of missionary workers were active in Africa in mission, school and development service and recorded their work in letters, reports, minutes and also photographic documentation. Conversely, African mission workers found their way to Germany early on for training. Over the course of more than 150 years, a unique archive collection has thus been created at the mission headquarters, which has hardly suffered any significant loss of material, even through the numerous political upheavals and military events. It is supplemented by a collection of pictorial documents which, like the written records, date back to the 1840s. A special library was also set up at the Bremen mission headquarters, which was primarily used for internal training purposes of the mission and contains numerous manuscripts and early prints in West African languages - in particular the Ewe language spoken in present-day Togo.
Transfer of the collection to the Bremen State Archives
On November 18, 2005, the archives, image collection and library of the North German Missionary Society were handed over to the Bremen State Archives. The documents, image collection and mission library are now available for research in one place. The archive of the North German Mission is one of the most important archive holdings in the Free Hanseatic City of Bremen. Its value and importance for research was recognized early on. Even during the Second World War, the State Archives took over numerous archival records in order to bring them to safety together with the state archives. In 1968, a contract was concluded under which the collection was transferred to the Bremen State Archives as a deposit (StAB 7,1025). Since then, it has been listed as no. 0503 in the general list of nationally valuable archives in accordance with § 13 para. 2 of the law on the protection of German cultural assets against emigration.

Inventory history

As the North German Mission was forced to part with its collection and library items in 2005 when it moved into a new but smaller mission house in Bremen and was no longer able to provide reading rooms for academic use in the mission house, it felt compelled to take the step of transferring ownership of the entire collection to the Bremen State Archives at the same time as transferring the remaining archive, collection and library items to the State Archives. This was initially done in the certainty that freer access would bring considerable advantages for academic and research use and against the background that archival indexing, especially of the collection and image material as well as the library, could no longer be adequately carried out in the Mission House itself. It was also not possible to ensure optimal long-term storage of the documents in the Mission House. It was agreed at the time of the handover that the collection should continue to receive a steady increase in written and collection material from the North German Mission, which is primarily active in West Africa.
Since 1968, Depositum 7,1025 Norddeutsche Mission has been one of the most frequently requested holdings in the Bremen State Archives for academic - and international - use. Since 2003, it has been used intensively for a research project of the University of Bremen funded by the VW Foundation, in which researchers and doctoral students from Togo and Ghana were also involved under the direction of Dr. Rainer Alsheimer, and the files had already been formed and recorded by an employee of the North German Missionary Society when they were delivered to the archive: In the 1970s and 1980s, Paul Wiegräber had compiled a file index and labeled the file folders with shelfmarks. During this time, larger and smaller amounts of written material were added to the collection several times - materials from older times, but also collection items that had accumulated in cooperation with the churches in Ghana and Togo at the time.
With the takeover of the archive material, the State Archives undertook to restore, pack and index the existing and especially the newly acquired image and library holdings. To this end, after returning from loan to the Transkulturation project in 2004, the archive holdings were systematically reviewed, the existing packaging materials were supplemented and the labeling was renewed. The documents in the collection are often loose; in particular, the sometimes extensive units in which the semi-official correspondence with the mission staff is filed are still very much at risk in terms of their preservation and internal organization.
The archive holdings had already been microfilmed in the 1970s as part of the federal government's back-up filming work; these films were returned to the State Archives after copies had been made and could be used. The subsequent deliveries to the collection will be filmed in 2007 so that user films can be made available for the entire collection. In future, copies will only be made of the films in order to avoid having to make copies of the documents themselves. To this end, the structure was greatly expanded in order to appropriately organize the previously little-noticed documents that were not directly related to the activities of the missionary staff in Africa and Australia. Where available, surviving titles were included in the index. The documents relating to missionary activities in the narrower sense, to which the older indexes were limited, had already been extensively indexed. In addition, the evaluations compiled by various members of the Transkulturation project were available, which were based on the older lists, but also contained descriptive texts, including transcriptions and translations. This information was evaluated for the file index, so that information on the scope and the languages used in the written material is available for this area of the inventory.
The image collection, its acquisition and processing
The North German Missionary Society has used the medium of photography since the 19th century to document its work internally and to present it to the public. The photographs, mostly taken by missionaries as part of their work in the African mission field, were not only kept as memorabilia, but were also used in slide shows for the public and at internal training events, and were often printed in the missionary society's publications.
An extensive stock of photo prints, systematically filed, forms the core of the archive. These photos were indexed in various lists and were often labeled and dated on the back. Another focus of the collection is on the portraits of the mission staff, which were apparently systematically collected and stored from the beginning of the mission's activities and the spread of photography, and the mission staff and various people associated with the mission also created their own collections and added them to the missionary society's photo collection. The collection contains several albums of individual missionaries and the German-Togo Society, as well as slide series from the lecture activities. Only a single album of photo negatives has been preserved. The existing slides are likely to be copies that were made from the recording media or prints. The collection comprises 5,316 individually listed photos, many of which have been handed down several times. They are all black and white photos, a few pieces are colored, two drawings are in color.
As part of the Transculturation project, which was funded by the Volkswagen Foundation and carried out under the direction of Dr. Rainer Alsheimer at the University of Bremen between 2003 and 2005, the religious studies scholar Sonja Sawitzki worked intensively with the image collection. She recorded the titles and dates of the photographs, signed and packaged the items and prepared them for reproduction. In particular, notes on duplicate image content were incorporated. The physical condition of the pieces was also described, with the size and state of preservation and any existing defects listed. With regard to the type of image, the editor distinguishes between prints, drawings, prints, postcards and the various film and glass materials, and there are also references to mounts on cardboard or in albums. Many photo prints are not in good condition, heavily faded, soiled or incomplete. The albums and portfolios often contain prints from which no high-quality originals can be obtained. As a rule, however, it was possible to find the originals for the prints elsewhere in the collection.
All existing images are now listed in the index to fonds 7,1025 Fotos. The existing prints and their signature, the repro or surviving negative or slide are listed and the identifier of the corresponding image file is given. As part of the content indexing, the image title and date are given, as well as additional information that Sonja Sawitzki noticed or found useful, that has been handed down with the items or that was filed in connection with indexing approaches by other processors in the past. Particularly important are the references to duplicates that were found in different contexts and identified together. Different titles for such duplicates have been regularly included, as some unlabeled photos could be assigned in this way. Missing titles have been added, preferably on the basis of labeled duplicates; added titles are indicated in square brackets. Images unsuitable for reproduction and items that were already recognized as duplicates during the first round of work have not been reproduced. In these cases, the image content of the duplicate is shown in the index and the image file of the reproduced duplicate is indicated. This applies above all to the photographic prints, which have already been filed systematically by the North German Missionary Society. Other classification features found were derived from the context of the photo albums and slide boxes. Only the items that had not been filed in any particular order were arranged according to a rough chronology, while the undated and unmarked items were grouped according to motifs. There are a large number of duplicates, particularly among the undocumented image originals, which could not be easily assigned to the better documented items due to the large size of the inventory. No evaluation of the file inventory was carried out in the production of the image annotations - numerous photos, especially portraits, could certainly be labeled more precisely on the basis of the file inventory.
The images can be viewed in an online presentation. The image descriptions and formal data are reproduced there, and a preview is intended to give an impression of the image content. The images will only be shown in specially justified cases. All images are available as black and white reproductions on film, unless negatives or slides have survived. Image files are also available for the images, which were created using the existing repros with a resolution of 400 ppi. Reproductions and image data are available from the Bremen State Archives.
The Bremen State Archives also took over the extensive special library of the North German Missionary Society along with the files and photographs. The books in the library are kept in a special section of the State Archives and are indexed as individual works according to standard library procedures. This index lists all titles published by the North German Missionary Society itself or by individual members of its staff. For the other works, the systematic classification is given; the titles can be searched in the library's online reference systems.
Bremen, May 2007
B. VeilContains Mission in New Zealand and the East Indies, especially letters and reports - Mission in West Africa, especially letters and reports from the main stations, service of African workers, school system and seminary, travel reports and maps, Bible translation, church ordinances, building matters and land acquisition, accounting, slavery, liquor trade, individual missionaries - institutions in Germany, in particular educational establishments and seminaries, management and administration of the missionary society, aid societies, international cooperationBlack-and-white negatives in ideal format were made from the surviving paper images, whereby the images already recognized as duplicates and most of the prints were not taken into account. During the reproduction process, signature labels were added to the photographs, which can now be seen in the image field of the online presentation. The surviving paper images were arranged in folders of approx. 50 pieces, the signature of the folder was noted, as well as the signature of the folder in which the created reproduction is stored. Some pieces or groups of objects - the existing stereo recordings, two daguerreotypes, the glass slides etc. - have been packed separately and are stored in separate folders. - have been packed separately and are stored in specially created units so that they can be better preserved. The existing repros and surviving film negatives were scanned by a service company and the data generated in this way was stored on CD in accordance with the standard used in the Bremen State Archives - 400 ppi, 256 gray scales, TIFF format. The items on glass were scanned at the Bremen State Archives. Preview images with a smaller data content were created from the image data in archive format.

North German Missionary Society
Staatsarchiv Bremen (STAB), 7,1025 Fotos · Fonds · 1846 - 1965
Part of State Archives Bremen (STAB) (Archivtektonik)
  • 1846 - 1965, State Archives Bremen (STAB), 7,1025 photos* description: Content - Mission work in West Africa: Stations Agu, Akpafu, Keta, Waya, Ho/Wegbe, Anyako, Atakpame, Kpalime - mission work in New Zealand and Japan - church life - local culture and religions - governments and political life - country and people - nature, plants and animals - landscapes and places - pastors, Mission women, mission staff - Agriculture and business - Housework, women's lives - Travel and transportation - Mission promotion - Photo albums and collections of individual missionaries
North German Missionary Society
Staatsarchiv Bremen (STAB), 7,2001 · Fonds · 1862 - 1932
Part of State Archives Bremen (STAB) (Archivtektonik)

Explanation: The company was run under this name as its own business since 1888 by Johann Karl Vietor, but was able to make use of the branches in Ghana, Togo, Dahomey, Cameroon, Liberia and Guinea, which had been founded by other members of the Vietor family since 1857. After the severe setback in the First World War, the company was rebuilt in Liberia, Ghana and Togo, but this was destroyed by the world economic crisis, so that the company died out in 1932. It was partly in close contact with other companies co-founded by J. K. Vietor. Content: Business papers before the First World War, in particular land purchases, inventories, insurance of factories in Togo (Anedlo, Palime, Lomé), in Ghana (Keta) and in Dahomey (Porto Novo) - Complete company registration after the First World War, in particular Reich compensation for war and colonial damage, correspondence with other companies and own branches - Liquidation

7,2025 E. K. Vietor
Staatsarchiv Bremen (STAB), 7,2025 · Fonds · 1899 - 1907
Part of State Archives Bremen (STAB) (Archivtektonik)
  • 1899 - 1907, State Archives Bremen (STAB), 7,2025* description: Explanation - No Bremen company. Emil Karl Vietor (born 1861 in Bremen, died 1933 in Richmond, USA) was a tobacco dealer in Richmond. Contents - Map of Virginia with tobacco growing areas - Exhibition diplomas
Staatsarchiv Bremen (STAB), 7,15 · Fonds · 1883 - 1887
Part of State Archives Bremen (STAB) (Archivtektonik)

Explanation: 1834-1886, merchant and explorer. Content: Expeditions and land acquisitions in Southwest Africa 1883-1886 - Splinters of the estates of brother August Lüderitz (1838-1922) and Heinrich Vogelsang (1862-1914) - Photo albums Use restriction: Please use on microfilm FB 3167, photos are digitally available

Lüderitz, Adolf
Staatsarchiv Bremen (STAB), 7,2016 · Fonds · 1905 - 1931
Part of State Archives Bremen (STAB) (Archivtektonik)

Explanation: In 1905, on the initiative of J. K. Vietor, Togo Baumwollgesellschaft mbH, based in Lome, was founded with strong participation from Bremen. The company dealt with the gutting and packaging of cotton grown in Togo. The Deutsch-Westafrikanische Handelsgesellschaft, Hamburg, brought a plant for processing oil fruits into the company, which became independent in 1913 as Togo Palmölwerke GmbH. In 1914 both companies were confiscated and were forced to dissolve after the First World War. Content: Supervisory Board correspondence - Minutes of the Supervisory Board meetings - Correspondence of the managing directors - Balance sheets - Reports - Orders - Reich compensation for war and colonial damage

Staatsarchiv Bremen (STAB), 7,2017 · Fonds · 1908 - 1936
Part of State Archives Bremen (STAB) (Archivtektonik)

Explanation: Founded in 1908 with significant participation of Norddeutscher Lloyd with its registered office in Bremen for the exploitation of mineral deposits in the German protectorates in the Pacific. In 1914 the mine installations were confiscated by Japan and later no longer returned. From 1923 the company participated in N. V. Phönix Handel- en Cultur Maatschappij, which was finally taken over, and from 1925 in Vereinigte Blei- und Zinkerzbergbau-Gerwerkschaft in Mies (Stribro/CSR). It expired in 1936. Content: Business correspondence - Reich compensation for war damage - Participations - Company archive of N. V. Phoenix Handel- en Cultur Maatschappij with information on branches in Amboina, Manokwari, Sarwi, Bonggo, Wakde and Hollandia (Dutch New Guinea)

Staatsarchiv Bremen (STAB), 7,2090 · Fonds · 1837 - 1937
Part of State Archives Bremen (STAB) (Archivtektonik)

Explanation: Colonial goods store founded in 1824 by Anton Papendieck (1800-1867), which converted to chair cane production in 1876. In addition, she was active in the shipping company Partenreederei. Contents: Accounts, in particular of the chair cane factory, 1837-1937 - Balance sheets 1844-1890 - Hinrich Papendieck's letter copy book in New York 1851-1852

Staatsarchiv Bremen (STAB), 7,73 · Fonds · 1910 - 1931
Part of State Archives Bremen (STAB) (Archivtektonik)

Explanation: 1861-1934, merchant. Content: Correspondence, especially with the son Claus Vietor and the merchants Nikolaus Freese, Karl Rieke, Eugen Maier, E. A. Euting - Management of the Huder Grashaus (residence of Vietor) - Splinter of the estate Nikolaus Freese (1864-1958)

Vietor, Johann Karl
Staatsarchiv Bremen, 7.2001 · Fonds · 1862-1932
Part of State Archives Bremen (STAB) (Archivtektonik)
  • 1862-1932, Staatsarchiv Bremen, 7.2001n* description: History of the inventory holder: The company J.K. Vietor (also called Afrikahaus in Bremen) was one of the most important German Africa companies before the First World War, together with its sister and subsidiary companies. The company's trading areas extended to Guinée Francaise (Hans Weber), Liberia (Huber & Vietor), Gold Coast (Fr. M. Vietor Söhne, Dietrich & Co., Augener & Mau), Togo (Fr. M. Vietor Söhne, J. K. Vietor, Vietor & Freese), Dahomey (Vietor & Freese, Vietor & Cie/Lohmann), Cameroon (Vietor & Freese) and South West Africa (J.K. Vietor). The First World War deprived the company of all its overseas assets totalling around 3.5 million Reichsmarks. After the war, it was paid around 500,000 Reichsmark in compensation. This enabled J. K. Vietor to rebuild his West African company overseas. After peace was concluded, he opened a business in Liberia (Grand Bassa and Sinoe) in 1921 with two of his former employees under the name Maier & Jürgensmeyer. In the same year, he also succeeded in setting up another trading business on the Gold Coast in Keta under the name Bremer Faktorei Ltd. Initiated by the Colonial Department of the Foreign Office, the company expanded into the French mandate territory of Togo in 1927. Branches were established in Lome and later in Palime (Bremer Faktorei S.A.). In October of the previous year, 1926, another business had already been opened in Accra under the name Nicolaus Vietor Ltd., which subsequently developed into the most successful Vietor company in West Africa with branches in Ho and Kumasi (Vietors Ashanti Company). J.K. Vietor also re-established relations with South West Africa immediately after the end of the war. However, the contact company in Lüderitzbucht remained insignificant during its existence (1920-1929). History of the inventory holder: The year 1930 heralded the collapse of the J. K. Vietor company. An economic crisis on the Gold Coast, combined with a boycott of shopping by the black population, cost the company half of its business capital, i.e. 300,000 Reichsmark. In July 1931, the German financial crisis intensified. In Bremen, J. F. Schröder Bank, J. K. Vietor's main lender, collapsed. In addition, there was a general run on outstanding debts in Germany and overseas. With the bankruptcy of the Banque Francaise de l'Afrique in Paris and Lome, the deposits that natives had with J. K. Vietor had to be repaid. The regular remittances from Africa therefore failed to materialise at all this year. Purchases for the new season could no longer be made. The debt of 812,000 marks with assets of 486,500 marks in September 1931 could not be recouped in the prevailing financial and global economic crisis. J. K. Vietor went into liquidation, including all overseas business. The company ceased to exist in 1932. Inventory history: The files of J. K. Vietor's company registry were handed over to the Bremen State Archives in August 1937 by J. K. Vietor's widow, Mrs Hedwig Vietor / Huder Grashof, for permanent possession (cf. registry 752-05). After being removed from storage during the Second World War, the files were returned to the State Archives mixed with torsos from various other company registries and completely disorganised, as well as being soiled and damaged by fire water. For provenance reasons, it seemed advisable to separate the J. K. Vietor company registry from the mixed holdings and to form the annexed but non-provenance parts into separate holdings. This resulted in the fonds 7.73 J. K. Vietor; 7.2016 Togo Baumwollgesellschaft mbH; Togo Palmölwerke GmbH; 7.2017 Deutsche Südseephosphat AG; 7.2018 Siedlungsgesellschaft 'Neuland'; 7.2019 Deutsch-Spanische Handelsgesellschaft mbH and 7.2020 Joao de Freitas Martins GmbH. Parts of the company registry were not cataloged. By reconstructing the old registry as far as possible, the structure, overall picture and work of a Bremen overseas export and import company between the two world wars was to be documented and handed down in the example of J. K. Vietor. Hartmut Müller Bremen, 1970
Staatsarchiv Bremen, 7.2125 · Fonds · 1929-1947
Part of State Archives Bremen (STAB) (Archivtektonik)
  • description: History of the founders: The history of Bremer Ostafrika-Gesellschaft mbH begins in 1900. It was registered in the Bremen District Court, Commercial Register Department under HR B 211 under the name Bremer Westafrika Gesellschaft mit beschränkter Haftung in January. The object of the company was the establishment and operation of factories in West Africa, the commercial acquisition and resale of such import and export goods traded in West Africa and the operation of all business connected with such trade. The share capital totalled 200,000 marks. The first managing directors were the merchants Gustav Caspar Clarus Pelizaeus and Rudolph Franz Florenz August Wilmanns. Other Bremen merchants acted as partners. In 1912, another Bremer Ostafrika-Gesellschaft mbH was founded with a branch office in Dar es Salaam. Its managing directors and shareholders were in no way identical with the aforementioned West Africa company. This company had already ceased to exist in 1925. Neither was anyone involved in the Afrikanische Handelsgesellschaft mbH, which existed from 1912 to 1934. History of the stockholder: A branch office was established in Neu Bremen (Cameroon) in 1903. Wilmanns left as managing director in 1905; in 1907 the share capital was increased to 500,000 marks. The shareholders at the time were the companies G.S. Pelizaeus, Melchers Gebr. & Co, Hegeler & Söhne, Münder & Bechtel and the authorised signatory Nils Alfred Persson, who was appointed managing director from 1910-1916. He was followed by the businessman August Dietrich Theodor Hugo Schmöle, who became the sole shareholder after the conversion of the Reichsmark to 150,000 in 1929. A Major von Brandis played an important role in the company's history. He had been an active officer and had taken part in the 1914-1918 campaign in East Africa under General Lettow-Vorbeck. He returned to Germany in 1919 and achieved the rank of major in the Schutzpolizei. When the Germans were allowed back into the former colonies, he and his wife Mary von Brandis bought plantations near Tanga in East Africa, in which they invested considerable sums of money. H.A. Schmöle was also involved - primarily with the compensation he had received from the German Reich due to the loss of assets he had suffered in Africa. This connection between the two gentlemen ultimately led to the company being founded and renamed Bremer Ostafrika-Gesellschaft mbH in 1936. The businessman Rudolf Adolf Ewald Strahlendorff, who was also the director of Bremer Tauwerke AG in Bremen-Vegesack, was appointed as a further managing director. Furthermore, the businessman Heinrich Schultz-Peltzer was added as managing director in 1936. As a Swiss citizen, he was primarily responsible for banking transactions in Zurich, but his name was deleted from the Bremen commercial register as managing director in September 1940. History of the portfolio holder: It is worth mentioning that the company continued to trade with Africa throughout the war years. At the end of the 1930s, it was mainly DKW automobiles and motorbikes that were delivered to Angola, while sisal and hemp were imported to Europe from Mombasa, Kenya. After the Second World War, business relations were continued by managing director Hans Schlotfeldt, who died in 1962. He was replaced by commercial clerk Gerrit Krebs, who became the company's liquidator two years later (1964). Until the end, Bremer Tauwerk-Fabrik, represented by Franz Tecklenborg, E. von Brandis and Theo Schmöle, held shares in the company. Liquidation was completed in 1968 and the company thus ceased to exist. Inventory history: On 15 March 2001, three large boxes of documents of unknown origin were handed over to the State Archives. They contained 14 folders and 12 loose-leaf binders. An initial inspection revealed that they were documents from the Bremer Ostafrika Gesellschaft mbH from the years 1929-1947. The archive has hardly any company documents from the immediate pre- and post-war period, let alone business correspondence from the war period. The fact that the documents of the Bremen West and East Africa Society in particular document a piece of African trade is an argument in favour of archival value, although the small volume can only be a very small section. Cassation was only carried out to a very limited extent. Unfortunately, the documents were heavily soiled due to decades of storage in a cellar. The documents were archivally processed, i.e. roughly cleaned of dirt and metal, packed, signed and catalogued using this index. It comprises a total of 7 archive boxes containing 25 indexing units. No detailed indexing was carried out; a chronological order was used as a classification criterion. April 2001 Dorothea Breitenfeldtn* 1929-1947, Bremen State Archives, 7.2125
D. H. Wätjen

Explanation: Diedrich Heinrich Wätjen (1785-1858), who in 1818 had become a partner in Anton Friedrich Schaer's commission and forwarding business founded in 1805, continued the business under his own name. In 1829 the company was transformed into D. H. Wätjen

North German NDL (inventory)
7,2010 · Fonds · 1858 - 1985
Part of State Archives Bremen (STAB) (Archivtektonik)

Explanation:1857 established as a public limited company in the shipping business, preferably for overseas passenger traffic. The company became the largest shipping company in Bremen and was involved in the founding of various industrial companies. 1970 merged with HAPAG to form Hapag-Lloyd AG Contents:Supervisory Board and Executive Board - Memoirs of Director Heinrich Wiegand (1855-1909) - Annual reports - Calculations - Personnel statistics - Participations - Press and public relations - Passenger shipping - Cargo shipping - Tug shipping - Travel guides, brochures, timetables. - Note: A collection of newspaper clippings of Norddeutscher Lloyd forms fonds 9, pp. 9-19.

Staatsarchiv Bremen, 16.24/1 · Fonds · 1893 - 1902
Part of State Archives Bremen (STAB) (Archivtektonik)
  • 1893 - 1902, Staatsarchiv Bremen, 16.24/1n* description: Inventory history: Documents from the estate of Hendrik Witbooi (ca. 1830-1905), leader of the indigenous movement against German colonial rule in what is now Namibia, then German South West Africa, fell into the hands of the Bremen merchant August Engelbert Wulff in 1895 in the course of military conflicts in Gibeon, Namibia. He sold them to the then German Colonial and Overseas Museum in 1935. The documents were handed over to the Windhoek National Archives in 1995 after reproductions had been made for the Bremen State Archives and the Overseas Museum.