Carl Bergmann (Secretary of State)

Carl Bergmann (April 20, 1874 in Sömmerda; died September 26, 1935 in Berlin) was a German banker and diplomat.

Biography

After studying law, which he finished with the doctorate, he became in 1900 Gerichtsassessor in Berlin before he changed the following year to the Deutsche Bank. From this bank he was sent from 1901 to 1902 to Konstantinopel for the management of the Chemins de Fer Ottomans d'Anatolie. 1911 he was appointed Deputy Director of the Deutsche Bank. 1914-1918 he worked as a financial delegate at the German Embassy in The Hague.[1]

After the end of World War I he was since 1919 representative of the German Reich in the Reparation in Paris. In July 1919 he was next to Stephan Moesle undersecretary in the Finance Ministry and also chairman of the war load commission. He held until September 1921 these offices and was thus one of the closest collaborators of the Ministers of Finance Matthias Erzberger and Joseph Wirth.

He then returned to Deutsche Bank as a member of the Board. From 1924-1927 he was co-owner of the bank Lazard Speyer-Ellissen in Frankfurt am Main. Even as a member of the Board of the Reichsbahn he took part in the negotiations reparations.[2][3] 1930 actually. From 1931 until his death in 1935 he was the trustee of the Danatbank (Danatbank).

With his wife Enriqueta Carl Bergmann had two daughters and a son. The two daughters died after the war from tuberculosis.

Appreciation

In his book "Réflexions sur le franc et sur quelques autres sujets" (thoughts about the Franc and some other topics, Paris 1926) John Maynard Keynes reminds the German diplomats Bergmann and bay and writes about Bergmann:[4]

Bergmann was the appointment of the Organizing Committee for Reparations in 1919 until the adoption of the Dawes Plan in 1924 constantly behind the scenes. He was one of the most excellent representatives of that man shock, which remains not sit on his gilded armchairs, but is linked friendly relations with the opposing camp, regardless of formalities.

The American historian Alfred C. Mierzejewski describes in his history of the Reichsbahn[5] the continued efforts by Carl Bergman (as a longtime member of the management and the supervisory board of the Railway), not to let fall the Reichsbahn in the hands of the Nazis.

Publications

Sources

References

  1. Vierteljahrshefte für Zeitgeschichte, Januar 1975, S. 23, Fußnote 79.
  2. Gall, Lothar/ Pohl, Manfred: Die Eisenbahn in Deutschland. 1999
  3. Graml, Hermann: Zwischen Stresemann und Hitler. 2001
  4. «M. Bergmann s’est trouvé constamment dans la coulisse, depuis la nomination du comité d’organisation de la Commission des Réparations, en 1919, jusqu’à l’adoption du plan Dawes, en 1924. Il a été l’un des plus heureux représentants de cette catégorie d’hommes qui ne restent pas assis dans leurs fauteuils dorés, mais établissent avec le camp opposé des relations amicales, exemptes de tout formalisme.» In: John Maynard Keynes, Réflexions sur le franc et sur quelques autres sujets, Kap. II: Les dettes de guerre: La reconstruction financière de l’Allemagne.
  5. The Most Valuable Asset of the Reich. A History of the German National Railway. (Volume I), 1999.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/27/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.