Freudenberg Group#Philanthropy
{{Short description|German group of companies}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2024}}
{{Other uses|Freudenberg (disambiguation){{!}}Freudenberg}}
{{Infobox company
| name = Freudenberg SE
| logo = Image:Freudenberg logo.svg
| image = Firma Freudenberg in Weinheim Luftbild vom 5. Juni 2010.jpg
| image_caption = Freudenberg Group headquarters in Weinheim, aerial view (2010)
| type = Family-owned
Societas Europaea
| foundation = {{Start date and age|1849|02|09|df=y}}
| founder = Carl Johann Freudenberg
| location = Weinheim, Baden-Wuerttemberg, Germany
| area_served = Worldwide
| key_people = Mohsen Sohi (CEO)
| industry = Conglomerate
| products = Household and other products
| revenue = {{profit}} €11.903 billion (2023){{Cite web |title=Annual Report 2023 |url=https://www.freudenberg.com/fileadmin/downloads/english/FreudenbergGroup_AnnualReport2023.pdf |access-date=27 April 2024 |publisher=Freudenberg Group |archive-date=1 April 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240401112150/https://www.freudenberg.com/fileadmin/downloads/english/FreudenbergGroup_AnnualReport2023.pdf |url-status=live }}
| num_employees = 52,241 (2023)
| homepage = {{url|freudenberg.com}}
}}
The Freudenberg Group is a German family-owned diversified group of companies whose products include housewares and cleaning products, automobile parts, textiles, building materials, and telecommunications. Its headquarters are in Weinheim, Baden-Württemberg, and it has production facilities in Europe, Asia, Australia, South and North America. The parent company was founded in 1849 as a tannery, and until the end of the 1920s produced only leather.
History
=Origins to 1933=
The company was founded on 9 February 1849 by Carl Johann Freudenberg and Heinrich Christian Heintze. After his father's early death, Freudenberg had been apprenticed to his uncle Johann Baptist Sammet, a leather merchant in Mannheim, and had become a silent partner in the company co-owned by Heintze and Sammet.{{cite book |first=Carsten |last=Knop |translator1-first=Geraldine |translator1-last=Diserens |translator2-first=Elizabeth |translator2-last=Renken |title=Freudenberg: A Start-Up in a Revolution |location=Frankfurt / New York |publisher=Campus |year=2024 |isbn=978-3-593-51964-7 |pages=23–24 |type=translation of Freudenberg: ein Start-up der Revolution }} That company fell into financial difficulties during the upheavals of the German revolution and was liquidated in 1848; the following year Freudenberg and Heintze took over a tannery at Weinheim where Freudenberg had been employed, and introduced lacquered patent leather as a specialty.Knop, pp. 26–31.{{cite book |first=Joachim |last=Scholtyseck |title=Freudenberg. Ein Familienunternehmen in Kaiserreich, Demokratie und Diktatur |location=Munich |publisher=C. H. Beck |year=2016 |isbn=978-3-406-68853-9 |pages=21–22 |language=de }} The product won bronze medals at the international expositions of 1851 and 1853 and a silver medal in 1855, and sold well.{{cite book |first=Michael |last=Horchler |contribution=Von der Gerberei zum globalen Technologiekonzern. Die Internationalisierung der Freudenberg Gruppe (1849–2002) |title=Regionale Produzenten oder Global Player? Zur Internationalisierung der Wirtschaft im 19. und 20. Jarhundert. Rheinland-pfälzische Wirtschaftsgeschichte im europäischen Vergleich |editor1-first=Ute |editor1-last=Engelen |editor2=Michael Matheus |series=Veröffentlichungen des Instituts für Geschichtliche Landeskunde an der Universität Mainz 74 |location=Stuttgart |publisher=Franz Steiner |year=2018 |isbn=978-3-515-11916-0 |page=130 |language=de }} For the next 80 years, the company produced exclusively various kinds of leather.{{Cite magazine |last=Scheele |first=Martin |date=22 January 2004 |title=Familie Freudenberg: Die Wischmopp-Millionäre |url=https://www.manager-magazin.de/unternehmen/karriere/a-282882.html |access-date=31 March 2022 |magazine=Manager Magazin |language=de |archive-date=12 August 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220812083302/https://www.manager-magazin.de/unternehmen/karriere/a-282882.html |url-status=live }}{{Cite news |last=Lamparter |first=Dietmar H. |date=24 February 2011 |title=Unternehmen Freudenberg: Von der Kunst des Häutens |work=Die Zeit |url=https://www.zeit.de/2011/09/Industriekonzern-Freudenberg/komplettansicht |url-access=subscription |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110829042026/https://www.zeit.de/2011/09/Industriekonzern-Freudenberg/komplettansicht |archive-date=29 August 2011}}
Heintze died in 1862; on the death in 1874 of his son Leopold Heintze, who had become a partner in the early 1850s, the Freudenberg family bought his share in the business from his heirs and renamed it to Carl Freudenberg.Knop, pp. 31, 36. Carl Johann Freudenberg had placed his eldest son, Friedrich Carl Freudenberg, in charge of a second tannery in Schönau, which opened in 1869; his youngest son, Hermann Ernst Freudenberg, apprenticed and was a journeyman in the United States and after his return in 1875 introduced a better production process for the lacquered patent leather.Scholtyseck, pp. 22–24. The company became a GmbH in 1896,Scholtyseck, p. 27. and following Carl Johann Freudenberg's death in 1898, the brothers succeeded him at its head, with Hermann Ernst Freudenberg, who had bought out their sisters' interests in the company, being the dominant partner.Knop, p. 52.Scholtyseck, pp. 27–29.
With the introduction at the turn of the century of the faster and better chrome tanning process developed in the United States, by 1914 Freudenberg had become one of the four largest leather processing firms in Germany, importing hides from the Russian Empire, Poland, Argentina, France, and the United States and exporting finished leather to markets including the British Empire, Switzerland, France, Russia, Poland, the United States,Scholtyseck, p. 26. and Latin America.Horchler, p. 132. Like the rest of the German leather industry, the company was hurt by World War I, especially by the stoppage of imports of hides under the Allied embargo and a subsequent ban that was not officially lifted until 1924, and also by bureaucratic controls. Under the Weimar Republic, inflation and the devaluation of the German currency hindered international business; in order to pay for imported raw materials in hard currency, Freudenberg partnered with Swiss bankers to establish Externa S.A., a credit agency in Lausanne. The company also participated in a number of cooperative agreements to facilitate exports, and skirted regulations in Poland and Eastern Europe by representing German and Austrian leather as Swiss products of its Tannerie de Lausanne subsidiary. By 1929, the company was once more exporting 70% of its production, but the worldwide economic depression that began late that year, and the high taxes that many countries imposed on imports in response, further damaged the German leather industry. Freudenberg, also affected by patent leather falling out of fashion, cut hours to avoid layoffs.Scholtyseck, pp. 35–38, 46, 49–50, 60–63. In 1929, seeking to rebuild international trade, it formed a United States subsidiary in Boston.Horchler, p. 134.
=Nazi era=
In 1933 the company acquired Conrad Tack & Cie, a shoe manufacturer and retailer founded in 1883. This was one of the first Aryanizations of a Jewish-owned company in the Third Reich; in the face of boycotts Hermann Krojanker, the company head, requested that Freudenberg, the company's major supplier, take it over.Scholtyseck, pp. 113–31. It was Freudenberg's first expansion into both manufacturing and consumer sales; the company subsequently "Aryanized" a dozen other companies, including other shoe manufacturers and sellers which were incorporated into Tack, and other leather processors including Sigmund Hirsch GmbH, which was also in Weinheim and specialised in horse leather, and Josef Reiman / Gerhardus, an amalgamation of two Vienna companies.Scholtyseck, pp. 143–74. As the Reich expanded, Freudenberg sought to acquire companies in annexed and occupied countries. They were unsuccessful in acquiring Del-Ka, a leading Viennese shoe company, or any of the shoe companies in Czechoslovakia and Poland; Nazi administrators in the east sought to avoid further increasing the market share of leading German companies, and the Czech company Bata was permitted to retain all its shoe shops since it was a valued provider of military footwear.Scholtyseck, pp. 245–51, 254–57. In the west, Foreign Ministry policy was to promote German industrial expansion, and Freudenberg was able to acquire Chromex, a French manufacturer of vehicle seals that had been established with financial assistance from Freudenberg in 1934 and licensed Freudenberg technology; but Freudenberg abandoned attempts to "Aryanize" a leather producer in the Netherlands on grounds of likely bureaucratic veto, were passed over in the "Aryanization" of a Luxembourg tannery, and were also rebuffed in their attempts to acquire either regional outlets or the whole company of the French shoe company {{ill|André (shoe company)|lt=André|fr|André (chaussure)}}, which survived the war without being "Aryanized".Scholtyseck, pp. 286, 290–91, 295–301, 301–10.
With a view to diversification, Freudenberg began in the late 1920s to research industrial uses for leather.Scholtyseck, p. 205. In 1929, the company began to produce leather cuff seals for motors. The Austrian engineer {{ill|Walther Simmer|de}} developed an improved radial shaft seal that was patented in 1932 as the Simmerring. In the second half of the 1930s, the company changed from leather to synthetic rubber for the Simmerring.Scholtyseck, pp. 208–09.Horchler, pp. 134–35. Nazi restrictions and subsequently World War II led to renewed stoppages of leather imports and to other shortages; in response the company accelerated its diversification away from leather and into components for machinery.{{Cite web |last=Sywottek |first=Christian |date=October 2008 |title=Das Matroschka-Prinzip |url=http://www.brandeins.de/archiv/magazin/wir-rechnen-mit-allem-die-kunst-der-improvisation/artikel/das-matroschka-prinzip.html |archive-url=https://archive.today/20130210145833/http://www.brandeins.de/archiv/magazin/wir-rechnen-mit-allem-die-kunst-der-improvisation/artikel/das-matroschka-prinzip.html |archive-date=10 February 2013 |website=Brand Eins |language=de |type=interview with Wolfram Freudenberg}} Starting in 1936, chemist Carl Ludwig Nottebohm developed his patented concept of nonwovens at Freudenberg, leading to an artificial leather product on a nonwoven base that the company named Viledon and marketed for bags and luggage.Scholtyseck, pp. 269–70.Horchler, pp. 135–36.
In 1936, Freudenberg developed synthetic rubber shoe soles; marketed from 1938 under the brand name nora, they were the first commercially available synthetic rubber soles.Knop, pp. 92–93. (Freudenberg spun off production of the nora shoe soles in 1998, and the subsidiary manufacturing other nora products in 2007; it is now {{ill|Nora systems|de}}).Knop, pp. 296–303. In 1937, the company instituted testing of artificial shoe soles by a group of test walkers, initially consisting mostly of former workers. They became a noted sight in and around Weinheim, and one man walked {{convert|40,000|km|mi}} over the course of three years.Scholtyseck, pp. 324–27. In November 1939, Richard Freudenberg proposed that German footwear manufacturers set up centralized testing on this model, using as testers Reich Labor Service workers undergoing military training. The manufacturers agreed on quality and testing standards, but the central use testing system that was instituted under government oversight in 1940 was a {{ill|Sachsenhausen shoe test track|lt=shoe test track|de|Schuhläufer-Kommando}} at the Sachsenhausen concentration camp. Prisoners were assigned to walk more than {{convert|30|km|mi}}, later more than {{convert|40|km|mi}} daily, testing sample pairs submitted by the manufacturers. Some were assigned the task as punishment by the SS; some were required to walk carrying heavy burdens; an unknown number died.Scholtyseck, pp. 330–34.Knop, pp. 123–26.
=Since World War II=
The development of artificial materials for both footwear and automotive uses led to fabrics and, when it was noted that the company's cleaning women were using discarded scraps of the experimental fabrics for cleaning. Vileda (from {{langx|de|link=no|wie Leder}}, 'like leather') window-cleaning cloths were first marketed in 1948;{{Cite book |last=Grant |first=Tina |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=d_3XAAAAMAAJ&q=Freudenberg+Weinheim |title=International Directory of Company Histories |date=2001 |publisher=St. James Press |isbn=978-1-55862-446-7}} the name had originally been suggested for the first nonwoven product, Viledon.In the first postwar decades, housewares became a major focus for Freudenberg,Scholtyseck, p. 270. together with nonwovens for the textile industry.Horchler, p. 136. The company internationalized; it opened production facilities in other countries, beginning in 1950 with a textile plant in Lowell, Massachusetts and continuing in the 1970s and 1980s with plants in Brazil, Japan, and Hong Kong, and partnered particularly with Japanese companies, such as Nippon Oil Seal Industry Co. in 1960, leading to joint ventures in Asia. In 1990, it acquired the Swedish cleaning products company {{ill|Wettex|sv}}; in 1997 it formed a joint venture in Italy, later wholly owned, to recycle PET bottles into fabric. From the mid-1990s, it systematically developed markets and production facilities in Brazil, Russia, India, and China. It also continued to diversify, into shock absorption, filters, and starting with the acquisition in 1966 of {{ill|Klüber Lubrication|de}}, chemical production.Horchler, pp. 136–38.
File:ViledaFreudenbergGroup.jpg, Canada]]
Since a reorganization in 1996, Freudenberg Group has had a decentralized structure; in 2013, it consisted of 16 divisions or areas of business incorporating 430 independent units.[http://www.freudenberg.com/en/Company/Structure/Pages/default.aspx Company Structure] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130327125655/http://www.freudenberg.com/en/Company/Structure/Pages/default.aspx |date=27 March 2013 }}, Freudenberg Group.Horchler, pp. 138–39: the reorganization project went by the name FOKUS, Freudenberg Organisation für kundenorientierte Unternehmens-Struktur, i.e., Freudenberg Organization for Client-Oriented Company Structure.{{Cite book |last=Block |first=Jörn Hendrich |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=VKTiVqrf2tcC |title=Long-term Orientation of Family Firms: An Investigation of R&D Investments, Downsizing Practices, and Executive Pay |publisher=Betriebswirtschaftlicher Verlag Gabler |year=2009 |isbn=978-3-8349-1959-5 |location=Wiesbaden |page=3 |type=thesis, Technische Universität München |access-date=9 January 2023 |archive-date=9 January 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230109085823/https://books.google.com/books?id=VKTiVqrf2tcC |url-status=live }} In 2004, Freudenberg Group made an initial entry into the global medical market with the creation of Freudenberg Medical EN.
The company's original business of leather production continued to shrink in the late 20th century, impacted by reduced demand and rising prices for raw materials. By 2001, the leather division was responsible for only 1% of Freudenberg's gross income and its primary customers were American companies, which canceled orders after the September 11 attacks. In 2002 the company closed its last remaining tannery in Weinheim, marking the effective end of the leather industry in Germany.Horchler, p. 139.Scholtyseck, p. 439. However, today Vileda is a market leader in Europe.{{Cite news |last=Dworschak |first=Manfred |date=1 October 2000 |title='Materie am falschen Ort' |language=de |work=Der Spiegel |url=https://www.spiegel.de/wissenschaft/materie-am-falschen-ort-a-bd5ebebf-0002-0001-0000-000017483323 |access-date=31 March 2022 |issn=2195-1349 |archive-date=31 March 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220331170704/https://www.spiegel.de/wissenschaft/materie-am-falschen-ort-a-bd5ebebf-0002-0001-0000-000017483323 |url-status=live }} All German cars contain parts made by another Freudenberg subsidiary, and German-made outdoor clothing contains fibers made by yet another. Almost all major airports have flooring made by another Freudenberg subsidiary.
{{As of|2005}}, three-quarters of Freudenberg's business was as a supplier to other companies.{{Cite web |last=Behrens |first=Bolke |date=24 January 2005 |title=Freudenberg-Gruppe bewahrt beharrlich den Familiencharakter: Ein ganz unauffälliges Weltunternehmen |url=https://www.handelsblatt.com/unternehmen/industrie/freudenberg-gruppe-bewahrt-beharrlich-den-familiencharakter-ein-ganz-unauffaelliges-weltunternehmen/2467328.html |access-date=31 March 2022 |website=Handelsblatt |language=de |archive-date=11 June 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160611141035/http://www.handelsblatt.com/unternehmen/industrie/freudenberg-gruppe-bewahrt-beharrlich-den-familiencharakter-ein-ganz-unauffaelliges-weltunternehmen/2467328.html |url-status=live }} In 2004 Freudenberg had employees in 43 countries.53 in 2008, according to Sywottek.{{As of|2013|04}}, 58 countries: [http://www.freudenberg.com/en/Company/Pages/default.aspx Freudenberg Group] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130327125650/http://www.freudenberg.com/en/Company/Pages/default.aspx |date=27 March 2013 }}, retrieved 13 April 2013. By 2011, Freudenberg Group was a 5 billion euro business with more than 32,000 employees, approximately 11,000 in Germany. In 2023, it was an 11.9 billion euro business with more than 52,000 employees.
=Chief executives=
- Carl Johann Freudenberg (1849–1898) and Heinrich Christian Heintze (1849–1874)
- Friedrich Carl Freudenberg (1898–1928) and Hermann Ernst Freudenberg (1898–1923)
- Richard Freudenberg (1923–1962)
- Hermann Freudenberg (1962–1988)
- Reinhart Freudenberg (1988–1997)
- {{ill|Peter Bettermann|de}} (1997–2012; first non-family member to be Speaker of the Management Board)
- Mohsen Sohi (2012–present){{cite web |author1=Michael Horchler |author2=Julia Schneider |url=https://www.freudenberg.com/fileadmin/downloads/english/History-Brochure_EN.pdf |title=The Development of the Freudenberg Group (Since 1849) |publisher=Freudenberg & Co. |date=January 2024 }}{{Cite web |date=29 June 2012 |title=Management Changes at Freudenberg |url=http://www.freudenberg.com/en/Press/Pressereleases/Pages/Management-Board-Changes-at-Freudenberg.aspx |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140811110217/http://www.freudenberg.com/en/Press/Pressereleases/Pages/Management-Board-Changes-at-Freudenberg.aspx |archive-date=11 August 2014 |publisher=Freudenberg Group |type=press release}}
Ownership and philosophy
File:Carl Johann Freudenberg.jpg
Freudenberg remains a family-owned private company, structured as a Kommanditgesellschaft (limited partnership) jointly held by descendants of Carl Johann Freudenberg (some 300 in 2011). Stock cannot be sold to non-family members and must be surrendered by in-laws upon divorce. No stockholder holds more than 2% ownership. An annual three-day General Meeting elects the Board of Partners, which consists of 7 to 13 members of whom the majority must be Freudenberg family members.{{Cite web |title=Freudenberg Group: Organization & Portfolio |url=https://www.freudenberg.com/company/organization-portfolio |access-date=31 March 2022 |website=www.freudenberg.com |archive-date=31 March 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220331171011/https://www.freudenberg.com/company/organization-portfolio |url-status=live }} The divisions are managed by a Management Board, who need not be family members. Stockholders receive a semi-annual family newsletter and have access to an owners' intranet. A select few are on the Wine Commission, which oversees the private Freudenberg vineyards. These vineyards are the largest in the Bergstraße region, producing 60,000 bottles of wine annually. Wolfram Freudenberg, a fifth-generation family member who formerly headed the Stuttgart Stock Exchange, was Chairman of the Board of Partners from 2005 to 2014, succeeding Reinhart Freudenberg, who stepped down for reasons of age.{{Cite news |date=27 June 2005 |title=Freudenberg: Neue Führung im Gesellschafterausschuss |language=de |work=Manager Magazin |url=https://www.manager-magazin.de/unternehmen/karriere/a-362343.html |access-date=31 March 2022 |archive-date=31 March 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220331170755/https://www.manager-magazin.de/unternehmen/karriere/a-362343.html |url-status=live }} In 2014 he was succeeded by Martin Wentzler, also a fifth-generation family member.{{Cite web |date=1 July 2014 |title=Change in Board of Partners' Chair |url=http://www.freudenberg.com/en/Press/Pressereleases/Pages/Wechsel-im-Vorsitz-des-Gesellschafterausschusses.aspx |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140811104711/http://www.freudenberg.com/en/Press/Pressereleases/Pages/Wechsel-im-Vorsitz-des-Gesellschafterausschusses.aspx |archive-date=11 August 2014 |publisher=Freudenberg Group |type=press release}}
Carl Johann Freudenberg laid down guiding principles for the company: modesty, honor, financial solidity and adaptability to circumstances.Horchler, p. 131. In the late 1930s, the company developed operating principles that include broad diversification in both products and markets, spreading of risk, long-term thinking, the maintenance of an equity ratio of at least 40%, and avoidance of large acquisitions while favoring small ones.{{Cite web |title=Corporate Values: Guiding Principles |url=http://www.freudenberg.com/en/Company/Values/Pages/GuidingPrinciples.aspx |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130922004532/http://www.freudenberg.com/en/Company/Values/Pages/GuidingPrinciples.aspx |archive-date=22 September 2013 |publisher=Freudenberg Group}} The company would rather acquire "a handful of interesting smaller enterprises" in a given year than a large company that might endanger the company philosophy.{{Cite news |last1=Neukirchen |first1=Heide |last2=Palass |first2=Brigitta |date=22 March 2002 |title=Familienunternehmen: Freudenberg-Gruppe |language=de |work=Manager Magazin |url=http://www.manager-magazin.de/magazin/artikel/0,2828,199444,00.html |access-date=23 December 2011 |archive-date=13 December 2004 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20041213172557/http://www.manager-magazin.de/magazin/artikel/0,2828,199444,00.html |url-status=live }} In each area of activity, the company operates only where it can be first or second in the market; for example, it sells motor seals worldwide but Vileda mops mostly in Europe.
Divisions
File:Headquarters Freudenberg Sealing Technologies.jpg
{{As of|2024}}, the company consists of the following business groups (the majority headquartered in Weinheim):
- Freudenberg Chemical Specialities, headquartered in Munich (including the subsidiaries Capol, Chem-Trend, Klüber Lubrication, OKS, and SurTec)
- Freudenberg e-Power Systems, headquartered in Munich
- Freudenberg Filtration Technologies
- Freudenberg Flow Technologies, headquartered in Wolfratshausen (including TotalSealCare, Techlok, Bluelock, FlexBall, AlignLock, WellProtek, and EagleBurgmann, a partnership with the Japanese company {{ill|Eagle Industries|ja|イーグル工業}}{{cite web |url=https://www.ekkeagle.com/en/profile/history |title=History |website=Eagle Industry Co., Ltd. |access-date=2 March 2024 }})
- Freudenberg Home and Cleaning Solutions (including Vileda, Vileda Professional, Gimi, Oates, Wettex, the American brand O-Cedar, acquired in 2003{{cite news |url=https://www.thefreelibrary.com/NEWS+BRIEFS%3A+FREUDENBERG+ACQUIRES+O-CEDAR+BRANDS...GILLETTE+PARTNERS...-a0111195793 |title=News Briefs: Freudenberg Acquires O-Cedar Brands |work=HFN |date=8 December 2003 |via=Free Online Library |access-date=23 February 2024 }}{{Cite web |title=About O-Cedar |url=http://www.ocedar.com/about-ocedar |access-date=13 April 2013 |website=O-Cedar.com |archive-date=5 May 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130505043533/http://www.ocedar.com/about-ocedar |url-status=dead }} the UK brand Marigold, acquired in 2013,{{cite news |first=Vince |last=Bamford |url=https://www.thegrocer.co.uk/companies/marigold-gloves-business-sold-to-fhcs/353090.article |title=Marigold gloves business sold to FHCS |website=The Grocer |date=23 December 2013 |access-date=2 March 2024 }} and Gala brand products under a joint venture with the Indian company Gala Brush{{cite web |url=https://galaclean.com/ |title=Who We Are |website=Freudenberg Gala Household Products |access-date=2 March 2024 }})
- Freudenberg Medical, headquartered in Beverly, Massachusetts, US
- Freudenberg Performance Materials
- Freudenberg Sealing Technologies (including Simmerings and Corteco, a brand of spare parts)
- Vibracoustic
- Japan Vilene Company, headquartered in TokyoThe Freudenberg Business Groups, [https://www.freudenberg.com/ Freudenberg.com], retrieved 2 March 2024.The company has also used the brand names Evolon, FIT (Freudenberg IT), HelixMark, Lutradur, Lutrasil, Merkel, MicronAir, Pellon, Simrit, Trelleborg-Vibracoustic, Vildona, Viledon, Vilene, and Vilmed; see "Brands" at the [https://web.archive.org/web/20121218004517/https://www.freudenberg.com/ecomaXL/index.php?site= homepage], archived from [https://www.freudenberg.com/ecomaXL/index.php?site= the original] on 18 December 2012.
Philanthropy
Freudenberg instituted health insurance for employees in 1874.Horchler, pp. 130–31.
The company owns the Schau- und Sichtungsgarten Hermannshof, a public botanical garden in Weinheim, which opened in 1983 and is jointly operated with the town.{{Cite book |last=Dohna |first=Countess Ursula |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KssLAQAAMAAJ&q=In+recent+years+Weinheim+has+acquired |title=Private Gardens of Germany |date=1986 |publisher=Harmony Books |isbn=978-0-517-56512-4 |page=122 |access-date=25 October 2022 |archive-date=9 January 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230109085819/https://books.google.com/books?id=KssLAQAAMAAJ&q=In+recent+years+Weinheim+has+acquired |url-status=live }}{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yHVMAAAAYAAJ&q=Owned+by+the+multinational |title=Gardens Illustrated |date=2002 |page=36 |access-date=25 October 2022 |archive-date=3 April 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230403180405/https://books.google.com/books?id=yHVMAAAAYAAJ&q=Owned+by+the+multinational |url-status=live }}{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=krdVAAAAMAAJ&q=Der+Garten,+der+1983+er%25C3%25B6ffnet+wurde,+ist+eine+Stiftung+der+Familie+Freudenberg.+ |title=Garten und Landschaft |date=2002 |page=44 |language=de |access-date=25 October 2022 |archive-date=3 April 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230403180420/https://books.google.com/books?id=krdVAAAAMAAJ&q=Der+Garten,+der+1983+er%25C3%25B6ffnet+wurde,+ist+eine+Stiftung+der+Familie+Freudenberg.+ |url-status=live }}
The Freudenberg Stiftung (Foundation) was founded in 1984 and is endowed with stock in the parent company. It has a broad mandate "to promote science, the humanities and education as well as strengthening peaceful coexistence in society and culture" and focuses particularly on assistance to and democratic education of young people, primarily in Germany.{{Cite web |title=Freudenberg foundation |url=http://www.freudenberg.com/ecomaXL/index.php?site=FCO_EN_foundation |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120407040417/http://www.freudenberg.com/ecomaXL/index.php?site=FCO_EN_foundation |archive-date=7 April 2012 |publisher=Freudenberg Group}}
References
{{Reflist|2}}
Further reading
- Carl Freudenberg. 150 Years of Freudenberg: How a Family Enterprise Developed from a Tannery into an Internationally Diversified Enterprise. [Mannheim]: Freudenberg, 1999. {{OCLC|313963779}}
- Pia Gerber. Der lange Weg der sozialen Innovation—wie Stiftungen zum sozialen Wandel im Feld der Bildungs- und Sozialpolitik beitragen können: eine Fallstudie zur Innovationskraft der Freudenberg Stiftung / The Long March of Social Innovation—How Charitable Foundations can Contribute Towards Social Change in the Fields of Education and Social Policy: A Case Study on the Innovative Vigor of the Freudenberg Foundation. Opusculum 21. Berlin: Maecenata-Institut für Philanthropie und Zivilgesellschaft, November 2006. {{OCLC|643152814}} [https://books.google.com/books?id=DRZ21wGmkggC&pg Google preview] {{in lang|de}}
External links
- {{Commons category-inline|Freudenberg Gruppe|Freudenberg Group}}
- [https://www.freudenberg.com/ Official site in English]
{{Authority control}}
Category:Manufacturing companies of Germany
Category:Companies established in 1849
Category:Companies based in Baden-Württemberg