From the Collection of Hans Colsman - All Rights Reserved
Johannes Colsman (1868-1922) Johannes Colsman was born in 1868 in the little town of Langenberg near Elberfeld. His father was a merchant and (as he himself later became) one of the owners of a silk manufacturing plant founded in 1750 and which still exists today. His mother, who came from a Barmen patrician family related to the Engels-family, died in London. In Prussia, the sons of the industrialists served in cavalry-troops. Johannes served in the cavalry, as did his father and also Johannes' eldest son. Among his papers was found a personal letter written by Prince Max of Baden, who, in 1918, became the last chancellor of the German empire and who was Johannes Colsman's superior in his young days at cavalry. During his education, he spent a year in the United
States, residing mostly in New York about 1899. After his unexpected death in 1922, his son followed
him into the family company. The family was very conservative,
socially-conscious (involved in much social welfare works) and religious in the Protestant faith. I remember
my grandfather (the eldest son) venerated him. |