Ole Paus (businessman)

Ole Paus
Born 24 October 1846
Skien
Died 20 March 1931
Bygdøy
Nationality Norwegian

Ole Paus (24 October 1846 in Skien 20 March 1931 at Bygdøy, Aker) was a Norwegian iron and steel industrialist and Chairman of the commercial bank Den norske Creditbank (now DNB ASA). He was a first cousin of Henrik Ibsen.

Career

Villa Paus at Bygdøy, built for Ole Paus in 1907, and where he died in 1931

He attended the Latin School in his native Skien and studied in Lübeck. He lived for several years in Germany and the United Kingdom, until he settled in Bygdøy, Aker.

He founded the iron and steel wholesale company Ole Paus in 1872 and the factory A/S Den norske Hesteskosømfabrik in 1883. He was chairman of the Norwegian Iron Industry Association from 1910 to 1918.[1] He was a member of the Board of Directors of Den norske Creditbank, one of Norway's leading commercial banks, from 1897, and became the bank's Chairman in 1903.[2] He was also elected as a member of the Christiania city council, was a board member of Christiania Handelsstands Forening, chairman of the supervisory board of the leading conservative newspaper Morgenbladet, a member of the Council of Fifty (consisting of Oslo's 50 leading businessmen) and a member of the supervisory board of Akers mekaniske Verksted.[3][4][5]

Family

He was the son of shipowner and banker Christopher Blom Paus and Erasmine Ernst, a native of Denmark. His first cousin was playwright Henrik Ibsen and his nephew was art collector and papal chamberlain, Count Christopher Tostrup Paus. His grandparents were shipowner Ole Paus and Johanne Plesner (formerly married Ibsen).

Ole Paus was married to Birgitte Halvordine Schou (1848–1923, a niece of Christian Julius Schou). They had several children

References

  1. Hoemsnes, Ole N., Fra isenkram til Norsk stål : stålbransjen gjennom 175 år, 1998
  2. Ebbe Hertzberg, Den Norske Creditbank 1857-1907: et tilbageblik, W.C. Fabritius & sønner, a.s., 1907
  3. Aftenposten 1931.03.20
  4. "Paus, Ole," in Hvem er Hvem? (Who's Who), 1912, p. 204
  5. "Dødsfall: Grosserer Ole Paus." Aftenposten 1931.03.20 p. 5
  6. http://www.rosekamp.dk/kbb_74_ALL/G.htm
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