Esaias Wechter

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born1701
Died(1776-05-17)17 May 1776
Turku, Sweden
Spouses
  • Catharina née Schele
  • Catharina Elisabeth née Danckwardt
Esaias Wechter
Born1701
Died(1776-05-17)17 May 1776
Turku, Sweden
Occupationsmerchant, industrialist
Spouses
  • Catharina née Schele
  • Catharina Elisabeth née Danckwardt
Children
  • Vendla
  • Hans Henric (ca. 1728–1788)
  • Esaias (1729–1794)
  • Catharina Elisabeth, married Idman (1732–1797)
  • Israel (1736–1764)
  • Margareta Elisabeth (1737–1739)
  • Jeremias (born 1740)
  • Johan Joachim (1748–1749)
  • Daniel (1749–1749)
  • Brita Johanna, married Bäck (1751–1824)
  • Maria Magdalena, married Lander (born 1754)
  • Benjamin (born 1759)
Parent(s)Henric Wechter and
Anna née Simolenia[1]

Esaias Wechter (1701 – 17 May 1776) was a Finnish merchant (living in what was then Sweden), early industrialist and politician.

Wechter started the first baize manufactory of Turku and was co-founder of the local shipbuilding industry together with his business partner Henric Rungeen. Wechter became one of the richest merchants of the city.

Wechter took part in the Diet of Sweden for three times in 1734–1743 representing the estate of bourgeoisie. He was also involved in local politics starting from the 1730s; between 1741 and 1769 he was a councillor. For the end of his political career Wechter was passive and embittered. In time, he also lost most of his property.

Wechter was born in Turku, Southwest Finland. His parents were merchant, mayor Henric Wechter and Anna née Simolenia. The Wechters were an old Turku bourgeois family. The city fell under Russian occupation during the great wrath in 1713 and the family could not escape. Henric Wechter hid a part of his large property and could not manage to tell the location of the treasure before his death. The cache was found at an academy construction site in 1802, when Esaias Wechter had already died.[1]

Industrial career

Political career

Sources

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI