Zeiss: Carl Zeiss - A History of A Most Respected Name in Optics
Zeiss: Carl Zeiss - A History of A Most Respected Name in Optics
Zeiss
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From its inception through to the middle 19th century, lens making was a craft
that was essentially passed on from generation to generation. Innovations had
typically resulted from trial and error experimentation; this was a costly and time
consuming process that could not factor in all of the possible variables in lens
making materials and design. It would be left up to one who could employ
scientific methods of study, and then devise the mathematical formulas to
characterize the physics of optics to make the next important technological leaps
possible. It would then be asked of a chemist to invent and manufacture those raw
materials necessary to make the new designs possible. And it would be one man
to bring this combination together to create a concern of unrivaled
accomplishment.
Dr. Carl Friedrich Zeiss (b.11 Sept. 1816 in Weimar - d.3 Dec.
1888 in Jena) founded the Carl Zeiss firm at Jena, opened on 17
November 1846 at Neugasse 7, Jena on the Saale River in the
district of Thuringia in Germany for the production of simple
microscopes (in the first year selling about 23 units), measuring
instruments, and other precise optical and mechanical
instruments.
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This research and development effort bore its first noteworthy fruit in 1886 when
Zeiss marketed the first "aphochromate" microscope objectives; this apochromatic
microscope objective offered superior quality. Employing "fluorspar" elements this
was the first use of crystal in an industrial optical application. Zeiss now employs
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250 workmen, and delivers its 10,000th microscope! Carl Zeiss lives to see this
breakthrough, but soon after he dies on 3 December 1888.
Abbe was interested in improving academic and research resources. His efforts
resulted in the establishment of the Institute of Mineralogy at the University of
Jena. Abbe was also interested in social reforms culminating in the formation in
1889 of the "Carl-Zeiss-Stiftung" (something akin to a foundation) to operate the
various Zeiss concerns, with a mission to ensure the Zeiss firm follow the social
vision of its founders. By 1900, the employment benefits at Zeiss were
uncommonly good in their day; these included an eight-hour work day, paid
holidays, some forms of health benefits, profit-sharing, and a retirement plan. It is
our understanding that one provision of the Stiftung Statutes was that the top
salaries at Zeiss could not exceed that of the foremen by more than a factor of
ten. Such concerns of employees well being was rare at the time, but it was
returned to the company with increased employee loyalty and by attracting better
qualified candidates for employment.
The original constitution of the Stiftung provides that the profits of the Zeiss firms
go to the foundation which, after making grants for scientific research and cultural
activities, distributes the funds back to the firms to finance growth and employee
benefits programs. In 1891 Abbe (and later Roderich Zeiss) bequeathed his shares
in the Zeiss Optical Works factory and the Schott Glassworks to the "Stiftung". In
1923 Schott also added his stock shares in the Glass Works to the foundation.
Among the first notable optical accomplishments by the Zeiss works were that by
1870 Abbe had independently reinvented image erecting Porro prisms (sometimes
referred to as the "Porro-Abbe" design), and by 1873 a prototype instrument had
been completed. However, due to the limitations imposed by available crown glass
at the time Abbe did not proceed much further until later in his career. The original
prism design was developed by an Italian Ignazio Porro (1801-1875). By 1888
Schott improved the optical characteristics of Crown glass such that Abbe
resurrected an earlier project, by 1893 he had created and patented (back dated
to July 9 at the German Imperial Patent Office) a 8x 20mm "binocular telescope
with increased objective separation". The significant improvements over then
competing designs being that he employed the improved glass prisms in an air
spaced fashion in the form of the now traditional Porro binocular permitting a
wider separation of the doublet objective lenses thereby resulting in markedly
improved depth perception. This patent remained in force until 1908. The mass
production of prism binoculars by Zeiss then began in 1894.
By the end of the century Zeiss had negotiated limited partnerships with overseas
companies including "Bausch and Lomb" of Rochester, N.Y., an American firm to
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By 1900 Zeiss employs 1070 people. In 1903 Abbe retired from active
management due to ill health, he would die on 14 January 1905 and was
succeeded by Prof. Dr. Siegfried Czapski.
On 24 June 1904 the issuing certificate for a new Zeiss trademark was issued; this
logo was fashioned with "Carl Zeiss" within in the border of an achromatic doublet
lens outline designed by a consultant Erich Kuithan (b. 1875, d 1917). Kuithan was
an accomplished artist and designer residing in Jena since 1903. This trademark
was to become world famous and remained in use throughout World War II. It
remained the corporate trademark employed by Zeiss Jena (with some protest
from the West German Zeiss) until the reunification of Germany and the Zeiss
companies in the 1991.
By World War I, Zeiss had established the "Carl Zeiss, Jena Optische Werkstaette"
with marketing branches in Berlin, Frankfurt, Vienna, London, and Hamburg with
other sales agents around the world. Other firms offered Zeiss products including:
Eastman Kodak who manufactured a Zeiss "Anastigmat" lens under license for its
cameras; and Ross Ltd. of London. From shortly before World War I, up to World
War II the Carl Zeiss firm established subsidiaries in European countries to
produce optics; some of these (particularly between the wars) produced military
optics which might have aroused international concern. It is not unusual to find
the traditional Zeiss trademark with the city of origin listed ("Petersburg" Russia
for example in place of Jena on the logo, or "Zeiss Nedinsco") as being outside of
Germany. It is ironic that the systems manufactured by subsidiaries in European
countries might have then been employed to equip the Wehrmacht and SS armies
that would later occupy them.
Franz A. Meyer (b. June 6, 1868 Hamburg - d. May 29, 1933 at Jena) became the
first college educated engineer employed at the Optical Workshops at Jena; a
person of his qualifications was deemed necessary by Abbe for the design and
construction of large astronomical instruments although he played part in many
other areas of production at Jena.
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Among the areas of prominent growth in the sciences was the field of astronomy;
demand for larger and more complicated telescopes and mountings could be met
only by a firm with well integrated resources. Among the areas that Zeiss
pioneered and dominated before World War II was the development of
planetarium instruments - even though these were never really a profit center for
Zeiss, it was a matter of social responsibility and corporate pride that caused Zeiss
to continue production. A concept put forward in 1913 by Dr. Max Wolf, Director of
the Heidelberg Observatory. The device was patented by Zeiss in 1922, and their
first planetarium instrument (in the world) was placed into public service in 21
October 1923 at the new German Museum at Munich. A planetarium instrument is
housed in the center of a room with a hemispherically domed ceiling; the
instrument projects points of light to the ceiling to simulate the night sky from
various perspectives (seasonal, or historical views of the Earth-sky relationship).
This instrument is single handedly responsible for motivating many young people
to explore and understand astronomy and celestial navigation. Even after World
War II both Zeiss companies would establish planetarium production at their
headquarters, and their domes would figure prominently in the skyline of their
factories.
Before the turn of the century in order to facilitate cabling information and the
placing of orders, most common Zeiss products bore code names which clearly
identified the product. By 1902 Carl Zeiss was pioneering new advances with
camera lenses, introducing names that remain respected today by the modern
descendants such as the "Tessar", a lens introduced in 1902 which was marketed
as the "eagle's eye". Giant 60mm, 80mm and even 110mm aperture binoculars
introduced for the consumer market in the 1920's bore the names "Starmorbi",
"Asembi", "Asenglar". A particular 80mm telescope with an alt-azimuth stand,
fitted wood storage case, and accessories might carry the name "Asestaron", while
the same telescope on another mount would bear another name.
After considering the efficiency in low light applications of visual optics producing a
7mm diameter exit pupil, Zeiss introduced the first 7x 50mm binoculars in 1910.
This formula remains the world standard for marine and astronomy uses. By 1914
Zeiss had introduced the 7x50 "Binoctar" binocular which was to become the
model in terms of optical arrangement, and external appearance for generations of
marine and low light binoculars to come.
Carl Zeiss employed a number of persons whose names have become familiar to
those who use optical instruments. Albert Koenig and his team are known for
designs of telescopic objectives, oculars, and other optical devices. Heinrich Erfle
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(b. 1884 - d. 1923) who in 1917 Patented a practical design for a wide angle
ocular that since 1918 has appeared in many binoculars, and telescopes.
Possibly to avoid past or future legal litigation, after World War I Carl Zeiss Jena
established a distributor in New York "Bennett & Co." at 155 West 23rd Street,
New York City operated by a Carl Zeiss Jena employee. In December, 1925 this
organization was incorporated as "Carl Zeiss, Inc." at 485 - 5th Avenue, N.Y., N.Y.
Regional representative agent offices were then established in Chicago, and Los
Angeles. Interestingly enough Carl Zeiss Inc. continued doing business in New
York throughout World War II; after December 1941 selling all remaining imported
merchandise and providing service as possible, and eventually becoming involved
with the manufacture of products. Throughout this time it remained under the
management of Dr. Karl Bauer, the corporations' first president and a citizen of
Germany.
The growing production capability at Jena continued into diverse areas including
manufacture of automobile acetylene (by 1921 electrical) headlights beginning in
1911 which were ground of crystal glass with a silver plated parabolic reflector. By
October of 1912 this was incorporated into "The Auto Department". Shortly after
World War I the demand for these components increased growing to between
1927 and 1929 with production expanding into related areas of spot lamps, and
fog light head lamps. But, by 1933 Zeiss sales had declined to insignificance as
may other companies entered the market, at times with improved designs, and at
far lower prices.
By 1913 Dr. Hans Lehmann at the Ernemann Werke at Dresden prototyped a very
high speed movie camera (marketed by the Instrument Department of Zeiss Ikon
as the "Zeitlupe") that produced images that when played back on a conventional
projector, it allowed the study of motion. The original hand driven commercial
camera operated at about 300 frames per second but, with improvements over the
years Zeiss eventually produced cameras capable of many thousands of images
per second. By 1926 the Ernemann Werke in Dresden was acquired fully by Zeiss
Ikon. Zeiss Ikon would grow to also include the Ica factory in Dresden, two Goerz
factories in Berlin (which also made searchlights, medical instruments), and the
Contessa Werke in Stuttgart.
By 1923 Carl Zeiss Jena manpower was up to about 5000 employees. And in spite
of the worldwide economic recession and depression of the 1920's the Zeiss
company continued to grow.
In 1849 Moritz Carl Hensoldt (b. 1821 - d 1903) and his brother-in-law Carl
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Kellner (known best for his eyepiece design) began a business for the fabrication
of telescopes. By 1850 Hensoldt formed his own company "M. Hensoldt & Soehne
AG" for the manufacture of optical instruments. By 1928, the Hensoldt company
with its factory in Wetzlar had the Carl Zeiss company as a shareholder. Zeiss
thereby acquired a partnership with a manufacturer best known for their roof
prism binoculars introduced in 1897, and in 1905 the "Dialyt" series of Abbe-
Koenig in line prism binoculars, and rifle scopes. Hence the similarity between the
appearance of traditional Hensoldt roof prism binoculars made since about 1905
and several Carl Zeiss roof prism products up to today. Improvements continued,
including the 1933 shift from binocular housing construction of brass and zinc to
light weight metals including aluminum and magnesium.
Zeiss had become involved in camera lens design and fabrication giving the world
such famous names as "Tessar", "Biotar" and "Sonnar" (the latter developed by
Dr. Ludwig Bertele - another famous name in optics design). In 1926 Carl Zeiss
Jena combined five companies including "Contessa" to produce cameras and
lenses. 1926 "Zeiss Ikon, AG" based in Dresden began to produce box cameras; in
1932 Carl Zeiss entered the 35mm camera market (pioneered by rival Leica) with
its first "Contax" range finder cameras also built in Dresden. These in prewar and
postwar configurations earned worldwide respect and admiration leading to the
development of the Contarex and the Contax RTS camera series (some of which
are now fabricated by Yashica-Kyocera of Japan under license to Zeiss
specifications). Lenses made by Carl Zeiss were made for sale with cameras
manufactured by other firms such as Rollei and Exacta at Dresden. Zeiss lenses
made in Germany and by Yashica continue as the choice for several camera
manufacturing firms including "Hasselblad" of Sweden - even though in the mid
1970 Hasselblad seriously contemplated offering "Nikon" lenses. And Zeiss lenses
to this day also remain available for use with many commercial products (including
copiers, photogrammetric cameras, comparators, etc.).
The 1930's were an exciting time of change and discovery in the world, and
exhilarating time of productivity for Carl Zeiss Jena Astronomical Instruments
section. By 1930 the first Planetarium had opened in North America; the "Adler"
Zeiss Planetarium in Chicago. This was to introduce several generations of
youngsters and adults to a rare treat - a tour of the heavens. To this day Zeiss
Planetarium instruments continue to inspire awe at facilities around the world
including that planetarium projector at the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum
"Einstein Planetarium" in Washington, D.C.
By 1933 Zeiss had manufactured several proven refractors of the "E", "A" and
"AS" achromatic doublet designs, and apochromat triplets of the "U.V." and
"B" (Koenig) designs. These telescopes were offered in apertures of up to 65cm
(25.6 inch) aperture f16 requiring a 14.5 meter diameter dome, a 60cm (23.62
inch) "Doppelrefraktor" (double refractor) f16 was available employing two
objectives mounted in parallel within one tube - potentially the largest "binocular"
ever made, a 36cm "Dreifacher" employing three telescopes (a "trinocular"?) with
two U.V. triplets of 36cm with a 30cm "E" objective guidescope for astrographic
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uses, and numerous smaller refractors of 40cm, 30cm, 25cm down to 6cm
achromatic models for use by amateurs and schools. Large pedestal or tripod
mounted binoculars of from 60mm up to 15cm with 20x, 40 and 80x magnification
oculars mounted in a turret were in production. Mirror telescopes of Newtonian,
Cassegrain and Schmidt designs included models up to 1.25 meter aperture in
single, or double or even triple configurations for astrographic applications. Zenith
telescopes, spectrographic instruments and attachments, micrometers,
photometers, comparators, coelostats of at least up to 65 cm diameter, and
sundials of up to at least 90cm diameter rounded out the product line. And of
course the production of telescopes was accompanied by the fabrication of mounts
and drives to move them, and the domes to house them.
And Smakula was also involved in the development of crystals grown from
solutions in a laboratory environment. By the end of the 1930's he had developed
the first KRS five mixed crystal (thallium iodide-thallium bromide) which remains
in use in infrared technology applications.
By the mid 1930's Zeiss offered a very wide selection of camera lenses and filters
for use with print, and movie cameras, including some particularly unusual models
such as the "Quartz-Anastigmat" of 120mm or 250mm focal length described by
Zeiss as a "rapid special lens for criminological and scientific photography
particularly with ultra-violet light".
The 1937 literature indicated Zeiss had established marketing branches in Berlin,
Vienna, Cologne, Hamburg, Brussels, London, New York, Los Angeles (under New
York), Buenos Aires, Rio de Janeiro, Sao Paulo, and Tokyo with other firms acting
as sales agents in Montreal, Calcutta, Bombay, Madras, Singapore, Melbourne and
Sydney, Bangkok, Cairo and Haifa, Johannesburg, Stockholm, Amsterdam, Paris,
Milan, Madrid, Shanghai.
By 1937 Zeiss listed about 20 high quality monocular, binocular and stereo
microscope configurations in their literature. And they also marketed a wide
selection of optional attachments and illuminators including at least 33 objectives
of from 2X to 120X (including six Fluorite models), and about 20 eyepieces of
Huygens, Orthoscopic, and Compensating designs of from 3X to 30X.
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It was the quality of design and manufacture of products by the German firms
including Zeiss, Hensoldt, and Leitz (now also marketed as Leica) to name a few
that over the course of the early half of the century served to cement the
international perception of the preeminent quality of German optics mechanical
design and manufacture as a whole.
Carl Zeiss Jena had become a Social-Democratic bulwark. Yet from 1933 and
through World War II the management of the Carl Zeiss industrial complex had
generally supported the Nazi regime as did most major German industries,
although there are examples of personal risk taken in favor of high moral
principles. By 1937 the corporate priorities were obviously changing. In Dresden
where camera production had been dominant, civilian products and development
were gradually discouraged in favor of those products such as bombsights which
met the more immediate goals of the government.
When World War II began (arguably) in September 1939 there was an air of
invincibility in Germany, and in keeping with traditional practice, most Zeiss
products (and those of other manufacturers in Germany) had proudly borne the
trademark, and city of their origin of the product. However, soon it became clear
that the Allies were able to identify and bomb targets in Germany. So, in February
1942 the German Armaments Ministry assigned three letter code marks to those
companies engaged in fabricating military hardware. The codes identified the
manufacturer, and their facility of origin. Carl Zeiss Jena products employed code
marks including "blc"; Leica "beh", and so on.
There were forced foreign laborers ("Fremdarbeiter") brought to work at Carl Zeiss
Jena and other German manufacturing facilities. And it is certain that not all
Germans were sympathetic to the Nazi regime, in fact there are known examples
of intervention by the Zeiss Personnel Department to obtain the release from
prison of foreign laborers. Some Germans might warn newcomers to "what what
you say" around certain other Germans who might be Nazi party supporters. One
foreign laborer at Jena recalls visiting a couple whose son was at the Russian front
and listening to the English news from London; he was later warned such conduct
could lead to the death penalty.
Zeiss optics figured prominently in the success of many weapons systems. For
examples there were the pressure resistant U-Boat targeting bearing transmitter
binoculars, ultra wide angle large aperture binoculars, the stereoscopic range
finders and sights used to direct fearsome weapons such as the outstanding 88mm
anti-tank guns. One of the most published early photographs of the war shows
Adolf Hitler outside of Warsaw Poland in September of 1939 observing through a
pair of artillery director periscoping binoculars (commonly used by a battery
director to evaluate and correct artillery ranging) as the city is leveled by German
artillery and air forces.
However, with the turning tide as the end of the "Third Reich" approached, the
advancing allied forces would discover interesting products of German research
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and development efforts in many areas including optics. Among these was the
"liberation" of at least one 200mm binocular made by Zeiss which weighed about
1200 lbs! These remain in the custody of the U.S. Government in Washington,
D.C. and are completing a comprehensive restoration by Mr. Kevin Kuhne in New
Jersey even though there are no plans to display them.
Intricate examples of complex lens making were found bearing Zeiss code marks
indicating production after November 1944, even though the need for such
sophistication and refinement on one product in a nation beset by lack of raw
materials and manpower could be questioned. We have an example of a finely
crafted hand held Zeiss 7x50 binocular with very sophisticated optics, two custom
made sets of filters, finely sewn leather case with straps and eyepiece rain guard
(engraved "Benutzer" - for the use of) that was made at a time while other Zeiss
hand held military binoculars made were being shipped with painted prism
housings instead of the pebble grain exteriors and no accessories.
Major German cities were bombed during the war. Stuttgart for example was
bombed in 1944 with the central district being obliterated while the Contessa
factory in the Henslack district suffered only minor damage. Jena was bombed by
the U.S. 8th Air Force several times during the course of the war, with increasing
severity. In one bomb raid of 19 March 1945 witnessed by Lucas VanHilst "I was
standing outside a zig-zag "Schutzgraben" looking up to 'my friends', the first
wave of whom just passed by so to speak. Then suddenly a German soldier on
leave grabbed me by the arm. "Mach' schnell, 'runter!!". The suction of an
explosion threw me down the stairs. He may well have saved my life. In the center
section several persons were killed or wounded. The last bombardment was the
worst. The sight of carts loaded with dead bodies was shocking - as it would
anywhere. That air attack did substantial damage to some Zeiss and also to Schott
buildings (where one of my Dutch friends was killed). The rather small "Alte Stadt"
was totaled. Visiting in 1994 it still was a sad sight."
There is evidence that the disruptions of raw materials and transport were having
some chain reaction effect at Jena and those who depended on products coming
from Jena. In March the completion and delivery to the military of several new
"Jagdtiger" (or "Hunting Tiger") tanks were being held up by the late delivery of
the special shock resistant (the tank had a 128mm gun!), precision sight
components from Carl Zeiss Jena.
It appears that towards the end of the war in Europe one of the last decisions
made in the selection of targets for the allied air forces was whether to bomb
Schweinfurt (known for its ball bearing production, and a October 1943 bombing
campaign that resulted in tragic losses for the U.S. Army Air Forces and the
German Luftwaffe), or Jena with its Zeiss and Jena works. Schweinfurt was
selected even though by then more than 35% of its production from the five
factories had been dispersed.
On April 6, 1945 90th Infantry forces of the U.S. Third Army came upon the
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Kaiseroda salt mine near Merkers (a few miles inside the border of Thuringia). The
mine housed currency (including 98 million French francs, 2.7 billion Reichsmarks)
and gold and coin including the entire gold reserves in 550 bags each of 55 to 81
lbs. totaling nearly 250 tons from the Reichsbank in Berlin (including 711 bags
each filled with $25,000 in U.S. $20 gold coins), and silent testament to victims of
the Nazi's: stacks of valuables taken from those at the death camps (jewelry -
wedding rings, watch cases, gold filled glasses, teeth with gold and silver fillings,
etc.), 400 tons of art from Germany and works plundered from conquered nations,
dozens of complex microscopes and other optical instruments made by Zeiss and
others. The entire 712th tank Battalion and the 357th Infantry regiment were also
diverted to guard the mine in preparation for removal of the items to the
Reichsbank building in Frankfurt.
One humorous aside to this was that on the morning of April 12, Generals
Eisenhower, Bradley, Patton and Maj. Gen. Manton Eddy took the 1,600 foot
elevator ride down into the shaft. When the elevator doors opened at the bottom
of the shaft, a Private on guard stumbled to salute, and in the tomblike stillness
was heard to mutter "Jesus Christ!".
Among the most disconcerting discoveries made by the unprepared allied soldiers
were the concentration death and labor camps. On April 11 U.S. Third Army XX
Corp forces overran Buchenwald (near Weimar and Jena) where some prisoners
were employed as slave labor for the manufacture and assembly of components
including military binoculars with Zeiss code marks; on April 11 prisoners were
observed throwing binoculars over the fence to passing allied soldiers.
The U.S. Third Army continued its advance, and on April 13 the regimental combat
team 80th Division cleared Jena where they found the Carl Zeiss factory complex
had sustained what they described as "surprisingly little effective bomb damage".
By then the original large planetarium test dome was gone, even though nearby
on another roof top a small telescope observatory dome remained. The Yalta
agreement fashioned between the allies political leadership had determined that
Germany would be partitioned into four areas, each under control of a major ally
(England, France, Russia, U.S.A). All of the Zeiss facilities but the Contessa works
in Stuttgart (occupied by the French but designated for U.S. control) were in what
would become the Russian zone of occupation; and so at Jena over the course of
several days the U.S. forces proceeded to evacuate manufacturing assets and
documents.
At least some foreign laborers went with the U.S. Third Army to act in capacities
such as "member-translator" of outfits such as the "Civic Affairs Team TA-4"
traveling as far east as Vimperk (Winterburg), Czechia. With the rapid advances
into areas being newly occupied the letter of the law or procedure were not always
adhered to; just imagine running into a person in U.S. army uniform carrying a
carbine, with a Dutch passport!
The members of the Carl Zeiss Jena board of management and the most vital staff
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including Professor Dr. Ing. Walther Bauersfeld (1879-1959) Scientific Head with
the company since 1908, Dr. Ing. Heinz Kuppenbender, Professor Dr. Joos, Paul
Henrichs, and about 130 engineers and technicians were evacuated to western
Germany occupied by allied forces to what would become the Federal Republic of
Germany. The evacuees were advised by the American officials (reportedly in an
early version of "make them an offer they can not refuse") that they would be
moved to the American Zone of occupation; there are accounts that some went
voluntarily and others were given no choice. Army trucks were assigned to move
the families who were afforded only enough time to pack a suitcase. The 65 year
old Frau Bauersfeld was allowed to take (as a last minute concession) one
armchair for the long ride in the back of the truck. Months later, with the help of a
neighbor and some luck one of Prof. Bauersfelds daughters moved from Jena the
family Steinway piano on a railway car to Heidenheim. Zeiss Administrator Joos
went on to the United States.
Within as little a few weeks after the fighting concluded, some Zeiss facilities were
back at work. The Contessa works at Stuttgart resumed production of Ikonta and
Nettar film cameras. German military and civilian optics of the period remain
among the most sought after "war trophies" taken home by occupying forces; to
this day many people represent undocumented binoculars as being the personal
Zeiss of Field Marshal Erwin Rommel.
After the war, the "Zeiss Stiftung von Jena" was established at Heidenheim with
the "Opton-Optische Werstatte Oberkochen GmbH" factory at Oberkochen on the
banks of the Kocher River near Stuttgart, with the Schott Glass Works subsidiary
located at Mainz. The most important provisions of the organization are:
The Carl-Zeiss-Stiftung is the sole owner of Carl Zeiss and Schott Glaswerke
Financial resources must be obtained independently by Zeiss Stifftungs own
efforts
No external influences e. g. by private persons, and no capital from external
sources or the government
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Shortly after the war Carl Zeiss, Inc. of the United States resumed the import of
products from Zeiss Jena and Zeiss Oberkochen. And by 1960 the U.S. based
company was owned by Carl Zeiss of West Germany. Dr. Bauersfeld continued to
work until he passed away in 1959, at age 80!
While Jena had resumed the manufacture of some products (by 1947 binoculars
were back on line) it was on June 1, 1948 that the East Germans now independent
of Carl Zeiss Oberkochen formally reorganized the original factory in Jena as a
state owned corporation to be known as "V.E.B Carl Zeiss Jena" (peoples owned
corporation). The reorganized Carl Zeiss Jena under the direction of the East
German government gradually resumed production of microscopes, measuring
instruments, astronomical telescopes, photographic lenses, military optics. By
1949 in Dresden cameras such as the Contax II single lens reflex with a new
42mm threaded mount, and camera lenses such as the "Sonnar" were in
production with all internal and external air to glass surfaces being "T" anti-
reflection coated. The occasional similarity of appearance, of design, and the
interchange ability of Zeiss Jena and Oberkochen components such as components
for microscopes, and cameras was more than by accident. For example, some
binoculars marketed by Carl Zeiss Oberkochen (bearing the trademark "Optron")
were actually made by Carl Zeiss Jena.
As diplomatic relations between East and West were closing, both Zeiss companies
sought out new sources. During the time up to about 1952 there were hopes for a
German reunification and so the Zeiss counterparts actually worked to help each
other recover to some degree. The hopes for reunification were dashed as the East
German political leadership assumed firm control of all commercial enterprises;
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from now until reunification the Communist Party and its system of promotion by
political achievement which selected the top management would determine the
course of company policy.
By 1954 the Zeiss Jena works had reestablished their ability to produce world class
planetarium projectors, the first completed unit being delivered in 1954 to the
Volgograd Planetarium in Russia.
In West Germany camera and camera lens production were underway at the
"Contessa" camera factory in Stuttgart. In May 1950 at the Photokina camera
show, Zeiss introduced their new "Contax IIa" 35mm rangefinder camera bearing
the "Zeiss Ikon Stuttgart" mark.
By 1953 it could be argued that microsurgery was rendered possible with Zeiss
Oberkochen surgical microscopes. In 1953 Oberkochen introduced a publication
"Zeiss Information" to highlight the latest innovations at Zeiss. In 1954 the
Oberkochen facility produced its first binocular: an innovative very compact
8x30mm Porro Prism model made possible in part by their development of the air
spaced objective. In 1958 Zeiss Oberkochen introduced an improved wide angle
eyepiece designed by Horst Kohler and Helmut Knutti; designated by the binocular
model designation suffix "B" (for Brillentrager spectacle wearer) this allowed
persons wearing prescription spectacles or sunglasses to see the field of view with
none or little vignetting. Also in 1956 they developed a new flexible gasket system
for their central focus binoculars which substantially improved the sealing of the
interior optics against dust, dew, light rain. Beginning in 1962 space missions are
flown with Zeiss optics; Jena providing for Russia, and Oberkochen the West. And
now the unified Carl Zeiss continues to do so to this very day.
By 1954, Carl Zeiss Oberkochen had acquired a majority stock holding in Hensoldt.
By 1964 Zeiss of West Germany had moved all binocular production to its Hensoldt
subsidiary works in Wetzlar. Then in 1968 Hensoldt became a fully owned member
of the Carl Zeiss Oberkochen group. To this day, binoculars and riflescopes made
there bear either the Zeiss or Hensoldt trademarks - the Hensoldt trademarked
products being offered primarily for the military and law enforcement markets.
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Binocular innovation by Carl Zeiss at Oberkochen and Wetzlar continued with the
introduction of an even more compact in line Schmidt (or Pechan) prism design for
binoculars in 1964 bearing the trademarked "Dialyt" designation. While Zeiss had
a tradition of offering "theater glasses" (low magnification, compact binoculars for
use at concerts, etc.) dating back to before World War I, it was in the early 1960's
that Zeiss introduced high quality pocket size "compact binoculars", that could fit
easily in to a shirt pocket; the first being an 8x20mm model introduced in 1969.
In the early 1970's tensions between the two firms between the two firms peaked
(as they did between East and West) with each of both companies claiming the
exclusive rights to the patents, trademarks and traditions of "Carl Zeiss". This
culminated in a series of legal battles around the globe, among these was one
resolved by U.S. Supreme Court granting rights to the name "Zeiss" to the West
German Zeiss firm. As a result of court decisions, and marketing agreements
marketed for products sold in the United States the trademark "ZEISS" or "CARL
ZEISS" appeared only on products manufactured by Carl Zeiss based in
Oberkochen, West Germany.
The bold logo employed by Zeiss West Germany products until 1991
The East German products manufactured by the Jena firm were marketed in the
United States only under the "aus JENA", "JENOPTIK", or "JENOPTIK JENA"
trademark. The original "CARL ZEISS JENA" trademark appeared on East German
products sold in the former communist block nations, and in Canada, England, and
some other countries. And to add to the confusion, in some countries both
trademarks were recognized. However, both East and West continued to employ
the name "Carl Zeiss" throughout the postwar era until the reunification of 1990
wherever possible.
Zeiss Jena maintained an office in New York City, with distribution of microscopes
(and incidentally - planetarium instruments) through a private company in the mid
U.S., binoculars and microscopes through a company in Pennsylvania, and
surveying instruments such as Theodolites through another firm in Florida. These
firms were completely independent of one another.
In 1976 the the West German Chancellor Schmidt presented the Carl Zeiss
Oberkochen Mark IV Planetarium projector to the National Air and Space Museum
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"Einstein Planetarium" in Washington, D.C.. Among the invited guests were Ruth
Van Hilst b. Bauersfeld daughter of the former head developer of Zeiss
planetarium instruments. The Zeiss instrument remains one of the highlights at
the most visited attraction in the United States.
Zeiss West Germany continued to set the world standards for microscopy in many
areas. In 1973 Carl Zeiss West Germany announced the first high precision UMM
500 3D coordinate measuring machine. In 1976 Zeiss announced the first
microscopes specifically designed for the examination of living cells, these were
the IM 35 and ICM 405. In 1982 Carl Zeiss West Germany announced the world's
first LSM Laser Scan Microscope - the quantum leap in microscopy. And then in
1984 a new era in electron microscopy was introduced, the EM 902 with energy
filter.
In 1995 the NASA space probe "Galileo" reached Jupiter and then on July 13 it
dispatched a probe into Jupiter's atmosphere. A "Helium Abundance Detector"
interfereometer on the probe made by Zeiss at Oberkochen also contributed to the
success of the effort during the 75 minute descent. Delivered by Zeiss in 1984,
this was the first instrument in space made by Zeiss at Oberkochen, and so far is
the farthest that Zeiss has traveled from Earth.
All the while Carl Zeiss Jena continued to make innovative products including
electro-optical equipment for distance and height measurements in sports events
including the Olympic Games of Moscow in 1980, Los Angeles in 1984, and Seoul
in 1988. Also developed was the "Cosmorama" computer controlled planetarium
projector in 1984, and later the "Fundus" camera and their workstations for
ophthalmology. The value of the western currencies figured prominently in what
success the eastern products enjoyed in the west.
On June 1, 1990 the "ROSAT" X-ray satellite was launched from Cape Canaveral;
at the time it featured the world's smoothest mirrors and was the largest X-ray
telescope ever made (83.4cm aperture); it conducted the first X-ray survey of all
the skies.
Carl Zeiss West Germany grew to become the world's largest optics research and
development firm with marketing organizations in at least 28 Western countries. It
features state of the art microscopes, several of the world's largest or most
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In 1990 Carl Zeiss Oberkochen introduced the "20x60 S" binocular; this employed
a Zeiss developed, revolutionary "cardanic" dampened stabilization mechanism
that does not rely on electronic or hydraulic mechanisms. The 20x60 S allows a
person to hand hold the binocular with such apparent steadiness by the reduction
of vibration that one has the sense of looking though a much lower magnification
binocular of 4x or so! The 20x60 development has earned for Carl Zeiss the "R&D
Magazine" award for developing one of the 100 most important technical
innovations of 1992.
The German reunification of 1990 was symbolically realized with the literal
collapse of the Berlin Wall, and the practical fall of Communism. But while the
West German economy was robust, the East German economy was so stagnant
that the transition has been turbulent and fraught with uncertainty for displaced
workers. At the time of the reunification Carl Zeiss Oberkochen had a logical desire
to acquire only the best technical and most historic assets of the East German
Zeiss firm. Zeiss Oberkochen then had approximately 31,700 employees who were
generating $2.18 billion in sales; Oberkochen did not wish to acquire Carl Zeiss
Jena liabilities (as most West German firms were hesitant to do) such as the staff
and pension expenses for a grossly overstaffed (totaling about 70,000) and under
productive (sales of about $390 million) work force. Furthermore, Oberkochen
wished to avoid manufacturing and personnel redundancies. And so an initial
merger plan was not accepted by the Carl Zeiss Jena firm.
Since shortly after World War II Zeiss Oberkochen products bore the trademark
"ZEISS West Germany". Within weeks after the reunification of 1990 new Zeiss
letterhead and products bore the trademark "ZEISS Germany".
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The logo employed by a unified Zeiss for products made after 1991
When economic realities settled in at a now near bankrupt Carl Zeiss Jena (and
other eastern manufacturers across a united Germany), negotiations were
concluded by June of 1991 with Oberkochen to acquire only certain selected assets
including the original facilities Jena. However, only a little more than 10% of
Jena's peak 70,000 person labor force of 1989 (down to about 27,000 in May
1991) would be incorporated into Zeiss Oberkochen. And even then contrary to
optimistic plans, the remaining labor force would be reduced even further over the
next few years.
The Eisenberg facility continued with the development and growth of synthetic
crystals to support its own products. By 1991 Jena offered at least 19 different
materials grown from melts and solutions, having made something on the order of
250 tons of materials in its recent 30 years of production. One of the most
important products for the advanced amateur and institutional astronomy markets
to come of this was the growth of high quality Calcium Fluoride (CaF2) crystals
from Stockbarger melts which made possible the "APQ" Apochromatic objectives
that Jena offered for sale in 105mm, 130mm and 150mm apertures; a 206mmf8
"APQ" telescope was advertised but Zeiss was never able to complete a single
instrument before the small telescope manufacturing group at Jena was cut back
further. And at least one 80mm x 500mm "APQ" objective was made, possibly for
use in terrestrial and compact astronomical telescopes, and in the large binoculars
previously manufactured at the Eisfeld plant.
Since the reunification, the groups involved with research and development, and
the growth of synthetic crystals and fluorides, and marketing have been
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The group at the Jena works who were involved in production of astronomical
telescopes was retained, while the planetarium production team at Oberkochen
was moved to and incorporated with existing Jena facilities. The production of
large, observatory telescopes continued at Jena with the first joint Zeiss telescope
project being a contact signed in November of 1991 to produce a 1 meter
telescope (the 13th instrument of the design made at Jena since the first one
made in 1971) with control system and a 12.5 meter dome for the European
Space Agency. The Carl Zeiss Jena GmbH Division of Astronomical Instruments
worked with the Carl Zeiss, Oberkochen APS Division.
In mid April of 1992 at the "Opto 92" European optoelectrics symposium in Paris,
the optical metrology departments of Carl Zeiss, Oberkochen and Carl Zeiss Jena
displayed their products as a unified Zeiss for the first time. Also in 1992 the
publication "Zeiss Information" and the "Jena Review" were combined to produce
the publication: "Zeiss Information with Jena Review" bearing the copyright logo
and "Carl Zeiss, Oberkochen, and Carl Zeiss Jena, GmbH, Jena". Also in 1992 the
"Reta-Sport A" measuring instruments was announced brining in a new generation
of distance measuring instruments geared especially to sporting events such as
those held at the Olympic Games.
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Zeiss Sales Volume and Employees Worldwide Trend from 1989/90 to 1994/95
For 1995, the tradition of innovation continued with the introduction by Zeiss of
the "Axiophot 2", the world's first computer controlled photomicroscope.
The shareholders' agreement for the founding of the new joint venture "LEO
Electron Microscopy Ltd." (LEO) was formally signed on September 12, 1995,
ahead of the originally envisaged schedule. LEO officially commenced trading on
October 2, 1995 following the approval of the German antitrust authorities
(Bundeskartellamt, Berlin). The contract incorporating the new company was
signed at the German Society of Electron Microscopy annual meeting in Leipzig by
the CEOs of the parties, Dr. Peter Grassmann (Carl Zeiss) and Dr. Markus Rauh
(Leica). A parallel announcement of the founding of the new company was made
at the EMAG conference held at the University of Birmingham.
Leica and Carl Zeiss each hold a 50% share in LEO, with operating subsidiaries in
the UK, Germany, France and the USA. Dr. Peter Grassmann, CEO Carl Zeiss was
nominated Chairman of the Board of the new company; Raghuvir Kalbag, a UK
national, Chief Executive Officer. R. Kalbag comes to the company from the
international headquarters of Leica in St. Gallen where he is a Member of the
Corporate Management, and brings with him experience in the field of electron
microscopy going back to 1976. They were supported by a management team
drawn primarily from Carl Zeiss and Leica. Worldwide representation is provided
through the existing Leica and Carl Zeiss sales channels and a network of
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independent dealers.
Carl Zeiss dissolved their amateur telescope division located at Jena in the Fall of
1995.
With the high living and salary standards of the West German economy, and the
pressures on that economy to subsidize and modernize the former East Germany,
and need to meet the competition from abroad (most notably from Japan, and the
United States), there has never been so many challenges to the once dominant
Carl Zeiss firm. In fact 1996 finally showed a profit for the unified Zeiss thereby
indicating a good measure of recovery from the impact of unification.
There is little doubt that Zeiss will continue their traditions of excellence and
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innovation. Today the Carl Zeiss trademark remains a symbol of traditional values
and innovation in optics technology.
__________________________________
The author of this article (Martin C. Cohen) can not accept credit for much more
than compiling the information in this paper, as credit for the content actually
better placed with a variety of sources of knowledge and enthusiasm. Among
these are the contributors to the "Zeiss Historica" society journal (most notably by
Larry Gubas, Nicholas Grossman, Wolfgang Pfeiffer, William Stone, Joachim Arnz,
Charles Barringer, Thomas Schreiner, Maurice Zubatkin, Hans-Jurgen-Kuc, and
many other fine authors) and other publications geared to enthusiasts and
historians, and ultimately to the current and former employees of the Carl Zeiss
organizations including Lucas VanHilst, and their families.
Corrections or additions are invited. The writer also wishes to clarify that this by
no means a comprehensive discussion, and that many individuals deserving credit
for innovation and administrative accomplishments at Zeiss are worthy of mention.
Contents Copyright 1994-98 Used by Permission of Company Seven, all Rights Reserved.
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