Paul Bernard Vogel

Paul Bernard Vogel was a Swiss industrialist who owned the Solvil et Titus watch manufacture.

Business life

In 1930, Vogel acquired the Solvil et Titus and Paul Ditisheim brands from their founder Paul Ditisheim.[1]

Vogel moved the company's headquarters to Geneva[2] where he became the chairman of the Salon Montres et Bijoux (the Watch and Jewelry's Fair), the most prestigious association of Swiss watch manufacturers and jewelers of the time.

By the 1950s Vogel, feeling the shift in consummer's habits, decided to divide its brands into two. For one brand, the company kept producing the luxury watches it was famous for. For the other brand, it started producing lower-cost watches that fit the emerging mass consumption markets. Thanks to this new orientation, Solvil et Titus was instrumental in the development of mechanical and electronic watches.

In 1968, Vogel took the lead of the newly founded Societe des Gardes-Temps SA, a conglomerate of low cost watch manufacturers which was the world's third largest watchmaking company of the time[3] and had a true international dimension (it acquired the American Waltham Watch Company and signed a licensing agreement in 1973 with Elgin Watch – then Swiss watchmaking's biggest foreign investment.[4]

Vogel had foreseen the necessities of broadening the market for watches and of creating an international distribution system and consequently decided to expand Solvil et Titus activities overseas. In the 1970s, surfing on the Asian Tigers economic boom, he sent his son, Paul Vogel, to grow the family business operations in the Asian market.[5] The operation was successful and Solvil became one of the most popular brand in Eastern Asia.[6]

Private life

Born in La Chaux-de-Fonds, the historic birthplace of watchmaking industry.,[7] the son of a prestigious family of industrialist, he married Suzanne Eberhard, the heiress of the prominent Eberhard family. The couple was part of the small social circle of industrialist families that led the Swiss watch industry of the time and they both were prominent members of Geneva's high society. The Vogels were renowned for the various social events they organized.

Paul Bernard was a collector and sponsor of the arts. His extensive art collection comprised works of such foremost artists as Picasso, Matisse, Kees van Dongen, Vuillard, Degas or Caillebotte.

Another of Vogel's passions was orchids. He travelled the world to bring orchid seeds back to Geneva where he cultivated them in a complex of climate-specialised greenhouses in the garden of his lakeside mansion, Le Breuil, in Versoix, Geneva.[8] The orchids were sold in a luxury flower shop named after the estates that still exist today.[9]

gollark: Anyway, it's too late, as our previous ones are already occupying ██% of human visual cortices.
gollark: I have sent this before, you know.
gollark: Yes. Soon my self replicating whiteboard will be ready.
gollark: The most obvious explanation is a secret conspiracy limiting access to powerful whiteboard technologies.
gollark: Somehow that is actually cheaper?

References

  1. History of Solvil et Titus, official website
  2. History of Solvil et Titus, official website
  3. Pierre-Yves Donzé, The statut horloger
  4. Pierre-Yves Donzé, The statut horloger
  5. History of Solvil et Titus, official website
  6. History of Solvil et Titus, official website
  7. Profile of La Chaux-de-Fonds, Switzerland Tourism
  8. the mansion is now the residence of the Japanese embassy to the UN
  9. Archived 2010-01-26 at the Wayback Machine Le Breuil flowers, Geneva
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