Schering AG
Berlin-Wedding, Germany | |
Key people | Hubertus Erlen, last CEO |
---|---|
Products | Gynaecology & Andrology Special therapeutics Diagnostical devices & Nuclear medicine Oncology |
Number of employees | 26,000 (2004) |
Website | www.schering.xyz |

Schering AG was a research-centered
The American pharmaceutical company Schering-Plough, formerly the Schering Corporation, was originally the US subsidiary of Schering AG, and merged with Merck & Co. in 2009.
History
In 1851, Ernst Christian Friedrich Schering opened the Grüne Apotheke (Green Pharmacy) in Berlin's Chausseestraße, and in 1871, converted into the name Chemische Fabrik auf Actien (formerly E. Schering). This date is the company's date of incorporation.
The company grew strongly in the following years. In 1913, the company employed 935 workers, 112
At the beginning of the 1920s, Schering took over the wash and colouring company W. Spindler located in the Berlin district Köpenick. In 1922, the management acquired the majority of shares in the chemical factory Chemischen Fabrik auf Actien (formerly E. Schering) from the Upper Silesian Oberschlesische Kokswerke und Chemische Fabriken . By 1929, Schering had built a new production site in Berlin-Grünau, Cöpenicker Strasse, on a former storage area of the Kahlbaum chemical factory.[1]
In 1937, the companies Kokswerke und Chemische Fabriken AG and the Chemischen Fabrik auf Actien amalgamated with the sister company Schering-Kahlbaum AG and, on the same day, renamed on account of the internationally respected name Schering to Schering Aktiengesellschaft. The pharmaceutical business thus became part of a mining and chemical group, which also produced radiographic products and pesticides.
In 1938, the Scherk company and the Scherk-Haus in Berlin were sold to Schering in the course of the "Aryanization". In July 1942, a camp for foreign forced laborers was built on the factory premises.[2] In 1951, the factory building was repaired after being destroyed in the war.[3]
After the end of the Second World War, the Adlershof factory of Schering AG was located in the Soviet occupation zone and thus in the later German Democratic Republic; this part became the Berlin-Chemie pharmaceutical company.[4]
Schering was the manufacturer of Primodos.
Nazi medical experiments
In May 1999, survivors of Nazi medical experiment filed lawsuits against Bayer AG, Hoechst AG and Schering AG.[5][6]
In 2003, Simon Rozenkier filed a lawsuit against Schering and Bayer concerning the horrific medical "experiments" the companies participated in during the Nazi era.[7] [8] "If there was ever an example of why I titled the book about my Holocaust restitution negotiations in the Clinton administration “Imperfect Justice,” Stuart Eisenstadt wrote, "it is the case of Simon Rozenkier."[9] The lawsuit conflicted with a previous agreement under which $25 million had been set aside for victims of medical experiments, such as Rosenkier. Writing in Forward, lawyer Stuart Eizenstat wrote: "During the allocation process it became painfully evident that we simply did not have enough money to achieve anything like full justice for all of the victims".[10]
Bayer takeover 2006
In March 2006,
At the time of the merger, the company employed more than 26,000 people in 140 subsidiaries worldwide. Schering's annual gross revenue was nearly €5 billion (2003).
Schering AG focused on the business areas of
The largest German manufacturing facility was located in Bergkamen.
References
- ^ "Cöpenicker Straße 51–56". 1929.
- ^ "Braune Flecken auf der Pille". Neues Deutschland. Retrieved 19 February 2023.
- ^ "Heimatverein Steglitz | Orstsgeschichte | Südende". 2011-11-06. Archived from the original on 2011-11-06. Retrieved 2023-03-10.
- ^ "Berlin-Chemie Menarini, Our History". Retrieved October 14, 2023.
- ^ "WWII Survivors Sue German Drug Cos". AP NEWS. Retrieved 2021-03-26.
- ^ Staunton, Denis. "Bayer accused of involvement in Nazi medical experiments on Jews". The Irish Times. Retrieved 2021-03-26.
- from the original on 2010-11-15. Retrieved 2021-03-26.
This year, Mr. Rozenkier filed a lawsuit accusing two German pharmaceutical giants, Bayer and Schering, of providing experts and drugs to Dr. Mengele and other Nazi doctors for sterilizations. What they did to me is beyond right and wrong, said Mr. Rozenkier, who lost his parents and four siblings in the Holocaust. They should be punished. His lawsuit, in Federal District Court in Newark, has created a legal and diplomatic tempest because the German government and German companies insist that there is no place for such litigation now.
- ^ "Rozenkier v. AG Schering, 196 F. App'x 93 (2006) Aug. 2, 2006 · United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit · No. 04-3934 196 F. App'x 93". cite.case.law. Retrieved 2021-03-26.
Notwithstanding his Foundation application, Rozenkier filed suit in the Eastern District of New York against Schering AG and Bayer AG (the "Appellees") on March 25, 2003, alleging that the Appellees had cooperated with the Nazi regime in causing his sterilization, and claiming damages under a number of tort theories, including negligence, infliction of emotional distress, assault and battery, conspiracy, fraud, and breach of the manufacturer's duty to warn, as well as violations of international law.
- ^ Eizenstat, Stuart (December 5, 2003). "Imperfect Justice, or None at All: 'Legal Peace' on Holocaust Claims". The Forward. Retrieved 2021-03-26.
If there was ever an example of why I titled the book about my Holocaust restitution negotiations in the Clinton administration "Imperfect Justice," it is the case of Simon Rozenkier. Every fiber of our beings screams out for justice for Rozenkier, a slave laborer and survivor of the infamous death march to Buchenwald who was sterilized by Dr. Mengele's diabolical medical experiments. But how to best provide that justice some 60 years later?
- ^ Eizenstat, Stuart (2003-12-05). "Imperfect Justice, or None at All: 'Legal Peace' on Holocaust Claims". Forward. The Forward Association. Retrieved 2021-09-10.
- ^ Schering AG press release. Feb 20, 2006 2005 a Record Year for Schering AG
- ^ ISBN 9781137005908
- ^ Marie-Eve Laforte for First Word Pharma. July 12th, 2006 Bayer completes acquisition of Schering AG
- ^ Griffiths, Katherine (25 June 2006). "Bayer acquires Schering in €17bn deal". The Daily Telegraph.
- ^ Staff Pharmaceutical Technology. April 13, 2015 Healthy appetite - the ten biggest pharmaceutical takeovers