

In the early 1950s, a legal battle flared about who had the right to use the name Toneking and New King.
Keilwerth tenor sax registration#
The Staatsanzeiger for Hessen lists his registration for the commercial register on July 12th 1948.īy this time more than 80 people were producing saxophones and brass instruments. There they employed 5 people, and did saxophone repairs only. On January 29, 1947, the Julius Keilwerth Company started its operations in the laundry room of the Bäckerei (bakery) Stelzer at Bahnhofstrasse 9, Nauheim. Other instrument makers also had settled down in Nauheim, due to an active policy of the local authorities. Julius Keilwerth first went to Nordhessen and in 1947 settled down in Nauheim, near Frankfurt. He went with his wife Franziska (28-10-1971), son Josef (27), his wife Hilde (22) and the little Gerhardt (1). Julius Keilwerth, then aged 52, is mentioned on an expulsion list for train 15, wagon 33, on Sept 12th 1946 destination Bavaria. Most people were only allowed to take 50 kg (110 lbs) of luggage on the train with them. The Julius Keilwerth company became one of the largest saxophone manufacturers in Europe by the start of WWII, with approximately 150 workers.īreinl villa where Julius Keilwerth lived till 1946Īfter WWII the family was forced to leave Graslitz, like most of the German speaking population in Bohemia.

In 1938 Julius Keilwerth bought the villa of Anton Richard Breinl, Lipova Ceste 17. In 1937 despite the crisis he extended the factory. In 1930 he built a factory with a house at the Silberbacherstrasse 1348 (now Havlíčkova). Soon 100 employees worked in the Keilwerth factory, and an additional 50 were homeworkers. But he saw the possibilities for scaling up, hired a number of people, grew and bought a modern company building equipped with modern machines and a production of 85 saxophones per week and sold them to 30 countries around the world. First Keilwerth delivered his saxophones piece by piece to Markneukirchen. Once these two saxophone types were extremely successful, he began making sopranos, baritones and, upon special order, bass saxes. The Julius Keilwerth company was founded in Graslitz in 1925, when Julius started making alto and tenor saxophones. They primarily manufactured saxophones for Adler and F.X. Then Julius Keilwerth and his brother, Max, established a workshop in their home around 1920.

He then went back to work as an instrument maker, his injuries hindering him. After the end of the First World War, he found no work and started working on his father-in-law's farm and later coal mining in Falkenau. After his apprenticeship, he worked abroad for quite some time, including Switzerland and Germany. He first apprenticed for the Kohlert company in Graslitz, Czechoslovakia. Julius Keilwerth ( – ) was trained as an instrument maker.
