Abraham Oppenheim


Abraham Oppenheim since 1868 Abraham Freiherr von Oppenheim was a German banker and patron.

Life

Oppenheim was the second son among the twelve children of banker Salomon Oppenheim, Jr. and his wife Therese Stein. Stein was the daughter of a businessman from Dülmen.
The eldest son of Salomon Oppenheim, Jr.,, joined his father's banking house in 1821. Abraham followed in the same year, and their mother Therese Oppenheim was given signatory power.
In 1826 Salomon Oppenheim gave his sons Simon and Abraham general power of attorney to continue the banking business. In 1828, Abraham was made a partner. The brothers transformed their father's commission and exchange house into a major private bank. Through Abraham's marriage in 1834 to, the Oppenheim family became relatives of the Rothschild banking family.
Abraham Oppenheim figured prominently in the finances of the German railway system, insurance industry, and the engineering and cotton industries. In 1868, he became the first unbaptised Jew to be ennobled in Prussia, being created a Baron and being admitted to the inner circle of Kaiser Wilhelm I. Together with Gerson Bleichröder and other bankers he advised the king on financing the Austro-Prussian War of 1866 through government bonds. The Prussian king rejected the plan of Oppenheim and Bleichröder, advocated by Bismarck, to finance the war by privatizing state-owned mines in the Saar.