Starting a family, growing a business
Hubert and Antonia Schmidt
Hubert Schmidt is twenty-seven years old. Fatherless at the age of four and one of seven siblings, he learnt bricklaying with the conviction that a job well done forges a destiny. In 1934, he married Antonia and, at the age of 27, set up his own bricklaying business in Türkismühle, a small town in the Saarland. Antonia managed the administrative side of the business. Hubert built and sold. Soon, one project followed another: detached houses, apartment blocks and administrative buildings. The company was a family business from day one, and would remain so.
Two consecutive fires destroyed the workshop and warehouse a few years after the company was founded. Others would have given up. Hubert Schmidt set off again, true to the words of Kipling that he had made his own: “If you can see your life’s work destroyed, and without a word start to rebuild…”.
The Saarland of 1934 was a territory in limbo. Under mandate from the League of Nations since 1920, it was awaiting a referendum that would decide its future: whether to remain under international administration, rejoin France or return to Germany. In this political in-between, the desire for a home and a detached house crystallised the desires of an entire generation. It is in this context that the meaning of Hubert Schmidt’s book finds its social resonance.