Emile Mond


Emile Moritz Schweich-Mond was a German businessman who mostly worked in England. From 1930 to 1938 he was the honorary treasurer of the Faraday Society.

Early life

Emile Mond was born in 1865, the son of Leopold Schweich and Philippine Schweich, and initially studied in Paris, where his father was working at the time. He then studied chemistry in Switzerland at the ETH Zurich. He moved to England to work with his uncle, Ludwig Mond at Brunner Mond & Co. From Cheshire he moved to Jamaica with his friend Emile Bucher and founded the West Indies Chemical Works. He then returned to England again to work as an assistant to his uncle. He was on the Board of Brunner Mond & Co. and of Mond Nickel Co. He was chairman of Ashmore, Benson, Pease & Co., the South Staffordshire Mond Gas Co., and the Power Gas Co.

Family

He married Angela Primrose Schweich-Mond, née Goetze, the youngest child of James Henry Goetze and Rosina Harriett Bentley. Other children are Violet Mond, Baroness Melchett, who married Alfred Mond, 1st Baron Melchett, Emile's cousin, and English painter and art patron Sigismund Goetze.
Emile and Angela Mond had four sons and a daughter:
Francis was killed while flying in France on 15 May 1918: to honor him, Emile Mond established the Francis Mond Professorship of Aeronautical Engineering at Cambridge, the first British chair in that subject. Originally attached to the Special Board for Mathematics, the professorship was assigned on its creation in 1923 to the Special Board for Engineering Studies, and in 1927 to the Faculty of Engineering.

Personal life

Emile Mond was created Officier de la Légion d'honneur by the French Government and Officier de l'Ordre de Leopold by the King of the Belgians.
Emile Mond's wife was a talented musician and held private chamber music concerts. Mr. and Mrs. Mond made their home a centre of the most friendly and generous hospitality and of the most cultured social life of London.