- Paul J. Sorg
Paul John Sorg (
September 23 ,1840 –May 28 ,1902 ) was a businessman and member of theUnited States House of Representatives fromOhio .Paul J. Sorg was born in Wheeling, Virginia (now West Virginia) where he attended public school. He was the youngest son of Henry and Elizabeth Sorg, immigrants from Hesse-Darmstadt (or
Hesse-Kassel or Hesse-Cassel),Germany . Paul Sorg moved with his parents and siblings toCincinnati, Ohio in 1852 where he was apprenticed as an iron molder. He attended night school in Cincinnati.He served in the
Union Army during the Civil War.In 1864 Paul J. Sorg met John Auer, a German-born tobacco roller in Cincinnati. Auer could make tobacco, but he couldn't keep books; for his part, Sorg knew nothing about tobacco, but he was a good bookkeeper. These two men organized a firm for the manufacture of tobaccos, starting a plant in Cincinnati. In 1869 they partnered with another tobacco firm in Cincinnati. One of the new partners lived in Middletown, Ohio and urged the newly formed company, Wilson, Sorg and Company, to relocate there and a new plant was constructed.
Sorg and Auer soon sold their share of the business and immediately formed another company, P. J. Sorg Tobacco Co., to manufacture cut filler and plug tobacco. One of their brand names was "Biggest and Best." This new firm they built up to become one of the largest of its type in the world and Sorg became Middletown’s first multi-millionaire.
On July 20, 1876, he married Susan Jennie Gruver (1854-1930) in Middletown; they had two children, Paul Arthur Sorg (1878-1913) and Ada Gruver Sorg (1882-1956). In 1888, he completed a $1 million, 35-room stone Romanesque mansion that still stands in Middletown, but has been converted into low-income apartment units. Being a public-spirited man, he made many civic and charitable contributions to build up the city of his adoption, including the 1891 Sorg Opera House (designed by
Samuel Hannaford ) that is the performance center of Middletown’s Sorg Opera.At a special election held in May 1894 to fill the vacancy caused by the death of
George W. Houk , Paul Sorg was elected as a Democrat to the Fifty-third congress from Ohio’s Third district. He declined at first to accept renomination in 1894, in pique that a friend had not been appointed Consul to Berlin by PresidentGrover Cleveland , to whose campaign Sorg had contributed generously. However, he relented and was narrowly re-elected to the Fifty-fourth in 1894 when the Republicans swept all but two seats of the Ohio delegation and two-thirds of Congress partly as a result of thePanic of 1893 . He was theranking member on the Committee on Labor. He declined a third election in 1896.James M. Cox , a Butler county native working as assistant telegraph and railroad editor of the Cincinnati "Enquirer", went with Sorg to Washington as his executive secretary. A few years later, Cox held the same seat in Congress.After leaving Congress, he allowed his name to be put in nomination for Governor of Ohio at the July 1897 Democratic convention, but withdrew his name during the second ballot. He allowed efforts toward nomination again for the 1899 election, but these came to nothing when he became ill.
Sorg resumed his former tobacco business activities in Middletown, forming a Tobacco Trust with Lorillard and Liggett until he sold the business to Continental Tobacco Company for $4.5 million in 1898. With the proceeds, he purchased in 1899 a paper company that had been the first
paper mill in Middletown but had subsequently gone through several hands. He renamed the company, the Paul A. Sorg Paper Co., for his son who became president of the firm. Paul J. Sorg continued his business career as president of a bank in which he had invested in 1891. He also had real estate and railroad interests.He was appointed by Governor Asa S. Bushnell, a leader in
trust-busting , to be a delegate to a national Conference on Trusts in 1899. The topic of discussion was to be "Trusts and Combinations, their uses and abuses—Railway, labor, industrial and commercial," a subject on which Sorg could be said to be an expert. Paul John Sorg died in Middletown, Ohio, where he was interred in Woodside Cemetery.Son Paul Arthur Sorg (1878-May 4, 1913) and his wife became fixtures in New York City high society where he showed horses under fine harness and four-in-hand coach. He also participated in coach-and-four races, gaining many records during the first decade of the 1900s. He died suddenly at his
New York City residence.The paper company, by then the Sorg Paper Co., was merged in 1983 with the Mosinee Paper Corp., which in 1997 became Wausau-Mosinee Paper Corporation. The new owners closed the mill in 2000.
The 120-year old mansion is currently for sale with a $650,000 price tag. It was put on the market in Mid-September 2008. It would cost more than $1 million to build today. The sale would include two acres of land, a duplex home, and a carriage house.
The Akron Beacon Journal / Ohio.com ources
* Taylor, William A. Ohio in Congress from 1803 to 1901. Columbus, Ohio: The XX Century Publishing Company, 1901.
* numerous articles from 1870 to 1910 in the New York Times.External links
* [http://www.lanepl.org/Blount/jbplaces/documents/B3EADAD9D2F1E57852BC8A50DAA91E246C36FEFE.html Index to Butler County Place Names]
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