Robert August Bosch was a German inventor, engineer and industrialist
who founded Robert Bosch GmbH, one of the world’s leading engineering
firms, in 1886. Robert Bosch is also noted for inventing the spark plug and the electrical magneto for automobiles.
Early Life and Education:
Born on September 23, 1861, near Ulm in Württemberg, south-western
Germany, Robert Bosch attended the Technical University at Stuttgart. He
also received training in mechanics in Ulm, Great Britain and the
United States.
Contributions and Achievements:
Robert Bosch established the Robert Bosch GmbH Corporation, one of the leading producers of automotive
technology who also manufactured numerous other products. Bosch made
important contributions to the expansion of the automobile industry and
related sectors.
Bosch started his own company, “Workshop for Precision Mechanics and Electrical Engineering”,
when he was only 25. He invented a magneto for gas engines in 1887,
which was used in an automobile engine almost ten years later. He also
invented the first spark plug, an invention which revolutionized the
operation of automobiles. His company largely benefited from the war,
but Bosch open-heartedly donated more than ten million marks back to the German public.
Bosch Industries faced severe crisis after the war due to the
depressing economic downfall, but the company massively restructured in
1927, expanding into the manufacture of cameras, power tools, television sets, refrigerators and radios.
Later Life and Death:
Robert Bosch died on March 12, 1942 in Stuttgart, Germany, of
complications resulting from an inflammation of the middle ear. He was
80 years old.