Background
Christian Marius Thams was born in Trondheim, Sør-Trøndelag, Norway.
Christian Marius Thams was born in Trondheim, Sør-Trøndelag, Norway.
He was educated at a school for boys in Grenchen, Switzerland and at a technical school in Holzminden, Germany.
His parens were Marentius Thams (1836-1907) and Emilie Christine Ullitz (1838-1916). The foundation of the family fortune was Örkedals Mining Company. The acquisition of the Løkken Mine in 1896 marked their dominant position with control of all mines in the region.
The Løkken mine was however flooded, and in order to extract the pyrite Thams had to empty the mine of water.
This was done by constructing a pipeline from nearby lake Bjørnlivatnet to transport water to a power station inside the mine. This power station produced 60 kilowatt to run a pump station mounted on a timber raft.
As the water was pumped out of the mine, the raft sank with the sinking water, and in this way the mine was emptied of water in two years. In 1904 Christian Thams founded Orkla Grube-Aktiebolag whose main activity was mining at Løkken Verk.
Thams soon realized that extended access to electricity would be of great benefit to his businesses.
He therefore decided to build a hydro electric plant, and got a concession to build at Skjenaldfossen waterfall, following his acquisition in 1899 of the rights to utilize the power from the river. This marked the beginning of large-scale production at the mine and an important milestone in the history of the Norwegian industrial conglomerate Orkla. Christian Thams is also known for construction of Thamshavnbanen, the first electric railroad in Norway, visited by Norwegian king Haakon VII at its opening on July 10, 1908.
Among Thams" other activities was Strandheim Brug, a sawmill and prefabrication of houses business.
This production was also powered by hydroelectricity. The successful industrialization of the activities in Orkdal coincided with other key entrepreneurial ventures of that time (1890 to 1910) that were all based on the new technology of hydroelectricity.
Most of them are still key players in the Norwegian economy. In addition to Orkla, Norsk Hydro, Borregaard and Hafslund are prominent examples.