Background
Upon the death in 1929 of his father (also named Georg Schäfer), Georg Schäfer (II) inherited a one-third interest in the Friedrich Fischer steel ball bearings firm.
Upon the death in 1929 of his father (also named Georg Schäfer), Georg Schäfer (II) inherited a one-third interest in the Friedrich Fischer steel ball bearings firm.
After his death, most of his art collection was housed in the Museum Georg Schäfer in Schweinfurt. In 1929 the firm did not join a merger of Swedish and German ball bearing manufacturers, and this was at first seen as a setback. But as the government of Adolf Hitler prepared for war, the Fischer firm"s independence allowed it to join the Nazi armament campaign, and this caused a rapid expansion for the firm.
By 1933 Schäfer was a Nazi city councillor in Schweinfurt and leader of the "Sonderring Wälzlager" (Ball Bearing Special Circle) which oversaw the supply of ball bearings in the German armament campaign.
In 1939 Schäfer ousted Hermann Barthel from the firm. Georg Schäfer supposedly shielded his Jewish sales director, Hugo Holzapfel, from detention by the anti-Jewish Nazis.
Georg and Otto Schäfer presided over the revival and expansion of FAG Kugelfischer during the Wirtschaftswunder era of the 1950s. At Georg Schäfer"s death in 1975, FAG Kugelfischer employed some 30,000 workers around the world.
Schäfer"s heirs left the business during a financial crisis in 1993, and in 2001 the company merged with the Schaeffler Group in a hostile takeover.
In the 1950s Schäfer assembled a large collection of paintings by 19th-century German artists. Efforts to house the collection in a public museum in Schweinfurt began in the 1950s, but city officials and Schäfer’s heirs did not reach an agreement until 1988. The family temporarily lost control of the collection during the 1993 FAG Fischerkugel financial crisis.
Not all of the foundation"s paintings are housed in the museum.
In 2003 the Schäfer collection foundation loaned 42 16th-century German paintings to the State of Bavaria for display in the Veste Coburg castle.