Career
William Henry O'Swald's father was Johan Carl Heinrich Wilhelm O'Swald (1798–1859) a Prussian who in 1831 founded the company O'Swald & Co in Hamburg. In 1847 the company began trade with Zanzibar, Lagos and Palma. The main office was in Zanzibar.
Particularly successful was the "cowry trade" (Kaurischneckenhandel), the use of Shell money for trade. Scarce in West Africa cowries were purchased cheaply in the Seychelles where they were common and sold at great profit to African middlemen involved in the slave trade (Zanzibar was the main slave port in East Africa. The cowry money was also currency in the to and fro trade of commodities and products, especially linen between Zanzibar and Hamburg.
In 1849 the Company established further business links in Lagos, important for the oil trade and in 1853 O'Swald & Co. bought the Hamburg merchant Diederichsen's Lagos factory. In the following years, the brothers changed the management of the company each year, one living in Zanzibar, the other in Hamburg. In 1859 William O'Swald negotiated with Majid ibn Sa'id, the Sultan of Zanzibar, a commercial contract for the Hanseatic cities of Hamburg, Lübeck and Bremen, which had great influence in interior eastern Africa.
The Sultan benefited personally and Zanzibar benefited from the resulting increased tax revenues. In the following years using his position as Honorary Consul in Zanzibar he established new branches of the company in Madagascar, the Somali Coast and the German Protectorate in East Africa. O'Swald was also "praeses" (head) of the deputation for trade and shipping (a mixed commission of experts and officials) in the administration of Hamburg.
Three years later (11 January 1869) the parliament elected him life-long senator of Hamburg. On 3 April 1908 his fellow senators elected him deputy mayor (Second Mayor of Hamburg) for the term until 31 December 1909. Godeffroy.