Maurice B. Sachse is one of the representative business men of the younger
generation in the City of Baton Rouge, where he is secretary and treasurer of
the Baton Rouge Electrical & Machine Works, Inc. He was born at Vicksburg,
Mississippi, March 31, 1894, and his father, Victor A. Sachse, who was born in
Ouachita Parish, Louisiana, in 1866, passed the closing years of his life in
Baton Rouge, where his death occurred November 11, 1921. He was a son of
Theodore C. Sachse, who was born in Germany and who was a boy when his parents
immigrated to the United States and established their home in Illinois, where
they passed the remainder of their lives, the father, Dr. Maurice Sachse, having
received superior educational advantages in his native land and having become a
leading physician and surgeon in Illinois, where he served as personal physician
to Mrs. Lincoln, first wife of Abraham Lincoln. Theodore C. Sachse became a
successful planter and merchant in Tensas Parish, and was a gallant soldier of
the Union Army in the Civil war. He died in the City of New Orleans, and his
wife, who was born in Germany and whose maiden name was Wilhelmina Weis, was a
resident of Baton Rouge at the time of her death.
Victor A. Sachse was
reared in Tensas Parish, and his educational advantages included those of
Centenary College at Jackson, this state, in which he was graduated. He was for
a term of years a successful traveling salesman, and during the last fourteen
years of his life was thus a representative of the firm of Ely & Walker of St.
Louis, Missouri. He was a young man when he established his residence in New
Orleans, where he continued to maintain his home until 1900, the remainder of
his life having been passed in Baton Rouge. He was a director of the Bank of
Baton Rouge at the time of his death, and in the capital city was affiliated
with St. James Lodge No. 47, Ancient Free and Accepted Masons, and Baton Rouge
Lodge No. 490, Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks. At Vicksburg,
Mississippi, was solemnized his marriage to Miss Fannie Bloomenstich, who was
there born in September, 1874, a daughter of Isaac Bloomenstich and Carolyn
Frank.
Isaac Bloomenstich was a gallant soldier of the Confederacy,
having served in the Eleventh Louisiana Regiment. Since the death of her husband
Mrs. Sachse has continued her residence in Baton Rouge. Maurice B., of this
review, is the eldest of four surviving children; Violet is the wife of Joseph
Wolf, a principal of the Davis Safe Company at Shreveport, Louisiana; Victor A.,
Jr., is (1924) a student in the law department of the University of Louisiana;
and Carolyn is a student in the literary or academic department of the same
institution.
In the public schools of Baton Rouge Maurice B. Sachse
continued his studies until he had profited by the curriculum of the high
school, and in 1909 he was matriculated in the University of Louisiana, in which
he continued his studies three years, at varying intervals. In 1914 he assumed a
position in the employ of the Cahn Electric Company of Shreveport, where he
remained two years. He then returned to Baton Rouge, and here he held for one
year the position of sales manager for the Capital City Auto Company, a position
from which he retired to enter service in connection with the World war.
Mr. Sachse was one of the very first volunteers to enter military service after
the nation became involved in the World war, as is evident when it is noted that
his enlistment occurred April 6, 1917, the very day that the United States
formally declared war against Germany. He was sent to Camp Nicholls, New
Orleans, and later was assigned to Camp Beauregard, this state, whence he was
transferred to Leon Springs, Texas. With his command he disembarked at Brest,
France, in August, 1918, as a member and sergeant major of the One Hundred and
Fourteenth Field Signal Battalion. He took part in the historic Meuse-Argonne
offensive and was several times in service on German soil. After the close of
the war he finally returned to his native land, and at Camp Shelby, Mississippi,
he received his honorable discharge in August, 1919. After the signing of the
armistice he found opportunity to attend the University of Montpelier, France,
where he specialized in the study of French language and also in international
law.
After the close of his military career Mr. Sachse returned to Baton
Rouge, where he has since been one of the interested principals in the Baton
Rouge Electrical & Machine Works, of which corporation he is secretary and
treasurer, this being the leading concern of its kind in East Baton Rouge Parish
and its business being one of substantial order. Mr. Sachse is a progressive
member of and worker in the Baton Rouge Chamber of Commerce, is a member of the
Retail Credit Men's Association of Baton Rouge, is aligned in the local ranks of
the democratic party, and is affiliated with St. James Lodge No. 47, Ancient
Free and Accepted Masons, Washington Chapter No. 57, Royal Arch Masons, and
Lambert Council. He is a member of Nicholson Post No. 38, American Legion.
June 16, 1920, recorded the marriage of Mr. Sachse and Miss Debora Kaufman,
who was born and reared in Baton Rouge and whose youthful education included a
course in the Southwest Louisiana Industrial Institute at Lafayette. Mr. and
Mrs. Sachse have a charming little daughter, Annie Violet, who was born
September 26, 1921.
Contributed 2021 Nov 04 by Mike Miller, from A History of Louisiana, by Henry E. Chambers, published in 1925, volume 2, pages 141-142.
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