Caroline Märklin

Caroline Märklin (13 March 1826 – 2 December 1893) was a woman of affairs and manager of the German company Märklin.

She was born in Ludwigsburg, Germany. When her husband Theodor Märklin founded the company Märklin, she became involved in it as a travelling salesman. Following the accidental death of her first husband in 1866, she took over the management of the toy company, which she managed until her sons took over the company in 1888. Women in Germany would become fully legally able to do business only a century later.

Biography
Carolina Hettich grew up in Ludwigsburg, Germany, where she was born in 1826. Little is known about her early life. In 1859 she married recently widowed Theodor Friedrich Wilhelm Märklin, a learned tinsmith living in Göppingen. Her husband founded Märklin in the same year, a venture she joined in.

The company manufactured painted sheet metal miniatures and accessories for doll houses. Caroline took care of the distribution of the goods travelling to southern Germany and Switzerland. In that way, she became one of the first "female travelling salesmen".

In the midst of the company's development, Theodor Friedrich Wilhelm Märklin died suddenly at the age of 49 following an accident on December 20, 1866. From then on, Caroline Märklin remained the owner and sole manager of the company.

In 1868, Caroline Märklin remarried Julius Eitel, one of her employees. The company went through a difficult phase economically, and their marriage being very fragile, Julius Eitel committed suicide in 1886. Two years later, her sons, Eugen Märklin and Karl Märklin, took over the company and launched it into the manufacture of model trains – with which it has become almost synonymous today.

Caroline Märklin died on December 2, 1893 at the age of 67.