After the First World War, the economic situation of Leitz was dire. In 1913 it introduced a first fully functional binocular microscope. At the beginning of the new century, Leitz introduced eight-hour days and founded a health insurance society for employees. Its product range by this point included several optical instruments besides microscopes. Paul Ehrlich, inventor of chemotherapy, received the 150,000th one, and Nobel laureate Gerhard Domagk, discoverer of sulfonamides, the 400,000th Leica instrument.īy the end of the 19th century, the company had a worldwide reputation. Bacteriologist Robert Koch was given the company's 100,000th microscope in 1907. In 1887 the 10,000th microscope was shipped, four years later the 20,000th, and in 1899 the 50,000th was completed. By 1880, the company had reached an annual production numbering 500. Leitz microscopes improved on other models of their day in several ways, including lighting and optics, particularly with orthoscopic eyepieces. The microscopes were produced for biomedical as well as industrial purposes, including mineralogy. Consulting with his clients, he continued to refine the microscopes to their needs.
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