Dr Herbert Loebl, OBE (18 April 1923 – 28 January 2013)[1] was a British businessman, philanthropist and leading proponent of exporting, notable as a co-founder of Joyce, Loebl & Company, a manufacturer of scientific instruments.
During his time at King's College, Loebl met Captain Robert Joyce.[2] In 1951, the two went into business producing scientific equipment with only £200 of capital.[2] Joyce, Loebl & Co. exported over 70 percent of its products and at the time of its sale to Technical Operations Inc. (Tech/Ops), an American company, it was one of the major employers in north-eastern England with some 500 workers.[2] It is estimated that the company also spawned 45 other businesses in the region.[3] Some of the most significant products developed by Joyce, Loebl & Co were the optical microdensitometer used to visualise the properties of DNA and other organic compounds,[1] and the MecoLab, a system of routine blood-panel analysis for hospitals.
There are currently four companies which have grown out of the original Joyce, Loebl & Company Ltd: Loebl Ltd, Sevcon Ltd, Applied Imaging Ltd, and Phasor Ltd.[4]
Philanthropy
A donation made by Hebert Loebl was used to set up a section of the business school of Newcastle University, focussed on the promotion of exports, which is named the Herbert Loebl Export Academy in his honour.[5]
Loebl, Herbert (2005). A Coat Too Long: An Illustrated Autobiography. Fen Drayton.
Loebl, Herbert (1987). Government Factories and the Origins of British Regional Policy, 1934-1948: Including a Case Study of North Eastern Trading Estates Ltd. Aldershot: Avebury. ISBN0566053438.
Loebl, Herbert (2000). Juden in Bamberg : die Jahrzehnte vor dem Holocaust (in German) (2. verb. Aufl. ed.). Bamberg: Verl. Fränkischer Tag. ISBN3928648489.