Martin Maier (January 20, 1840 – November 9, 1893) was the founder and proprietor of Martin Maier Trunk and Bag Company (est. 1865), which specialized in making specialty and sample trunks. His company, based in Detroit, Michigan, was one of the largest luggage and leather goods distributors in the Midwestern United States.
Maier moved to St. Louis in 1863 and, when the Civil War broke out, joined the Union Army. He participated in the March to the Sea Campaign from Atlanta and mustered out in 1865. During the war, he fashioned a saddle for General Tecumseh Sherman.
After the war, Maier moved back to Detroit, where he married Elizabeth Dorman on May 3, 1866. They had six children.
After a fire, Maier moved his store to 102 Woodward Avenue and expanded the business to a four-story block on Twelfth Street, where the trunks were constructed. Maier was prolific in producing patented designs that made his trunks unique. A distinguishing high-quality feature was the issuing of uniquely built oak slat trunks. On many of his trunks, two Ms would be stamped in pieces of the metal hardware, particularly his dome-tops.
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