The first Nokia century began with Fredrik Idestam's paper mill on the banks of the Nokianvirta river. Between 1865 and 1967, the company would become a major industrial force; but it took a merger with a cable company and a rubber firm to set the new Nokia Corporation on the path to electronics...
Fredrik Idestam establishes a paper mill at the Tammerkoski Rapids in south-western Finland, where the Nokia story begins.
Eduard Polón founds Finnish Rubber Works, which will later become Nokia's rubber business.
Arvid Wickström starts Finnish Cable Works, the foundation of Nokia's cable and electronics businesses.
Former Olympic wrestler Verner Weckman becomes President of Finnish Cable Works.
Cable Works establishes its first electronics department, selling and operating computers.
The Cable Works electronics department produces its first in-house electrical device - a pulse analyzer for nuclear power plants.
Nokia Ab, Finnish Rubber Works and Finnish Cable works formally merge to create Nokia Corporation.




