JOHN BEHRENDS BUSS
September 8, 1840 – October 20, 1912

John B. (Behrends) Buss was a German-born St. Louis industrialist, merchant miller, mechanical innovator, and evangelical supporter. Operating during the height of the Midwest’s industrial and grain-distribution expansion, Buss established a substantial commercial presence within the flour milling and wholesale feed trade. Through the John B. Buss Milling Company in St. Louis, he operated within the highly competitive network of mills, grain elevators, and wholesale distributors that linked Midwestern wheat production with expanding domestic and commercial flour markets.

Commercial Operations & Industrial Logistics

Located on 7550 North Broadway just opposite Bellefontaine, Buss Mills was a modern flour mill operated by the John B. Buss Milling Company. Known for its brand Queen Flour, the company specialized in wheat flour production and improved milling methods, reflecting Buss’s position within the technologically advancing flour industry of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. His milling operations formed part of the industrial infrastructure that helped establish St. Louis as a dominant commercial center during the period.

Mechanical Innovation & Industrial Technology

Beyond commercial management, Buss demonstrated a practical interest in mechanical engineering and industrial modernization. In 1900, patent records identified “John Behrends Buss” of Woodlawn, St. Louis County, Missouri, as the holder of a patent for an air compressor design associated with pneumatic industrial systems used in manufacturing and grain-handling operations. The patent reflects Buss’s participation in the broader technological transformation that reshaped American industry during the Second Industrial Revolution.

From Mills to Ministry

Alongside his industrial career, Buss became closely associated with the expanding Bible conference movement that linked conservative evangelical teachers across the United States. Evangelist and author Arno C. Gaebelein recorded that Buss regularly welcomed him into his home in Jennings, Missouri, and later built a Bible Hall on Finney Avenue where numerous conferences and Bible meetings were conducted. Buss also contributed financially to C.I. Scofield and to the writing and publishing of the Scofield Reference Bible.

Business Leadership and Evangelical Influence

Buss died in 1912 following decades of industrial and evangelical involvement in the St. Louis region. Though less publicly prominent than the major publishing executives or financiers associated with early twentieth-century conservative Protestantism, he remains an important historical example of the entrepreneurial lay supporters whose commercial success and practical philanthropy helped sustain the infrastructure of the early American Bible conference movement.