As chief executive of 3M Co., Lewis Lehr left a legacy of global expansion that propelled 3M into Asia, health care products and space research for the first time.
Lehr, who collected jokes from fellow 3Mers in an 8-inch thick file until the day he died, was chief executive of the Maplewood-based conglomerate from 1979 to 1986 and a member of its board of directors from 1974 to 1991.
He died Saturday in Phoenix at age 95, the company said.
The opening of a 3M factory in China made 3M the first wholly owned foreign enterprise in that country, said Inge Thulin, 3M's current chief executive. "Lew Lehr was a visionary who helped build 3M into the enterprise we are today," Thulin said.
Thulin added that Lehr's "commitment to volunteering and giving back to the community also set an example for all 3Mers to follow. On behalf of our entire 3M team, we salute Lew for his leadership and extend our deepest condolences to his family."
Lehr was born to corn farmers in Elgin, Neb., in 1921. An only child, he lived on the farm until the age of 14, when his father died, forcing him and his mother to move to town. She took a job at the local general store, while Lehr did chores for aunts and uncles in the area after school.
He graduated from the University of Nebraska with a degree in chemical engineering and married Doris Stauder in 1944. The couple would later settle in Roseville and raise four children.
Lehr served in World War II as an engineer in the U.S. Army, then joined 3M in 1947. He started as a technical service representative and engineer in the company's tape business and spent the next 39 years rising up the ranks.