Adolph Rickenbacker (April 1, 1887 – March 1976) was a Swiss-American who co-founded the Rickenbacker guitar company along with George Beauchamp and Paul Barth.
Born in Basel, Switzerland as Adolf Rickenbacher. He emigrated 1891 to the United States with older relatives after his parents died, settling in Wisconsin. He moved to southern California as a young man. He later Anglicized both his own name and that of his company to Rickenbacker to capitalize on the popularity of his distant cousin, America's top Flying Ace Eddie Rickenbacker.
Starting in the late 1920s, his Rickenbacher Manufacturing Company made metal bodies for the National String Instrument Corporation. Through this connection, he met George Beauchamp and Paul Barth, and in 1931 they founded the Ro-Pat-In Company. In 1932 they produced the first cast aluminum versions of the lap steel guitar.
Two years later the company was renamed the Electro String Instrument Corporation. By the time production ceased in 1939, about 2,700 Frying Pan guitars had been produced.
Rickenbacker, not convinced of the guitar business's potential, continued manufacturing until 1953, when he sold his company to Francis Cary Hall, a forerunner of the Southern California electric guitar boom.
Adolph Rickenbacker died from cancer in Orange County, California in 1976 at the age of 90.