Ferdinand Spickermann

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Ferdinand Spickermann (born November 29, 1812 in Stargard in Pomerania , † April 26, 1880 in Berlin , also Spieckermann ) was a Berlin doctor and landowner.

Life

Spickermann settled in Berlin as a doctor after completing his medical degree. In 1844 he married a daughter of the landowner Wilhelm Gotthold Büttner . Büttner and, after his death, Spickermann owned the largest arable farm in Berlin. During the development of the building areas between Berlin and the city of Pankow, a street was laid out in his honor in 1906 as Spiekermannstraße in today's Pankow district . A street in the Fulerum district of Essen has also been named after him. In 1874, Dr. Spickermann owned the Rangsdorf manor near Zossen , which his son Richard Spiekermann took over in 1880 and, after his death, his grandson Richard.

Real estate

The estate near the Schönhauser Tor has been cultivating areas since 1822, which today are largely built up as residential quarters in northern Prenzlauer Berg . In addition to the block Alte Schönhauser 3/4 - Linienstraße 222/228, the property included an area which comprised almost 400  acres , i.e. about 100  hectares .

This area was to the right of Schönhauser Allee from what is now Metzer Strasse to the north to the border of today's districts of Pankow and Weißensee . The gap between Metzer Strasse 42 and 43, which extended to Kollwitzplatz , was the old Büttner Feldweg and marks the east border with the former Bötzowländereien , which were largely to the right and left of Kollwitzstrasse.

The Büttner border stretched in a straight direction to Danziger Strasse . It ran on Danziger Strasse to the corner of Prenzlauer Allee , on this further north, then jumped about 250 meters across from the current Kuglerstrasse to the eastern side of Prenzlauer Allee and then went at an obtuse angle to the Weißensee border. To the west the border of the field stretched along Lychener Strasse, then went north to Pankower Feldmark and to the south along Schönhauser Allee to Metzer Strasse.

The area of ​​the Jewish cemetery Schönhauser Allee also belonged to this site until 1826.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Spiekermannstrasse. In: Street name lexicon of the Luisenstädtischer Bildungsverein (near  Kaupert )