Office of Gehlenbeck

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coat of arms Germany map
Coat of arms of the Gehlenbeck office
Office of Gehlenbeck
Map of Germany, position of the Gehlenbeck office highlighted

Coordinates: 52 ° 19 ′  N , 8 ° 39 ′  E

Basic data (as of 1972)
Existing period: 1843-1972
State : North Rhine-Westphalia
Administrative region : Detmold
Circle : Luebbecke
Residents: 12,099 (Dec. 31, 1972)
Office structure: 5 municipalities
Location of the Gehlenbeck office in the Lübbecke district
map
Template: Infobox community association in Germany / maintenance / coat of arms

The Gehlenbeck office was an office in the former Lübbecke district in North Rhine-Westphalia with its seat in Gehlenbeck . The office was dissolved by the Bielefeld Act on December 31, 1972. The city of Lübbecke is the legal successor to the office .

The office was north of the Wiehengebirge and was divided by the Mittelland Canal . In the east it bordered the district of Minden .

At the time of the dissolution, the office had 12099 inhabitants and was divided into the five communities of Eilhausen , Frotheim , Gehlenbeck , Isenstedt and Nettelstedt . The communities of Frotheim and Isenstedt were incorporated into the newly formed town of Espelkamp , the other communities form the new town of Lübbecke with the communities of Lübbecke and Blasheim.

A curiosity as a result of the dissolution of the office was that the city of Lübbecke had two outdoor pools from 1973. The once centrally in the middle of the office Gehlenbeck, just south of the Mittellandkanal, lying office pool Gehlenbeck fell on the town of Lübbecke, Lübbecke although already has a Municipal Freiband in the core city possessed. Now Lübbecke had to finance two outdoor pools. After decades of discussion, the old inner-city outdoor pool was given up in 2005 and the Gehlenbeck outdoor pool became Lübbeck's only urban outdoor pool.

history

The area of ​​the office Gehlenbeck corresponded in the prince diocese of Minden to the Vogtei Gehlenbeck in the office Reineberg .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Heimatkreis Singkreis Ahlsen-Reineberg eV (Ed.): 700 years of Ahlsen. (1290-1990). Self-published, Ahlsen-Reineberg 1990, p. 85, map of the Principality of Minden from 1800.