Local pharmacy Naststätten

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The Office Pharmacy Nastätten is a pharmacy based in Nastätten and was in the Duchy of Nassau Office Pharmacy . The old building at Poststrasse 1 is a listed building .

history

Until 1815, Naststätten belonged to the Lower County of Katzenelnbogen . Pharmacist Seris Bertrand had a license for the part of Lower County that was ceded to Nassau, which gave him a pharmacy monopoly. He also ran the pharmacy in Langen-Schwalbach and a branch pharmacy in St. Goarshausen (since 1814) . The latter concession was limited to 1818, the other two are inheritable.

When the Medizialediktes was issued in 1818, Bertrand was appointed to be the official pharmacist of the Nastaetten Medical Office. Since, however, according to the principles of the edict, no pharmacist should own more than an independent pharmacy, the pharmacist Halberstadt should give up his pharmacy in Camberg (Camberg had not become the official place, but Idstein ) and take over the pharmacy in Langen-Schwalbach. After the negotiations failed, he kept both pharmacies for the time being.

Seris Bertrand was a member of the examination committee in the duchy and advisor to the state government on pharmacy issues. In 1824 he was appointed medical assessor. From 1825, Gustav Justi , who later became a member of the state parliament, trained as a pharmacist in the Nastaetten office pharmacy. In 1827 Bertrand was transferred to Langen-Schwalbach as an official pharmacist, and in 1828 he sold the Nastätten pharmacy to the pharmacist Johann Anton Geissler (1800–1879) from Rüdesheim. This was preceded by a legal dispute in which Bertrand wanted to enforce his personal privilege to operate both pharmacies. His son should inherit the Nastätter pharmacy. However, the government took the position that the medical edict had expired all older rights.

In 1848 Johann Anton Geissler handed the pharmacy over to his son Johann Joseph Geissler, who was appointed official pharmacist. After the annexation of Nassau by Prussia , pharmacy law was liberalized. In 1874 Geissler set up a branch pharmacy in Miehlen . The other pharmacists in the pharmacy in Nastätten, which now bore the traditional name of the Amtsapotheke, were:

  • Adolf Sutor-Wernich (1894–1904)
  • A. Sendler (1904-1905)
  • Dr. Ferdinand Linz (1905-1914)
  • Ernst Schrader (1914–1921)
  • Emil Döhmer (1921–1962)
  • Horst Döhmer (tenant), his son (1962–1983)
  • Rainer Dreis (since 1983)

building

The local pharmacy was located at Poststrasse 1. In 1957, an extension was built at the rear and the entrance to Römerstrasse 7 was relocated. The Poststrasse 1 building is a listed building.

literature

  • August Pfeiffer: The pharmacy situation in the former Duchy of Nassau . In: Nassauer Annalen, Volume 44, pp. 94-95

Web links

Coordinates: 50 ° 11 ′ 56.6 ″  N , 7 ° 51 ′ 31.2 ″  E