Schlösser Brewery (building)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
building
Portal with facade

The building of the Schlösser brewery in Düsseldorf is described by Josef Kleesattel and Paul Sültenfuß . The main building was the Altestadt 11 building, which was expanded from 1889 to 1900 by the Altestadt 3–9 and 13 buildings. The last extension was the purchase of Altestadt No. 1 in 1933. The building complex was destroyed during World War II.

history

Parent company

The brewery was founded in 1873, when the Schlösser family acquired the Zum new Engel house at No. 11 Altestadt and the building became the seat of the Schlösser brewery . Inge Hufschlag thinks that there was a brewery in the house from the start. August Dahm, on the other hand, believes that there was no brewery in the area around St. Lambertus until the 19th century.

The house Altestadt 11 was from 1833 to 1844 the apartment of the mayor Fuchsius and the meeting place of the catholic. Journeyman's Association.

The door of the Altestadt 11 building was neo-classical influenced by Schloss Benrath. It showed remarkable strips, panels and door fittings: They are “of particular delicacy in the history of the Düsseldorf house” .

Extensions

Between 1889 and 1900 the neighboring houses Altestadt No. 13 and then No. 3–9 were acquired for expansion of the brewery. In 1933, house no. 1 was bought. During the Second World War, the entire building complex was destroyed.

  • The house Altestadt 3, known as Zum heiligen Appollinarius , was built around 1600. In 1743 it belonged to the goldsmith Johann Schleuten, who sold it to the Insfeld family. In 1755 it was given to Dr. med. Johann Carl Insfeld to his stepfather, the city surgeon Ludwig Grein. In 1839 it still belonged to the widow de Grein, whose grandson the painter was Sonderland. The children of the former city commandant of Ckladt, the Vicar v. Ckladt on the first floor, the Canonicus and his sister Miss v. Ckladt on the second floor, the confectioner Troost lived on the first floor. The house was badly damaged in the Hanoverian bombing. The house was already damaged in the explosion of 1634. Between 1889 and 1900 house no. 3 was acquired for extensions to the Schlösser brewery.
  • Altestadt 5 was the property of the Hofkammerath spouses Nicolaus Voetz and Maria Catharina Schorners in 1700 when they sold it to Gerhard Robertz that same year. At the beginning of the 19th century it was owned by the lay judge Jacob Dewies, with whom the canon Constanze von Wiese also lived; in the 1830s it was owned and lived in by the Dewies family. Canonicus Waldhausen lived as a tenant on the first floor, and Capellmeister Schauseil on the second floor. Between 1889 and 1900 house no. 5 was purchased for extensions to the Schlösser brewery.
  • The house Altestadt 7 belonged to Dominus Johann Portmann, who lived there in 1632 and was an elder of the Reformed community in 1626 and 1631. In 1704 Johann Conrad Ventt sold it to Johann Worings. Presumably it is the parental home of "Henricus Petrus Venten pictor" , who was enrolled in the Rosary Brotherhood in 1660 and signed a certificate as "Henrich Peter Vendt, court painter" in 1685 , whereby it must be said that in 1701 "Conrad Peter Venten, your high-ranking Elector Court bad ” was. At the beginning of the 19th century it belonged to the Spelten family, so in 1905 the clergyman Carl Spelten lived in the house. The Meisen family then owned the house. Between 1889 and 1900 house no. 7 was acquired for extensions to the Schlösser brewery.
  • The house Altestadt 9 was enlarged in 1830 by building over the gateway belonging to the lower house; in 1704 it was owned by the von Redinghoven family. Between 1889 and 1900 house no. 9 was acquired for extensions to the Schlösser brewery.
  • The year 1625 can be read in the anchors of Altestadt 13. The house was called "Zum Neuen Engel". In 1840 it belonged to the master baker Stübben. Between 1889 and 1900 house no. 9 was acquired for extensions to the Schlösser brewery

Individual evidence

  1. Sültenfuß, p. 58a, Sültenfuß Fig. 71. Altestadt 6, Fig. 71a. Altestadt 6, Fig.71b. Old Town 6
  2. August Dahm; In: Die Heimat , 1957, No. 8, pp. 16-18.
  3. a b c City Archives of the State Capital Düsseldorf; In: On Depositom 4–117–0, Schlösser, Brauerei ; P. 1.
  4. Rudolph, Anton: Brewery bar Schlösser. Düsseldorf, Altestadt 3–13 . Düsseldorf 1930, p. 7.
    Kleinfeld, Hermann: Altestadt. The nucleus of our big city . In: Castle Tower. Düsseldorfer Heimatzeitschrift , Vol. 44 (68) No. 2, 1974, pp. 40–47, here p. 42.
  5. ^ Hufschlag, Inge: The old town sip from Düsseldorf. A successful advertising concept for the Schlösser brewery . In: Düsseldorf-Magazin , No. 1, 1982, pp. 38–39, here p. 39.
  6. ^ Dahm, August: Restaurants in old Düsseldorf. Part 1: In the shadow of the “groten Kerk” (Stiftsplatz-Altestadt). In: Die Heimat , Vol. 8 No. 1957, pp. 16–18, here p. 16.
  7. Sültenfuß, p. 91.
  8. http://www.duesseldorf.de/planung/wettbew/schlachthof/baugebiet.shtml
  9. ^ Heinrich Ferber: Historical walk through the old city of Düsseldorf. C. Kraus, Düsseldorf 1889. Reprint: Triltsch, Düsseldorf 1980, I p. 12 [Altestadt].
  10. ^ Heinrich Ferber: Historical walk through the old city of Düsseldorf. C. Kraus, Düsseldorf 1889. Reprint: Triltsch, Düsseldorf 1980, I p. 12 [Altestadt].
  11. ^ Heinrich Ferber: Historical walk through the old city of Düsseldorf. C. Kraus, Düsseldorf 1889. Reprint: Triltsch, Düsseldorf 1980, I p. 12f [Altestadt].
  12. ^ Heinrich Ferber: Historical walk through the old city of Düsseldorf. C. Kraus, Düsseldorf 1889. Reprint: Triltsch, Düsseldorf 1980, I p. 13 [Altestadt].
  13. ^ Heinrich Ferber: Historical walk through the old city of Düsseldorf. C. Kraus, Düsseldorf 1889. Reprint: Triltsch, Düsseldorf 1980, I p. 13 [Altestadt].

Coordinates: 51 ° 13 ′ 43.7 "  N , 6 ° 46 ′ 21.3"  E