Rönnebeck

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Rönnebeck is a part of the Bremen district of Blumenthal within the northern district of the city. It has an area of ​​243  ha .

history

Ev.-luth. Paul Gerhardt Church
Former Catholic Christ the King Church

The name ( Auf dem Ronnebeeke , roughly: settlement on the brook "rinne") was first mentioned in 1586. The community of Rönnebeck, which emerged on the village boundary of Lüssum , was part of the Blomendal office for a long time. It belonged to Sweden until 1714, Hanover until 1866 , and Prussia until 1939 .
The name of Neu Rönnebeck mentioned in 1586 was on Düllen (Dillichstraße).

In 1902 the Rönnebeck volunteer fire brigade was founded. In 1908 Rönnebeck was incorporated into Blumenthal, and in 1923 also Neurönnebeck. In 1939, Blumenthal (and thus Rönnebeck) was added to the Free Hanseatic City of Bremen by the fourth ordinance on the rebuilding of the empire . Since 1946, Rönnebeck has been part of the Blumenthal district of Bremen.

The responsible parish was originally Lüssum , whose old church was in the area of ​​the later Blumenthal. 1904/05 was in Farge the ev. Reformed Church Rönnebeck-Farge designed by architects Abbehusen and Blendermann built church was one of the region from then on Rönnebeck. The parish is called Rönnebeck-Farge . The writer Manfred Hausmann worked as a preacher in this congregation . 1956 the church of u. a. The newly founded Evangelical Lutheran Paul Gerhardt Congregation Rönnebeck-Farge was consecrated by the influx of refugees. The first Catholic service was celebrated in 1850 in the Montag family's house at 81 Dillener Str. Since 1890 more and more Catholics moved to Neurönnebeck with the industrialization. The Catholic Church was consecrated to Christ the King in 1930 and closed again in 2019.

Population development

1813: 480 inhabitants
1885: 694 inhabitants
1905: 1,690 inhabitants
1974: 4,603 inhabitants
1995: 4,693 inhabitants

2004: 4,619 inhabitants (as of December 31, 2004)

traffic

Rönnebeck is served by the train stations Turnerstraße and Kreinsloger, which have been included in the regional S-Bahn Bremen / Lower Saxony since December 11, 2011, as well as bus routes 90 to 92 and 96 and the night bus route N7 operated by Bremer Straßenbahn AG (BSAG). The BSAG depot responsible for Bremen-Nord is in Rönnebeck on Ermlandstrasse.

A delightful hiking and cycling path runs along the Weser, which also provides access to the Dillener Park.

The recreational boat berth called Rönnebecker Hafen at the former outflow of the Flethe is in the district of Blumenthal.

economy

Rönnebeck has been an important shipbuilding site since the 18th century. In the course of time, around 20 shipyards were located here - often one after the other at the same location - such as the wooden shipyard of C. Diercks & Co., the wooden shipyard founded by Hinrich Oltmann in 1847 and the shipyard of Fritz Oltmann (1950, 1956 taken over by the Krupp Group), the shipyard of C. Pape (1951–1971), on which coasters were built, Karl Sarstedt OHG , founded in 1971 , where u. a. Oil collection ships ( MPOSS - Pollution Control Vessel ) and sections for the Bremen volcano were built, and the shipyard Blumenthal GmbH founded in 1983 . Numerous ship owners also lived in Rönnebeck. There was also a ship rope factory here around 1860 and a starch factory around 1830.

Founded in 1871 by Werner Dewers brass foundry , which since 1882 led by his son Hinrich H. Dewers machine and fittings factory , took over in 1927 the iron foundry and machine shop Friedrich Schwarting , the Great Depression survived by Marine orders and delivered until its closure fittings for shipbuilding, Boiler, locomotive and mechanical engineering. It employed up to 350 people.

In 1867, Captain Louis Wieting founded the Rönnebecker Brewery GmbH (1887–1920 Louis Wieting Brewery) at the port. In 1894 Gorg Schlätzer bought the brewery, which Peter Schlätzer converted into a beverage wholesaler. The ice for the brewery used to be stored in a tunnel (ice cellar) at Dillener Park.

All of these companies no longer exist today.

Personalities

Individual evidence

  1. Hanswilhelm Haefs: Settlement names and local histories from Bremen: Notes on the history of the port city and federal state as well as the archbishopric including the Holler colonies. Book on Demand, 2006, p. 51. Neurönnebeck was called Auf der Düllen until around 1850
  2. ↑ Land map from April 1, 1862, in the Blumenthal home archive
  3. Fourth ordinance on the rebuilding of the Reich of September 28, 1939
  4. http://www.bsag.de/pdf/Web_BSAG_Bremen-Nord_Final.pdf
  5. ^ Weser-Kurier , August 9, 2015.
  6. Louis Wieting: Bremer Seeleute in Sibirien , Döll Verlag 1999.

See also

Coordinates: 53 ° 12 '  N , 8 ° 32'  E