Carl Georg Fiedeler

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Carl Georg Fiedeler (born November 8, 1811 in the click mill in Hanover , † April 6, 1893 ) was a brickworks and mill owner.

Life

Carl Georg's father, Johann Friedrich Fiedeler (1779–1851), who came from Salzderhelden , came to Hanover as a journeyman miller and leased the click mill until 1890.

In 1820 Johann Friedrich Fiedeler moved to Döhren and also leased the mill on the Leine weir . In 1831 the Kingdom of Hanover took over the reform laws of Prussia, according to which the farms could buy themselves out of fiefdoms. As a result of this link , many farmers sold their land on a leash, and Johann Friedrich Fiedeler bought one property after another in Döhren and Wülfel.

Carl Georg followed his father as a mill tenant. In 1845 he founded a brick factory between today's Fiedelerstraße and Hildesheimer Chaussee (which is now reminiscent of Ziegelstraße in Döhren). In 1850, with the support of the related Senator Conrad Bube, he was also able to acquire the mills in Döhren with all property, including the mill on the Leine island of Döhren .

Since his son Hermann Fiedeler (1844–1911) wanted to become a farmer, in 1860 he bought the house and property of the former General Druchtleben (* 1751) in Wiehbergstrasse .

In 1872 Carl Georg Fiedeler became a member of the knighthood of the Calenberger Land and named his property "Rittergut Döhren". In the same year he sold his high-yield mill (demolished in 1976/77) to the Döhrener wool laundry and combing ("Wool in Döhren") and expanded his agriculture to 102 hectares of fields and 7 hectares of meadows. From Hildesheimer Chaussee to Wiehbergstraße, he had Kastanienallee built as the entrance to his new mansion.

He sent two of his four sons who were "no good" to America without a return ticket. One daughter married the industrialist Wilhelm Garvens .

After his death Herbert Friedrich inherited the manor and expanded it into a huge park landscape, of which today's "Wiehbergpark" is a part. In order to avoid a dispute with the brickworks and manor owner Friedrich Willmer , he built the dignified manor house required by the knighthood in 1894 and named it "Rittergut Döhren". Willmer called his "Rittergut Waldhausen" (with the Villa Willmer designed by Karl Börgemann in 1884 , popularly known as "Tränenburg", demolished in 1971).

literature

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Dirk Böttcher: Fiedler, (1) Carl Georg. In: Hannoversches Biographisches Lexikon , p. 116; Preview over google books
  2. ^ Architecture and urban development in Hanover .