Dreibrück

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Dreibrück on the Urmes table sheet 3342 from 1839

Dreibrück is a part of the municipality of Deutschhof , a district of the municipality of Fehrbellin in the Ostprignitz-Ruppin district ( Brandenburg ).

Geographical location

Dreibrück is located in the south of the district, on the border with the Havelland and Oberhavel districts . The place is at an altitude of 32  m above sea level. NHN . Coming from Bergerdamm and Hertefeld, the L173 continues to Königshorst. Dreibrück has about 120 inhabitants and is a part of Deutschhof, now part of the Fehrbellin municipality.

history

The first mention of an inn "on the three bridges" across the Horster Grenzgraben at the intersection of the Nauener, Berger and Kronprinzendamms is dated to 1721. At that time it was laid out in the area of ​​the Königshorst office at the intersection of the three bridges. In 1770 the Koenigshorst office exchanged 8 acres of guardianship for as many from the Deutschhof community to equip the colonists' apartment (jug). Apparently the retired Sergeant Pfefferkorn had bought the jug. In 1782 the mill boy Hindenburg asked the authorities to buy the Pfefferkorn mug. In 1801 a certain Museholdt sat on the jug as a leaseholder. Bratring notes a fireplace (house) in which 6 people lived. In 1804 there were disputes between Museholdt and the responsible chief forester over birch and willow plantations at his farm. In 1817 5 people lived here. Around 1850, Dreibrück formed its own municipality. In 1849 Dreibrück is called an establishment . This year it was transferred from the jurisdiction of the Fehrbellin Royal City and Regional Court to the Fehrbellin Judicial Commission. In 1852 the real burdens were replaced. In 1840 and also in 1860 a residential house and four farm buildings are recorded. In 1840, the Dreibrück establishment , which belonged to a widow Uter and was valued at 1775 thalers, 24 silver groschen and 3 pfennigs, was auctioned.

In 1914, the "Hope Valley Association", whose further activities shaped the place, built a shelter for the homeless (or workers' colony ) in the village and bought the 140 hectare farm there. During the Second World War, the Hope Valley institutions also employed prisoners of war and forced labor. As early as the First World War, prisoners of war had planted a so-called hero garden near Dreibrück. The fruit trees were donated by relatives of the fallen.

The Hope Valley Lobetal Foundation has a place to live for 80 people (2014) with disabilities , in addition to caring for the disabled, agriculture also plays a major role in Dreibrück.

literature

  • Lieselott Enders : Historical local dictionary for Brandenburg. Part III Havelland. 452 p., Hermann Böhlaus successor, Weimar 1972, p. 77/78.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Service portal of the state administration of the state of Brandenburg: Fehrbellin municipality
  2. Entry on Dreibrück at the municipality of Fehrbellin on gemeinde-fehrbellin.de , accessed February 25, 2008
  3. Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv: Online research: Exchange of 8 acres from the community of Deutschhof for the same number of acres from the Königshorst office due to the furnishing of the colonists' apartment on the three bridges (Dreibrück). 1770
  4. Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv: Online research: Establishment of the dismissed NCO Pfefferkorn at the so-called Three Bridges (Dreibrück) in the Königshorst office with a jug. 1775-1777.
  5. ^ Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv: Online research: Sale of the Pfefferkorn jug on the three bridges (Dreibrück) to the mill boy Hindenburg. 1782
  6. Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv: Online research: Request from the leaseholder Museholdt in Dreibrück for the transfer of the meadow, known as Thielmannsburg, belonging to the Hertefeld Vorwerk. 1801
  7. Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv: Online research: Disputes between the leaseholder Museholdt in Dreibrück and the chief forester Bandasch over the use of the willow and birch plantations near his homestead. 1804
  8. ↑ Ortschafts = directory of the government = district of Potsdam according to the latest district division from 1817, with a note of the district to which the place previously belonged, the quality, number of people, confession, ecclesiastical circumstances, owner and address, along with an alphabetical register . Georg Decker, Berlin 1817 (without pagination) online at Google Books
  9. a b Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv: Online research: Recession on the replacement of real loads from the district of Dreibrück from March 15, 1852.
  10. a b Official Gazette of the Royal Government of Potsdam and the City of Berlin, 2nd supplement to the 13th issue of the Official Journal, from March 30, 1849. Online at Google Books (p. 44).
  11. August von Sellentin: Topographical-statistical overview of the government district of Potsdam and the city of Berlin: Compiled from official sources. 292 p., Verlag der Sander'schen Buchhandlung, 1841 Central and State Library Berlin: Link to the digitized version (p. 117)
  12. Richard Boeckh: Local statistics of the government district Potsdam with the city of Berlin. 276 p., Verlag von Dietrich Reimer, Berlin, 1861, p. 44 (under Passow)
  13. Official Gazette of the Royal Government of Potsdam and the City of Berlin, extra sheet for the 3rd issue of the Official Journal, from January 17, 1840 online at Google Books (p. 19)
  14. B. Schnabel: The workers' colony Dreibrück in the Havelländisches Luch. Havelländischer Heimatkalender, 15: 72–76, 1927.
  15. Jochen-Christoph Kaiser: Forced Labor in Church and Diakonie 1939-45. 464 pp., Stuttgart, Kohlhammer, 2005 ISBN 978-3-17-018347-6
  16. Anonymous: Communication. Gartenwelt, 21: p. 12, Berlin 1917 snippets from Google Books .
  17. ↑ The facility for disabled people in Dreibrück celebrates its 100th anniversary. Glimmer of hope in the swampy mud. Märkische Allgemeine Zeitung from May 24, 2014

Coordinates: 52 ° 41 ′  N , 12 ° 50 ′  E