Dreislar

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Dreislar
City of Medebach
Coordinates: 51 ° 9 ′ 0 ″  N , 8 ° 41 ′ 16 ″  E
Height : 380 m above sea level NN
Area : 6.2 km²
Residents : 355
Population density : 57 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : 1st July 1969
Postal code : 59964
Area code : 02982

Dreislar is a district of the city of Medebach in the Hochsauerlandkreis with 355 inhabitants.

Geographical location

Dreislar is located in the southeast part of the Hochsauerlandkreis about 5.5 km south-southwest of the core town of Medebach at an altitude of about 380  m above sea level. NN . The Nuhne tributary Olfe ( Ölfe ), into which the Oswinkel flows from the north , and the district road  56, which leads west to Hesborn and north to Medelon , run through the village .

history

In 1388, Glindfeld Monastery owned land in the village. A tithe was owned by the Count of Wittgenstein in 1413. In 1548 Dreislar was referred to as a village that, together with Elkeringhausen and Braunshausen , had to serve the Medebach bailiff Hermann von Viermünden . At that time it belonged to the Medebach office . In 1565 11 taxpayers were counted. In 1802 the place fell with the Duchy of Westphalia to the Landgraviate of Hessen-Darmstadt. From 1816 Dreislar belonged to Prussia . First it was the county Medebach assigned, as part of the Office Medebach to circle Brilon .

In 1864 the place had 254 inhabitants. By 1939, their number rose to 288. After the Second World War , their number rose briefly (1950) to 366. In 1966 their number had fallen back to 321.

On the night of 19 to 20 October 1944, a German plunged night fighter of the type Me 110 from Nachtjagdgeschwader (NJG) 1 by enemy fire from the village. The three fallen crew members were buried in the village cemetery. Towards the end of the Second World War, the first American soldiers with their tanks , coming from the south from Braunshausen , drove through the town on March 29, 1945. It was not until April 1st that US soldiers quartered in the village for a short time until April 2nd. The place was spared from fighting, only valuables were stolen by US troops. During this war, 18 residents died as soldiers in the Wehrmacht.

Until 1969 the place belonged to the office Medebach and had 290 inhabitants (1961) with an area of ​​6.2 km². 286 of them were Catholic. There were no Evangelicals. Of the labor force, 106 (58.5%) were employed in agriculture and forestry, 57 (31.5%) in manufacturing and the remainder in other occupations.

On July 1, 1969, the municipality of Dreislar was incorporated into the city of Medebach as part of the municipal reorganization .

economy

The Dreislar heavy spar mine was of particular importance after the Second World War . After the deposits were exhausted, it was closed in 2007. Dreislar is still largely agricultural today. Tourism also plays a role.

Sports

View of the sports center and the sports field

The first sports club Sauerlandia was founded around 1922 in the post-war period of the First World War . However, Sauerlandia was more than a sports club, as its members were also active for village life in addition to sports. In winter, for example, they devoted themselves to theater, and carnival parades were organized by the members for many years. However, football could only be played when there was neither snow nor ice. In 1929 the club got its first official sports facility. Two years later, Sauerlandia joined the football association. From the beginning of the Second World War until 1951, the association's activities were suspended. Eventually the game was resumed and carnival was taken care of again.

Since some important players left the club in the 1960s, the club was re-established on January 19, 1969. The new village club was then called FC Dreislar. In 1971/72 today's sports field was built. The sports home was officially opened on December 2, 1978.

Special

13 years after the Bundestag of the DFB lifted the women's football ban, ten women joined FC Dreislar on January 23, 1983, so that the women's team started operations.

Attractions

View from the entrance to the chapel
Barite museum

The neo-Gothic St. Franziskus Church dates from 1864. It had a predecessor building around 1650, which was consecrated to St. Francis Seraphicus. Dreislar belonged to the dean's office in Medebach .

Since August 8, 2008, a barite museum has existed in the town's former school .

literature

  • Wilhelm Rave (Hrsg.): Architectural and art monuments of Westphalia. Volume 45: Kreis Brilon , edited by Paul Michels, Münster 1952, pp. 301, 316.

Web links

Commons : Dreislar  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ City of Medebach: Stadtinfo Ortsteile , accessed on March 21, 2012
  2. ^ Alfred Bruns: Hallenberger sources and archive directories , Münster 1991, p. 67.
  3. Reinhard Oberschelp (editor): The treasury register of the 16th century for the Duchy of Westphalia. Part 1: The registers from 1536 and 1565 , Münster 1971, page 234.
  4. Manfred Schöne: The Duchy of Westphalia under Hesse-Darmstadt rule 1802-1816 , Olpe 1966, p. 172.
  5. ^ Statistical review for the district of Brilon , Düsseldorf 1967, pp. 16, 62.
  6. Michael Balss: German night hunting - material losses in training and use . VDM, Zweibrücken, 1999. ISBN 978-3-925480-36-2 . S. 352. Place name Dreislar near Frankenberg.
  7. ^ Hugo Cramer: The district of Brilon in the Second World War 1939-1945 , Bigge 1955, pp. 30–32, 210.
  8. ^ Statistical review for the district of Brilon , Düsseldorf 1967, pp. 62–65.
  9. Martin Bünermann: The communities of the first reorganization program in North Rhine-Westphalia . Deutscher Gemeindeverlag, Cologne 1970, p. 88 .
  10. ^ Fritz Bielefeld: Dreislar the day before yesterday, yesterday, today ... p. 106-109 .
  11. ^ Fritz Bielefeld: Dreislar the day before yesterday, yesterday, today ... p. 110 .
  12. ^ Fritz Bielefeld: Dreislar the day before yesterday, yesterday, today ... p. 110 .