Oak (Drolshagen)
Oak trees
City of Drolshagen
Coordinates: 51 ° 1 ′ 18 ″ N , 7 ° 48 ′ 21 ″ E
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Height : | approx. 350 m |
Residents : | 166 (December 31, 2009) |
Postal code : | 57489 |
Area code : | 02761 |
Eichener mill
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Eichen is a village in the southern Sauerland . It forms a locality and, together with Eichenermühle, forms the administrative district Eichen of the city of Drolshagen in the North Rhine-Westphalian district of Olpe . As of December 31, 2016 Eichen had 180 and Eichenermühle 26 inhabitants.
history
Eichen, together with the neighboring villages of Berlinghausen and Brachtpe , was first mentioned in documents in 1349. The Eichener Mühle monument , which was first mentioned in 1512, belongs to the village . It was a ban mill of the Drolshagen monastery and was converted into a sawmill in the 19th century . In the 18th and 19th centuries there was a pre-industrial iron producing or processing company on site. Until 1957 there was a train station on the Aggertalbahn route .
Web links
Individual evidence
- ^ Main statute of the city of Drolshagen. (PDF) (No longer available online.) Formerly in the original ; Retrieved September 1, 2010 . ( Page no longer available , search in web archives ) Info: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ localities. City of Drolshagen, accessed on October 14, 2017 .
- ^ Peter Kracht: Sauerland, Siegerland and Wittgensteiner Land . Aschendorff, Münster 2005, ISBN 978-3-402-05497-0 , pp. 72 .
- ↑ The Eichen Mill. (No longer available online.) City of Drolshagen, formerly in the original ; Retrieved September 1, 2010 . ( Page no longer available , search in web archives ) Info: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ^ Topographical directory of the iron and steel works in the Duchy of Westphalia (and border communities) according to today's communal boundaries. Landschaftsverband Westfalen-Lippe, accessed on September 1, 2010 .
- ^ Christoph Marschner: The station Wiedenest. To commemorate the creation, operation and demise of a village train station. Retrieved September 1, 2010 .