Fischerwall (Gransee)

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Fischerwall is a residential area in the district of Seilershof in the city of Gransee ( Oberhavel district , Brandenburg). A first house at this point was mentioned in 1698. Later it was a fisherman's house and customs office (in Mecklenburg).

Fischerwall on the Urmes table sheet 2945 Mildenberg from 1825

geography

Fischerwall is about 7 kilometers as the crow flies northeast of the town center of Gransee and only about 800 meters southeast of Seilershof directly east on the B 96 . The main street connects the residential area with Seilershof in an almost straight line. It is also only a few hundred meters to Dannenwalde north of the residential area. To the northwest it is only about 150 meters to the shores of the Kleiner Wentowsee . The bridge over the river, which connects the small and large Wentowsee , is also only 300 meters away.

history

In 1698 a dilapidated and very badly in need of repair house on the Fischerwall was mentioned for the first time. At that time it belonged to the Alt Ruppin office . The Schmettausche maps show a customs house here, almost directly on the (Dannenwalder) bridge. The Great Wentowsee seems to have been even larger at that time and extended further south. Johann Ernst Fabri describes the location as Fischerswalde , a royal fisherman's house with a fireplace that is said to have been uninhabited in 1767 (or did he not have any information?). For 1787 he gives 9 residents. In 1800 the building, known as the fisherman's house, also served as the secondary customs office of Zehdenick at the Dannenwaldische Brücke. At that time this formed the border with Mecklenburg; Dannenwalde formed together with Barsdorf, Blumenow and Tornow the so-called Fürstenberger Werder (belonging to Mecklenburg). At that time, twelve people lived in the building on Fischerwall. In 1817 the place was designated as an establishment and customs house; ten people lived in the house at that time. In 1840 it was called an establishment and border customs house. 19 people lived in the building. In 1846 it was transferred to the Zehdenick Office . In 1860 a farm building belonged to the customs house. With the construction of the Berlin – Stralsund railway line in 1877, a station keeper's house was also built here. By 1925 it had become a group of houses.

Population development in Fischerwall from 1800 to 1925
year 1767 1787 1800 1817 1840 1858
Residents 0 9 12 10 19th 19th

Communal affiliation

In 1895 Fischerwall belonged to the Neulüdersdorf district, which at that time also included (today's) Corridor 3 of the Seilershof district. In 1938 the community of Neulüdersdorf was dissolved. The (today's) corridor 3 was incorporated into the municipality of Seilershof, the rest of the municipality (and district) into the municipality of Altlüdersdorf. In 1938, Fischerwall became part of Seilershof. On September 27, 1997, Seilershof was incorporated into the town of Gransee and has been part of Gransee ever since. Fischerwall only has the status of a residential space.

Church affiliation

The residents were first churched in Tornow (then Mecklenburg). In 1860 and 1900 they went to church in Altlüdersdorf.

literature

  • Lieselott Enders : Historical local dictionary for Brandenburg, part II Ruppin . 327 p., Hermann Böhlaus successor, Weimar 1972 (in the following abbreviated to Enders, Historisches Ortslexikon, Ruppin, with corresponding page number).

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b Johann Ernst Fabri: Improvements and supplements in respect of the Graffschaft Ruppin. On the Büsching topography of the Mark Brandenburg. Magazine for Geography, State Studies and History, 3: 271–311, Nuremberg, Raspesche Buchhandlung, 1797 Online at Google Books , p. 310
  2. ↑ 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. Berlin, Georg Decker Online at Google Books .
  3. 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. 186)
  4. Enders, Historisches Ortslexikon, Ruppin, p. 54.

Coordinates: 53 ° 4 ′ 19 ″  N , 13 ° 10 ′ 57 ″  E