Flinger Strasse 22-26

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Flinger Strasse 22–26 before 1904
Düsseldorf, Flinger Straße No. 22 (widow of the organ maker Schillmann), No. 24 (birthplace of the notary Strauven, house of the Christian Unkelbach company, mineral water), No. 26 (widow of the goldworker Dübbers) before 1890

According to Boris Becker in Düsseldorf, the building at Flinger Strasse 22–26 in Düsseldorf was in early photographs from 1855–1914 a “representative residential and commercial building for the Christian Unkelbach company,” built in 1890/1891 by Bernhard Tüshaus and Leo von Abbema . Predecessor buildings were the low houses on Flinger Strasse 22-26, which had to give way to the representative residential and commercial building from 1890. The history of the individual houses 22, 24 and 26 and their residents is given by H. Ferber; Described in: Historical walk through the old city of Düsseldorf . An organ maker, a well-known notary, a jeweler and a gold worker lived and worked there. The buildings were destroyed in World War II.

history

  • No. 22: The owner was the Procurator Mohr in 1738. At the beginning of the 19th century it was bought by the organ maker Carl Schillmann, whose widow lived there until 1890.
  • No. 24: It was the birthplace of the notary Carl Strauven, who was highly deserving of the “local history of Düsseldorf” . His father was a calculator and registrar for the Strauven government's accounting and auditing department. He lived in this house with his father-in-law, the secret secretary Franz Wilhelm Custodis. After Custodis died in 1835, the house was sold.
  • No. 26: House No. 26 was called "Zum Heiligen Franziskus" around 1700. Furthermore, a calico spinning mill is listed in this house for 1774 , which was operated by Johann Abraham Dietze. The house later belonged to the button maker Peter Florenz, whose children from their second marriage sold the house in April 1778 to the married couple Philipp Schleuter and Anna Catharina Florenz for 800 Rheintaler. Schleuter was a wax dealer and godfather of Father Philipp Schulten. In September 1778 it was sold again by way of an offset sale. It was acquired by the siblings Anna Gertrud and Wilhelm Theophil Hülhof. Anna Gertrud was the widow of the regimental Feldscheerer Weiss. The Hülshof siblings sold the house on August 17, 1793 to Johann Gottfried Lieber and Maria Catharina, née. Fieseler. He preferred to be a jeweler and had the house demolished and built from scratch in 1793/1794 because of the “extreme and safe constructionlessness”. In 1803 it was sold to the married couple Philipp and Elisabeth Dübbers, née Nolden, for 2,800 Rheintaler. Dübbers was a gold worker; In 1858 the widow Dübbers was still the owner of the house.

image

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Boris Becker: Düsseldorf in early photographs 1855-1914 . Schirmer / Mosel, Munich 1990, ISBN 3-88814-376-4 , p. 42: Flinger Straße 22–24, before 1890. Peter Hubert Höltgen (* June 20, 1855, † April 27, 1914)
  2. ^ Architects and Engineers Association in Düsseldorf (ed.): Düsseldorf and its buildings. L. Schwann, Düsseldorf 1904, pp. 327, 330f
  3. Bergischer Geschichtsverein (ed.): Journal of the Bergisches Geschichtsverein. Volume 4. 1867, p. 422.
  4. H. Ferber: Historical walk through the old city of Düsseldorf. Part II. Verlag C. Kraus, Düsseldorf 1890, p. 28.

Web links

Commons : Flinger Straße 22/26, Düsseldorf  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Coordinates: 51 ° 13 ′ 31 ″  N , 6 ° 46 ′ 24.9 ″  E