Gerlachshof

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The Gerlachshof was a residential area in Wünsdorf , a district of the city of Zossen in the Teltow-Fläming district in Brandenburg .

history

The place was first mentioned in 1805 as Gerlachshof . At first it consisted only of a Vorwerk built in 1802 . The administration was in the Zossen office . In 1811 the Countess von Mellin acquired the estate from Friedrich Wilhelm III. , but sold it again to a businessman Samuel Geisler the following year. After his death in 1819, his wife took over the estate. Her brother-in-law, Carl Geisler, bought the property, added a forester's house in 1840, and sold it to Ferdinand Ludwig Magnus a year later. In 1858, 13 people lived there. In 1860 the Vorwerk consisted of a residential building and three farm buildings.

In the course of setting up a military training area in Wünsdorf in 1909/1910, the district of Zehrensdorf was cleared, but settled again in 1921 after the First World War . In 1925 five people lived there. In 1927 the Vorwerk came to the Zehrensdorf manor district. This was dissolved on December 27, 1927 and the Vorwerk was incorporated. The Vorwerk with a residential house has been handed down from this year. The size of the district was given as 5.8 hectares . A year later the manor district was converted into the municipality of Zehrensdorf and finally cleared in 1935.

literature

  • Lieselott Enders : Historical local lexicon for Brandenburg: Teltow (= Historical local lexicon for Brandenburg . Volume 4). Verlag Hermann Böhlaus successor, Weimar 1976.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Heinrich Berghaus: Land book of the Mark Brandenburg and the Markgrafthum Nieder-Lausitz. Second volume: In the middle of the 19th century or geographical-historical-statistical description of the province of Brandenburg. Brandenburg 1855 . BoD - Books on Demand, January 1, 1855, ISBN 978-3-88372-074-6 , pp. 530–.
  2. The territories of the Mark Brandenburg, or history of the individual districts, cities, manors and villages in the same, as a continuation of the land book of Emperor Karl IV. Edited by E. Fidicin, city archivist . J. Guttentag, 1857, p. 153–.