Good Hohekamp

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The Good High Kamp is located in Bremen , district Burglesum , district Burg-Grambke , B Burger Heerstraße 20-22 via Buschmannsweg. The manor house was built around 1825, the Hofmeierhaus in 1825 and the park around 1840. The ensemble has been a listed building in Bremen since 2014 .

history

The Meierhof Hohekamp developed south of the Lesum in Werderland. It belonged to Johann Wyttinges in 1509, to Doctor Schumacher around 1741 (first name unknown), in 1781 to the Bremen merchant Johann Eberhard von Hoorn († 1802), then to Ludwig Christian Wernicke and in 1804 to Gerhard Herklots. In 1824 the ship broker Johann Heinrich Buschmann acquired the estate as a preliminary work. The buildings stand on a foothill of the Bremen dune in the area of ​​the municipality of Burg.

In the minutes of October 21, 1741 of the commission for the determination of the boundaries in the context of the Second Stade Settlement it is described that in addition to the large and small dungeons, the "associated fighters of Doctoris Schumacher" belong to the Bremen area. This boundary deviated from the field mark boundary of that time and required a more complex boundary marking.

The Hohekamp estate with the avenue access, the representative today two-storey house with hipped roof, the park and the Hofmeierhaus with the annual inscription 1825 has now been expanded and the park was built around 1840. The farmer Friedrich Barnstorf followed as owner. The widow sold the property to the Bremen merchant Carl August Gruner in 1860. His son Theodor Gruner (1854–1908, 1905 President of the Bremen Citizenship), received it in 1888 and bought land.
The house, which has now been extended, received its classicist plastered facade and the preserved historical windows in 1888 . The Hofmeierhaus was also rebuilt. Around 1900 the green areas were converted.

The renovation of the house took place in 1906 according to plans by the Bremen architects Alfred Runge and Eduard Scotland as one of their first buildings. The client was the shipowner and general director of Norddeutscher Lloyd, Dr. jur. Heinrich Wiegand , who also had the renovation of his house in the city (Richard-Wagner-Straße 20) planned by these architects.

Wiegand's widow sells the estate in 1913 to the real estate agent Eduard Focke (Fockes Landgut) , who also converted it according to plans by Wilhelm Blanke . In 1929 and 1946, the outbuildings were converted by the new owner, General Manager Carl Erling , founder of Rolandmühle. The area has been in their family property ever since.

The State Office for Monument Preservation Bremen found: “The Hohekamp property is a clear building document of the Bremen country estate and country estate culture, which was mainly cultivated in Oberneuland and on the Lesum ... The renovation of the house ... is ... of great architectural history Meaning."

Note: Not to be confused with Good High r kamp in Bremen- St Magnus . A Hohenkamp house is in Bremen- Oberneuland .

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Monument database of the LfD
  2. Harry Black Forest : Landmarks in Bremen's Werder and Blockland . In: Staatsarchiv Bremen (Ed.): Bremisches Jahrbuch . tape 58 , 1980, pp. 71, 81, 89 ( State and University Library Bremen [accessed on January 17, 2018]).

Coordinates: 53 ° 9 '12.2 "  N , 8 ° 42' 5.3"  E