Hammesberg

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Wuppertal coat of arms
Hammesberg (72)
district of Wuppertal
Location of the Hammesberg quarter in the Heckinghausen district
Coordinates 51 ° 15 ′ 29 ″  N , 7 ° 13 ′ 19 ″  E Coordinates: 51 ° 15 ′ 29 ″  N , 7 ° 13 ′ 19 ″  E.
height 327  m above sea level NHN
surface 2.33 km²
Residents 1286 (December 31, 2016)
Population density 552 inhabitants / km²
Proportion of foreigners 8.9% (Dec. 31, 2016)
Post Code 42289
prefix 0202
Borough Heckinghausen
Transport links
bus 636 638 AST38
Source: Wuppertal statistics - spatial data

The Hammesberg residential area in Wuppertal is one of three quarters in the Heckinghausen district .

geography

The 2.33 km² residential area includes the single-family housing estates (emerged from old farms ) Hammesberg and Konradswüsten and large parts of the former training area and today's local recreation area Scharpenacken as well as the southern part of the Barmer facilities , the Barmer Forest . The residential area and today's industrial area of Kupferhammer are in the Blombachtal .

It is bounded in the east by the state road 58 (formerly federal highway 51 ) and the federal highway 1 and in the north in sections by the Murmelbach and in the south in sections by the Schmalenhofer Bach in the Blombachtal . The highest elevation is the 327 meter high Scharpenacker Berg , which is also known as the Hammesberg. There is a primary school in the residential area .

The Norrenberger Bach flows through the residential area .

Settlement history

According to the Topographia Ducatus Montani, there were five courtyards in today's residential area around 1715 : Desert (1805: Weuste, 1824: Conrads Desert), Scharpenacker , Plocksburg , Norrenberg and the eponymous Hammersberg, which was named Hamelsberg in 1715 and Hamersberg in 1840 . While Scharpenacker remained a single courtyard and was abandoned in 1936 with the establishment of the on- site exercise area, what is now the residential area developed from the other four courtyards.

In 1832, the Hammesberg settlement center belonged to the Scharpenacker Rotte of the rural outskirts of the city of Ronsdorf . The place, categorized as a hamlet according to the statistics and topography of the administrative district of Düsseldorf , had six residential buildings and three agricultural buildings at that time. At that time 50 people lived in the village, all of them Protestant faith. In the municipality lexicon for the Rhineland province from 1888, four houses with 94 inhabitants are given.

etymology

The etymological origin of the old place name Hammesberg is the personal name "Ham". In 1666, a Hamman Vorm Berg is mentioned in the Lüttringhauser church registers , who left behind a very extensive property. According to Wilhelm Crecelius, Hamman is a pet form for Johannes. In 1715 there were two hammer mills on the Schmalenhofer Bach at the foot of the Scharpenacker Berg (Hammesberg) . It is not clear whether the name Hammesberg / Hamersberg is derived from these hammer mills.

The name of the place as Hammesberger Straße (in the literature the street is called Hammesberg) appears for the first time in 1870 in the address book of the Lennep district . The Hammesberger Weg was named between 1906 and 1925, the exact date is not known.

The streets "Hammesberger Straße" and "Hammesberger Weg"

View from the "Scharpenacken" not far from the Konrads desert into the Wuppertal to the east

Hammesberger Weg begins at Landesstraße 58 and runs for the first 230 meters in a southerly direction, then the street turns in a westerly direction. Shortly afterwards, a 50 meter long cul-de-sac goes north. Around 340 meters after the start of Hammesberger Weg, the road meets the railway line from Oberbarmen to Ronsdorf ( Wuppertal-Oberbarmen – Solingen railway line ), turns south and bridges the railway line after another 120 meters. The road ends around 540 meters after the start of Hammesberger Weg and continues as Hammesberger Straße, which then continues in a north-westerly direction. After around 350 meters, a 320-meter-long cul-de-sac branches off in a northeastern direction. Hammesberger Strasse continues for around 70 meters in a north-westerly direction and ends at the Zur Konradswüsten road .

Web links

Commons : Hammesberg  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Johann Georg von Viebahn : Statistics and Topography of the Administrative District of Düsseldorf , 1836
  2. Königliches Statistisches Bureau (Prussia) (Ed.): Community encyclopedia for the Rhineland Province, based on the materials of the census of December 1, 1885 and other official sources, (Community encyclopedia for the Kingdom of Prussia, Volume XII), Berlin 1888.
  3. a b c Wolfgang Stock: Wuppertal street names . Thales Verlag, Essen-Werden 2002, ISBN 3-88908-481-8
  4. ^ Contract of inheritance of December 1, 1666, church register Lüttringhausen
  5. ^ Gustav von Eynern, News about the Erbslöh Family , Lintz, Düsseldorf 1905 (Wuppertal-Elberfeld City Library), p. 14