House Blessenohl

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Blessenohl
Coordinates: 51 ° 18 ′ 13 ″  N , 8 ° 9 ′ 31 ″  E
Height : approx. 270 m
Residents : (Dec 31, 2012)
Postal code : 59889
Area code : 02973
Entrance to the estate
Entrance to the estate
House Blessenohl
Side view

The Blessenohl house is located around two kilometers north of Eslohe - Wenholthausen on Landesstrasse 541. At the end of 2012, Blessenohl had three residents.

history

The Blessenohl farm was first mentioned in a document in 1425. The owner at the time was Heinrich von Beringhausen . Two years later the property was sold to the von Schade family . In 1749 Josef Anton von Schade intends to transform his Blessenohl estate into a Johanniterkommende . However, the plan does not run. In the years 1741 to 1742 the farm was then expanded into a manor . The von Schade family remained the owners of the house until it was sold on February 2, 1817.

Caspar von Wrede from Amecke subsequently became the new owner . After his death in 1832, Maximilian von Kleinsorgen bought the estate two years later and relocated from Schüren to Blessenohl. In 1846 von Kleinsorgen received the title of baron . In 1869 he combined his three estates, Blessenohl, Schüren and Bettinghausen, to form a family entailment .

The estate was occupied by the National Socialists after 1933. After the occupation, the property was used as a pre-military youth education camp. In 1940 the branch of the von Kleinsorgen family based in Blessenohl died out. The widow von Kleinsorgen (née Tesch) married Antonius Eickelmann zu Lüdighausen after the death of her husband. After her death, the inheritance fell to her niece Ursula Molzan.

Around 1952 nuns took over the property in order to set up a church retirement home in the property. In the period from 1986 to 2005 the regional association used the estate as a youth home. In 2009 the property came back into private ownership.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Eslohe and the surrounding area - Eslohe community. Retrieved November 17, 2017 .
  2. Géza Jászai, Heiko KL Schulze , Jochen Luckhardt : Monastic Westphalia. Monasteries and monasteries 800–1800. , Westphalian State Museum for Art and Cultural History, Münster 1982, ISBN 3-88789-054-X , p. 315.
  3. ^ Archive NRW: Brockhausen - Gut Bettinghausen , accessed on May 26, 2011.
  4. ^ Hugo Blessenohl: Contributions to the history of the family and the manor house Blessenohl 1825-1995. Jan Blessenohl, Paderborn 1998, p. 9 (PDF; 325 kB).
  5. Flyer Gut Blessenohl, History