Heinrich Niemeyer (politician)

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Heinrich Niemeyer (born August 19, 1815 in Linden near Hanover ; † February 22, 1890 there ) was a German local politician , distillery owner and member of the Prussian House of Representatives .

Life

The listed classicist house Davenstedter Straße 29 of the Niemeyer family in Linden-Mitte from around 1850 is one of the oldest houses in the area
Tomb of Christian Niemeyer's family in the Lindener Berg district cemetery

Heinrich Niemeyer was a half-Meier and owner of a brandy distillery that his ancestors, the Niemeyer brothers , had founded in Linden in 1786. The grain distillery is said to have been the oldest known industrial facility in Linden and is related to a Kötnerhof on the former Lindenerstraße , later Falkenstraße and today's Davenstedter Straße 29-33 , of which a backyard building is said to have survived. Before that, Christian Niemeyer is said to have had the so-called "Dolphin House" built around 1891, which later became the drying school .

A few years before the entrepreneur Georg Egestorff donated the building material for a new tower of the Evangelical Church of St. Martin in the early years of industrialization in the Kingdom of Hanover in 1854 , Heinrich Niemeyer was one of the heads of the parish of St. Martins in 1851, together with Heinrich Struckmeyer , the community accountant and add-on pancake and the add-on and innkeeper Karl Rehren .

When the royal domain chamber wanted to sell the stately Linden windmill in the mid-1850s , after the involvement of the Linden office , on October 3, 1855, the Halbmeier and Linden community leader Niemeyer was one of six signatories of the dismissal complaints for the previous mill compulsion .

Heinrich Niemeyer was the last community leader of Linden before the village was raised to an independent town in the course of industrialization during the founding of the German Empire in 1885.

In addition to linden trees, Niemeyer also worked in the town of Egestorf in the Süntel .

Heinrich Niemeyer, who with his brother Carl and other companies to have operated, had the son and Senator Christian Niemeyer (1842-1903) whose tomb on the mountain cemetery on the Linden Berg should have received.

Niemeyerstrasse

The Niemeyerstraße between Posthornstraße and Kirchstraße , which was laid out in 1874 during Niemeyer's lifetime in what is now the Hanover district of Linden-Mitte , has since honored the last community leader with its name.

literature

  • Wilhelm Rothert : General Hannoversche Biography (in Gothic script ), Vol. 1: Hannoversche men and women since 1866 ; Hanover: Sponholtz, 1912, p. 359
  • Bernhard Mann : Biographical Handbook for the Prussian House of Representatives 1867-1918 (= Handbooks on the history of parliamentarism and political parties. Volume 3). Droste, Düsseldorf 1988, ISBN 3-7700-5146-7 , p. 285.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Helmut Zimmermann : Niemeyerstraße , in ders .: The street names of the state capital Hanover. Hahnsche Buchhandlung Verlag, Hannover 1992, ISBN 3-7752-6120-6 , p. 182
  2. a b o.V. : Niemeyer, Heinrich in the database of Niedersächsische Personen (new entry required) of the Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Library - Niedersächsische Landesbibliothek , last accessed on March 6, 2017
  3. a b Detlef Schmiechen-Ackermann : Rural poverty and the beginnings of the Linden factory workers. Migration in the early industrialization of the Kingdom of Hanover. (= Sources and representations on the history of Lower Saxony , vol. 103), at the same time dissertation 1986 at the University of Hanover 1986, ed. from the Historical Association for Lower Saxony, Hildesheim: Lax Verlag, 1990, ISBN 3-7848-3503-1 , pp. 109, 165; Preview over google books
  4. a b Andreas-Andrew Bornemann: Farm of the farmer Hans Dietrich Niemeyer ( Memento of the original from March 7, 2017 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. on the postkarten-archiv.de page , last accessed on March 6, 2017 @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.postkarten-archiv.de
  5. Ilse Rüttgerodt-Riechmann: Davenstedter Strasse , in: Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany , architectural monuments in Lower Saxony, City of Hanover (DTBD), part 2, vol. 10.2, ed. by Hans-Herbert Möller , Lower Saxony State Administration Office - Institute for Monument Preservation , Friedr. Vieweg & Sohn Verlagsgesellschaft mbH, Braunschweig 1985, ISBN 3-528-06208-8 , p. 124ff .; as well as linden trees in the addendum : List of architectural monuments acc. § 4 ( NDSchG ) (except for architectural monuments of the archaeological monument preservation), status: July 1, 1985, City of Hanover , Lower Saxony State Administration Office - publications of the Institute for Monument Preservation , p. 22f.
  6. Helmut Zimmermann : Die Lindener Windmühle , in: Hannoversche Geschichtsblätter , New Series Volume 51 (1997), p. 302f.