Heinschenwalde

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Heinschenwalde (up to 1957 single courtyards ; Low German Op de Hööv ) is a district of the municipality Hipstedt im

community Hipstedt
Heinschenwalde coat of arms
Coordinates: 53 ° 31 ′ 18 ″  N , 8 ° 56 ′ 45 ″  E
Area : 18.09 km²
Incorporation : March 1, 1974
Postal code : 27432
Area code : 04768
Heinschenwalde (Lower Saxony)
Heinschenwalde

Location of Heinschenwalde in Lower Saxony

Cemetery in Heinschenwalde
Cemetery in Heinschenwalde

Lower Saxony district of Rotenburg (Wümme) . The place is on the Geeste .

Geography and transport links

Geographical location

Heinschenwalde lies on the Geest . The Geeste flows south of the village . The Hinzel Forest joins in the southeast .

Neighboring places

Neighboring places are Kleinenhain and Grossenhain in the north, Neu Ebersdorf and Ebersdorf in the east, Hipstedt in the southeast, Thebüe in the south, Frelsdorf , Frelsdorfermühlen and Geesteneth in the southwest and third geest and Köhlen in the northwest.

Transport links

Street

The place is on the county road 116 , which leads to the north-west to Köhlen on the state road 128 . In the southwest of the K runs 116 Hipstedt direction and proceeds to the highways 71 / 74 near Oerel . In the northwest, the district road 124 runs to Neu Ebersdorf to the state road 119 .

rail

Heinschenwalde has its own train station on the Bremerhaven - Buxtehude railway line , which is near Hipstedt-Löh . A narrow-gauge railway to the Sperrzeugamt also used to branch off from this station . This was later moved and then led to the Langen Moor, where peat extraction took place. In 1997 the peat plant closed and the narrow-gauge railway was dismantled.

history

The Geeste near Heinschenwalde

The community was formed around 1850 from the individual farms Heinschenwall, Freitag, Sünderwald, Bokelah, Drachel and Hinzel. Initially, the community was given the name of single courtyards , but in 1957 it was renamed in High German after the Heinschenwall farm in Heinschenwalde . In Low German, the place continues to be called Op de Hööv . The Friday and Sünderwald farms moved to the Hipstedt community in 1922.

From 1933 to 1936, a naval blocking equipment office was established in nearby Hinzel . However, after 1945 it was no longer used. Most of the buildings were blown up and demolished, but some were preserved and given new uses.

In the 20th century, numerous new houses were built on Postweg (K 116), which now form a small street village; the old farms are all apart.

Administrative history

Before 1885, the single-digit farms belonged to the Bremervörde Vogtei in the Bremervörde office and then to the Bremervörde district . In 1932 it merged with the Zeven district . In 1977 Heinschenwalde became part of the newly formed district of Rotenburg (Wümme) .

As part of the regional reform , Heinschenwale was incorporated into Hipstedt on March 1, 1974.

religion

Heinschenwalde is evangelical-Lutheran and belongs to the parish of the Bethlehem Church in Hipstedt-Löh . Before this church was built, Heinschenwalde belonged to the parish of the Oerel Church . For the (few) Catholics is St. Michael's Church in Bremervörde responsible, since 1 September 2010 on the parish of the Holy Spirit in Stade belongs.

Culture

Association

The village's shooting club is the Drachel und Umgebung e. V. , which was founded in 1920. The current shooting range was built in 1980 in the village. Heinschenwalde also has a volunteer fire brigade .

literature

  • Heinrich Krankenberg: Hipstedt: History of a village between Geest and Moor. 2008

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. municipalities. Retrieved on August 3, 2020 (German).
  2. ^ Heinrich Krankenberg: Hipstedt: History of a village between Geest and Moor . 2008, p. 149 .
  3. Home. Retrieved August 3, 2020 .