Hindenburgstrasse (Bremen)

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Hindenburgstrasse
coat of arms
Street in Bremen
Hindenburgstrasse
Basic data
city Bremen
district Burglesum
Connecting roads Stader Landstrasse, Lesumer Heerstrasse, Rotdornallee
Cross streets Bremerhavener Heerstr., Am Heidbergstift, Im Pohl, Stehnckenshoff, An der Lesumer Kirche , Krudopsberg, Lesumer Brink, Oberzeile, Alter Schulhof, Schneiderstr., Am Mönchshof, Käthe-Kollwitz- Str., Am Radeberg.
Buildings Lesum Church , Lesum Pharmacy
use
User groups Motor vehicles, bicycles and pedestrians
Road design two lane road
Technical specifications
Street length approx. 1180 meters
No. 32: Lesum District Court from 1854
No. 77: Lesum Pharmacy
Heimathaus Lesum
No. 14: Church of the Resurrection

The Hindenburgstraße is a historical street in east-west direction in Bremen in the district Burglesum , districts Lesum and Burgdamm. It leads from Stader Landstrasse to the streets Rotdornallee / Lesumer Heerstrasse.

The cross streets were u. a. named after the residents (Heidbergstift, Stehnckens, Krudop) or landscape features (the Pohl is a pond between Hindenburgstrasse and the Lesum, Brink means, among other things, elevated settlement, Radeberg can stand for clearing as in other places with this name), otherwise see the link to the streets.

history

Surname

The street was named in 1930 after Field Marshal General (1914) and second Reich President of the Weimar Republic Paul von Hindenburg (1847-1934). He was Reich President from 1925 to 1934. In 1933 he appointed Adolf Hitler as Reich Chancellor . The street was previously called Chaussee-Straße and continued until 1939 via today's Lesumer Heerstraße to Holthorster Weg .

development

Burglesum is a district that consists of several historical districts. The district of Lesum , through which the street leads, was first mentioned around 860 and was an independent parish . In the 15th century the Bremen council was responsible for the area, in 1741 it fell to the Electorate of Braunschweig-Lüneburg (later Hanover), in 1866 Lesum became Prussian and in 1939 Bremen.

The Lesum Church was built at the beginning of the 13th century on the church hill on the street. In 1778/79 a new, larger nave had to be built due to the growing population . At that time, Lesum was still rural.

The settlement of businesses in Lesum was favored from the middle of the 19th century, as Bremen was not part of the German customs area until 1888. The population doubled from 1858 to 1905 to 2169 inhabitants; today (2017) Lesum has around 9,000 inhabitants.

The course of the street Stader Landstraße - Hindenburgstraße - Lesumer Heerstraße is part of an older Heerstraße , which was expanded as a road in 1830/32 . The street was part of Reichsstraße 74 and B 74 . The center of Lesum was formed on today's Hindenburgstrasse around the St. Martini Church , with the Burglesum local office , the Lesum police station, the district library and the Bremen Sparkasse , various shops and a few restaurants.

In 1854 the justice administration on the Chaussee (today Hindenburgstrasse 32) built the Lesum district court out of red bricks ; (today police station).

During the Second World War , only a few building losses had to be accepted due to bombs.

traffic

The Bremen-Farge – Bremen -Vegesack railway was opened in 1888 by the Farge-Vegesacker Railway (FVE). The regional S-Bahn Bremen / Lower Saxony was set up in 2010 , which also serves Lesum with the S-Bahn line RS 1 towards Bremen-Mitte / Verden and towards Farge .

In transport in Bremen travel on this road, the bus lines 91, 94 and 95th

Buildings, plants

On the street there are predominantly one-, two-, three- and eight-story buildings, which are mostly residential buildings.

Architectural monuments and sculptures:

Other noteworthy facilities and buildings are:

  • No. 3: 2-sch. Volksbank Lesum from around 1970
  • at No. 5/7: crossing the Ihle , right tributary of the Lesum
  • No. 7: Senior citizens' residential park on the Ihle
  • At no. 12: crossing under the Bremen-Farge – Bremen-Vegesack railway line
  • No. 14: Church of the Resurrection of the Methodist Church in Bremen-Lesum
  • No. 18: 1-sch. Gabled house with half-timbering from 1836, today a bistro
  • No. 24: 8-gesch. Residential complex
  • No. 26: 4-sch. Residential complex
  • No. 29: 2-sch. Residential and commercial building from around 1910
  • No. 30: 1/2 cut. Parish hall with day care center of the Lesum Church
  • No. 31: 2-sch. Lesum district library from?
  • No. 32: 2-sch. Brick building from 1854; formerly Lesum District Court , now Lesum Police Station
  • at No. 32, old schoolyard 11: 2-sch. Heimathaus Lesum of the home and beautification association Bremen-Lesum
  • No. 33A: 2-sch. School at the Mönchshof
  • No. 51: 1-sch. Thatched house with a crooked hip , today a commercial building
  • No. 61 / upper row 2: 2-ply Burglesum local office
  • No. 63/67: 2/3 cut. Office building of the Sparkasse Bremen from 1965 based on plans by Ernst Becker-Sassenhof
  • after No. 56 or 79: Lesum stop on the Bremen-Farge – Bremen-Vegesack railway line

See also

literature

Coordinates: 53 ° 10 ′ 6 ″  N , 8 ° 41 ′ 29 ″  E