In the Moore (Hanover)

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View through the street Im Moore towards the Luther Church ;
Postcard around 1900

The street Im Moore in the northern part of Hanover is a residential street that leads from the street Am Puttenser Felde to the Hahnenstraße. The street on the edge of the Welfengarten , which is partially provided with front gardens , has various listed buildings from the 19th and 20th centuries.

history

The area northeast of Montbrillant Castle at the beginning of the 19th century;
Plan of the city of Hanover and the surrounding area (extract); Military engineers Pentz and Bennefeld, 1807
The Villa Im Moore 24, built by Mayor Wilhelm Orgelmann , is the oldest preserved building in the street today
Wilhelminian-style corner dominant around 1900 with a former mom and pop shop on the corner of Asternstrasse

The field name , after which today's street was named, was mentioned in 1750 at the time of the Electorate of Hanover . Around 1770 there was a garden path for the so-called garden cossacks : the Brauns family , which has been traceable in Hanover since 1649, owned extensive land in front of the stone gate in the stone gate field “in the so-called moor ”. In the area of what would later become the flower district , the Brauns family founded the largest horticultural company in northern Germany from around 1790 or around 1800 at the time of the Kingdom of Hanover ; the art and commercial nursery of the Gebrüder Brauns .

The “residential palace” of the 1920s : Im Moore 16 and 18;
Architects Eduard Jürgens and Hans Mencke
The former municipal girls' school with the Nordstädter bathhouse, today Anna-Siemsen-Schule opposite the Luther Church

The architect and Hare -Students and civil chief of the 13th and after Klagesmarkt designated Klagesmarkt district , Wilhelm organ man built himself in 1881 - still "open field" - and in the late early days of the German Empire which then he himself lived and in the brick shapes yet Upper bourgeois villa built in the neo-Gothic style at the current address Im Moore 24 , which is also the oldest surviving building in the street.

The headquarters of the Nebgen-Buden , so named from 1892, was initially located in the street Im Moore.

On November 15, 1911, the oldest baking and pudding powder factory in Germany, Meine & Liebig , relocated to the building at Im Moore 37a .

Among the younger - also listed - building on the street in Moore facing counts Lutherkirche former "urban girls school" set up: Today's Anna-Siemsen-school was during the Weimar Republic in the year 1930 by the Hanoverian Stadtbauamt designed by Karl Elkart built Before the people of Nordstadt could afford their own bathroom in their apartments, part of the school building was also known as the “Nordstadt bathhouse” for its bathtubs and showers ; for the women on the ground floor, for the men on the first floor.

literature

Web links

Commons : Im Moore  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b Gerd Weiß: Map 3/03 03 Nordstadt / 13 Hainholz / 11 Vahrenwald , as well as Im Moore. In: Monument topography of the Federal Republic of Germany, architectural monuments in Lower Saxony, City of Hanover , Part 1, Volume 10.1, ed. by Hans-Herbert Möller, Lower Saxony State Administration Office - Institute for Monument Preservation , Friedr. Vieweg & Sohn Verlagsgesellschaft mbH, Braunschweig 1983, ISBN 3-528-06203-7 , pp. 34f., 107f; as well as Nordstadt in the addendum to part 2, volume 10.2: List of architectural monuments acc. § 4 (NDSchG) (excluding 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. 6f.
  2. ^ Helmut Zimmermann : Im Moore , in ders .: The street names of the state capital Hanover . Verlag Hahnsche Buchhandlung, Hannover 1992, ISBN 3-7752-6120-6 , p. 127
  3. Klaus Mlynek: Gartenkosaken, In: Klaus Mlynek, Waldemar R. Röhrbein (Ed.) U. a .: City Lexicon Hanover . From the beginning to the present. Schlütersche, Hannover 2009, ISBN 978-3-89993-662-9 , p. 203.
  4. a b c Wilma Norkus-Bünte: Wilhelm Bünte. A musician's life. In: Hannoversche Geschichtsblätter , New Series 26 (1972), Issue 1/2, pp. 99–118; here: p. 103ff .; limited preview in Google Book search
  5. Eva Benz-Rababah : Stone gate field. In: Stadtlexikon Hannover , p. 602
  6. Anette Schröder: From Nationalism to National Socialism. The students of the Technical University of Hanover from 1925 to 1938 (= publications of the Historical Commission for Lower Saxony and Bremen , vol. 213), also dissertation 2001 at the University of Hanover, Hanover: Hahnsche Buchhandlung, 2003, ISBN 978-3-7752-6013- 8 and ISBN 3-7752-6013-7 , p. 173
  7. ^ A b Helmut Zimmermann : The street names of the state capital Hanover . Hahnsche Buchhandlung Verlag, Hanover 1992, ISBN 3-7752-6120-6 , pp. 29, 79, 161, 180, v. a. P. 247
  8. Ludwig Hoerner : in the other : Agents, Bader and Copisten. Hannoversches Gewerbe-ABC 1800–1900 . Ed .: Hannoversche Volksbank , Reichold, Hannover 1995, ISBN 3-930459-09-4 , pp. 35, 261f .; limited preview in Google Book search
  9. ^ Günther Kokkelink , Monika Lemke-Kokkelink : Architecture in Northern Germany / Architecture and Crafts of the Hanover School 1850–1900. Schlütersche , Hannover 1998, ISBN 3-87706-538-4 , p. 142, especially p. 555
  10. Indiana Tribüne , Volume 22, Number 58, Indianapolis, Marion County, November 16, 1898, page 2: Digitized by the US state of Indiana
  11. a b Claudia Gröschel, Ingo Bultmann: Tour 10: Nordstadt , in Ingo Bultmann, Thomas Neumann, Jutta Schiecke (Ed.): Hannover on foot. 18 district tours through past and present , Hamburg: VSA-Verlag, 1989, ISBN 978-3-87975-471-7 and ISBN 3-87975-471-3 , pp. 141–159; here: p. 146
  12. o. V .: Orgelmann, Wilhelm in the database of Niedersächsische Personen (new entry required) of the Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Library - Lower Saxony State Library in the version of October 5, 2005, last accessed on June 7, 2018
  13. ^ Waldemar R. Röhrbein : Nebgen stalls. In: Stadtlexikon Hannover , p. 464
  14. ^ Paul Siedentopf (main editor): Meine & Liebig, Hanover, Im Moore 37 a / Germany's oldest baking and pudding powder factory. In other words: The book of the old companies of the city of Hanover in 1927 , with the assistance of Karl Friedrich Leonhardt (compilation of the image material), Jubiläums-Verlag Walter Gerlach, Leipzig 1927, p. 89
  15. Gerd Weiß: The area around the Luther Church. In: Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany ... , p. 106f.
  16. Claudia Gröschel, Ingo Bultmann: Tour 10: Nordstadt ... , here: p. 148

Coordinates: 52 ° 23 '3.6 "  N , 9 ° 43' 14.8"  E