Jägerhofstrasse (Düsseldorf)

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Jaegerhofstrasse
coat of arms
Street in Düsseldorf
Jaegerhofstrasse
Jägerhof Castle
Basic data
place Dusseldorf
District Pempelfort
Created 1833
Connecting roads Maximilian-Weyhe-Allee, Jacobistraße
Cross streets Kaiserstrasse, Hofgartenstrasse, Feldstrasse
Buildings Court gardener's house , Jägerhof Palace , court garden
use
User groups Foot traffic , car traffic
Technical specifications
Street length 420 m

The Jägerhofstraße is a street in the Düsseldorf district Pempelfort . It runs along the courtyard garden and is named after the Jägerhof Palace at the eastern end , its point de vue .

location

Jägerhofstraße runs in an east-west direction and, in extension with Maximilian-Weyhe-Allee, connects the old town with the northern city ​​center . As part of the L 392 ( Meerbusch - Unterrath ), the Jägerhofstraße is very busy.

history

Today's Jägerhofstrasse was originally part of a connecting and trading route that connected Düsseldorf with the neighboring city of Ratingen from Ratinger Tor . On a city map from 1809, which shows Düsseldorf after the fortifications had been razed, today's street is marked as a largely undeveloped, nameless path, with fields and gardens in the north and the courtyard garden to the south. For the first time, Jägerhofstrasse appears by name on a city map from 1833, named after Jägerhof Palace, which was completed in 1766. The street was formally identified on July 3, 1854. At that time, in the middle of the 19th century, the Jägerhof and the surrounding streets were one of the preferred addresses of the middle-class ruling class in Düsseldorf and numerous artists. In 1856, in addition to sculptors, copper engravers and gilders, 37 painters, including W. Camphausen , E. Geselschap , H. Gude , and C. Häberlin , lived in what was then 35 houses .

In garrison building at Jägerhofstraße 5, seat of the Staff of the 14th Division , before the First World War under Dedo von Schenck , 1918 negotiations between the found on 8 November USPD -led Workers' and Soldiers and the local leadership of the German Army through the intermediary of Mayor Adalbert Oehler and Police Deputy Robert Lehr took place.

At the beginning of the 20th century there was a riding company at Jägerhofstraße 10. Shortly after the Second World War , the “Reitklub Hofgarten” association was founded here. The 14 founding members included the Duke and Duchess of Croy and the Düsseldorf industrialist Gustav Zapp .

Development

Jägerhofstrasse 7

With the exception of the Hofgärtnerhaus (No. 1), Jägerhofstrasse is exclusively built on the northern side of the street. The courtyard garden is on the southern side. Only a few buildings remain of the historical development, including:

Destroyed buildings:

Post-war buildings under monument protection:

Well-known residents and owners (selection)

Ferdinand Lassalle, around 1860
View of Düsseldorf from the studio window (probably the back of Jägerhofstrasse 26), painting by August Jernberg , around 1865
    • on Hofgartenstrasse
  • Hofgartenhaus, No. 1: Carl Hermann Schauenburg (1819–1876), German physician, around 1857–1859; Otto Rethel , German painter, around 1867–1870; Philipp Röth , German painter, around 1870; Berndt Lindholm , Swedish-Finnish painter, around 1867; Constantin von Briesen , government councilor in Düsseldorf with family, around 1875; Emy von Briesen , German painter and poet, around 1885–1901
    • on Kaiserstraße
  • House No. 2: the painters Wünnenberg , Volkhardt , Brenner and Schanke, around 1859; Georg Anton Rasmussen , Norwegian painter, around 1865 (in 1887 the plot with the number 2 is listed as undeveloped.)
  • House no. 3: Selma Meyer , first professor for paediatrics, with practice there from 1929, around 1935 move to Jägerhofstrasse. 6U, May 1939 emigration
  • House No. 4: Eberhard Stammel , German painter, around 1867, verifiably owner in 1887
  • House No. 5: Prince von Croÿ , Lieutenant General, owner; later division command building
  • House No. 6: Hermann Sondermann , German painter, lived there around 1865
  • House No. 7: Eduard Bendemann , German painter, owner, where he died in 1889; Sophie von Hatzfeldt , German socialist, and Ferdinand Lassalle , German workers' leader, lived in house number 7; after the new building at the end of the 19th century, the industrialist Carl Rudolf Poensgen
  • House No. 8 and 8a: Fredrik Wohlfahrt , Swedish painter, around 1865; Karl Rudolf Sohn and Paul Eduard Richard Sohn , German painters, lived there around 1875; Eduard Bendemann, German painter, owner around 1885
  • House No. 9: Wilhelm Camphausen , German painter, owner since around 1855, where he died in 1885; Gustav Marx , German painter, around 1889
  • House No. 10: Theodor Mintrop , German painter, where he died in 1870, lived there from 1859–1867 in a shared apartment with Eduard Geselschap , German-Dutch painter
  • House no. 11: Hans Fredrik Gude , Norwegian painter, owner around 1859; Uninhabited in 1865
  • House No. 13: Gustav Süs , German painter, around 1855; Hermann Pohle , German painter, around 1865, became the owner; Franz Maria Ingenmey , German painter, around 1865; Carl Irmer , German painter, around 1865; Carl von Häberlin , German painter, around 1859; Arnold Overbeck , German painter and photographer, around 1859; August Wittig , sculptor, 1865; Hermann Emil Pohle , German painter, lived in his father's house; Wilhelm Degode , German painter, lived there
  • House No. 14: Bernhard Budde , German painter, verifiably owned around 1875, 1887
    • Cross street: Feldstrasse
  • House no.15: August Weber , German painter, owner around 1859
  • House No. 18: Emil Gottlieb Schuback , German painter, lived there in the early 1890s
  • House number 19: around 1875 some painters, including Victor Zeppenfeld
  • House No. 20: Anton Schnitzler , architect, owner 1859, Adolf von Randow , sculptor, lived there around 1859, Emil Hünten , German painter, owner since 1870; Max Hünten , German painter, lived in his father's house until around 1895
  • House No. 21: Anton Schnitzler , architect, owner 1859
  • House No. 23 (was not yet built in 1859): Georg Oeder , German painter, around 1870; von Eckenbrecher, medic, owner around 1875, his son Themistocles von Eckenbrecher , German painter, verifiably around 1885
  • House No. 24 (was not yet built in 1859): Hermann Krüger , German painter, around 1875, verifiably owner 1885
  • House No. 25 (was not yet built in 1859): Leonhard Rausch , German painter and engraver, around 1875, verifiably owner 1885
  • House No. 26: Moritz Ulffers , German painter and lithographer, around 1863; August Jernberg , Swedish painter, had his studio there; Olof Jernberg , German painter, from 1865 to 1868 in the house of his father August Jernberg
  • House No. 27: Moritz Ulffers , German painter and lithographer, lived there from 1856, before moving to No. 26; Otto Rethel , German painter, lived there around 1859; Wilhelm Porttmann , German painter, around 1865
  • House No. 28: August Leu , German painter, owner around 1859; Hugo Haniel (1854–1896), co-owner of “Haniel & Lueg”, lived there around 1890
  • House No. 30: Anton Kraus, Hof-Gilder, owner around 1859; Rudolf von Normann , German painter, lived there around 1859
  • Houses No. 31–33 from 1859 to 1875 vacant
  • House No. 34: Inn owned by the owner Wahl, around 1859; Henry Lot , Dutch painter, around 1859; Heinrich Ewers , German painter, around 1865; August Lüttmann (1830–1882), German painter, around 1875
  • House No. 35 (at that time on the corner of Pempelforterstraße): Inn owned by the owner Röntgen, around 1859
    • on Pempelforterstraße

Web links

Commons : Jägerhofstraße  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Hermann Kleinfeld: Dusseldorf's streets and their names. Grupello, Düsseldorf 1996, ISBN 3-928234-36-6 , p. 181.
  2. ^ Peter Hüttenberger : The development towards the big city. In: Hugo Weidenhaupt (Ed.): Düsseldorf, History from the Origins to the 20th Century Volume 2 . Patmos, Düsseldorf 1988, ISBN 3-491-34221-X , p. 510.
  3. ^ Peter Hüttenberger: The development towards the big city. In: Hugo Weidenhaupt (Ed.): Düsseldorf, History from the Origins to the 20th Century Volume 2 . Patmos, Düsseldorf 1988, ISBN 3-491-34221-X , p. 512.
  4. ^ Jägerhofstrasse 5 , in address book for the city of Düsseldorf, 1912, p. 191
  5. ^ Peter Hüttenberger: Düsseldorf in the Weimar Republic. In: Hugo Weidenhaupt (Ed.): Düsseldorf, History from the Origins to the 20th Century Volume 3 . Patmos, Düsseldorf 1988, ISBN 3-491-34221-X , p. 278.
  6. History of the riding club Hofgarten e. V. , on reitklub-hofgarten.de
  7. CR Poensgen house in Düsseldorf; built by Kayser & von Grossheim, architects in Berlin , in Architektonische Rundschau, 1899
  8. ^ Address book of the Obermeisterei Düsseldorf, 1870 , in the forum ahnenforschung-bildet.de, accessed on August 2, 2015
  9. Rasmussen, painters, Jägerhofstr. 2 , in the address book of the mayor's office in Düsseldorf, 1865
  10. Meyer, Selma, Prof., specialist doctor f. Childhood illnesses, Jägerhofstrasse 3U. In the address book of the city of Düsseldorf 1930 , p. 368 ( uni-duesseldorf.de )
  11. Meyer, Selma, Prof., Dr. med., specialist, Jägerhofstr. 6U. In the address book of the city of Düsseldorf 1938 , p. 464 ( uni-duesseldorf.de )
  12. ^ Jägerhofstrasse 4, Stammel, Eberh., Maler E. , in the address book of the city of Düsseldorf, 1893
  13. ^ Sondermann, painter, Jägerhofstr. 6 , in the address book of the Lord Mayor of Düsseldorf, 1865
  14. ^ Jägerhofstrasse 7, Bendemann, Eduard, Dr., Director a. D., E. (= owner); Jägerhofstrasse 8 and 8a (Bendemann, Eduard, (resident) Jägerhofstrasse 7, E.) , in the address book of the mayor's office in Düsseldorf, 1887, p. 93
  15. ^ Helmut Hirsch: Sophie von Hatzfeld , Schwann, Düsseldorf 1981. ISBN 3-590-34101-7 . P. 34.
  16. ^ Poensgen, Carl Rudolf, factory owner, Jägerhofstr. 7 , in the address book of the city of Düsseldorf for 1900, p. 341
  17. ^ Son, Richard, painter, Jägerhofstr. 8 , in address book of the mayor's office in Düsseldorf, 1877
  18. Entries from the address book of the Lord Mayor's Office Düsseldorf 1889 , website in the portal adressbuecher.genealogy.net , accessed on September 8, 2015
  19. ^ The house where Theodor Mintrop died, Jägerhofstrasse 10 , in the address book of the city of Düsseldorf for the year 1894
  20. CE Lehmann (Ed.): Apartment indicator and address book of the Lord Mayor's Office in Düsseldorf per 1850 . Self-published, Düsseldorf, p. 59 ( online )
  21. ^ Geselschap, Ed., Painter, Jägerhofstr. 10 , address book of the mayor's office in Düsseldorf 1868
  22. ^ Gude, Professor, Jägerhofstr. 11 , in the address book of the mayor's office in Düsseldorf, to the year 1859
  23. ^ Suss, Gustav, painter, Jägerhofstr. 13 , in the address book of the mayor's office in Düsseldorf, 1855
  24. ^ Overbeck, Arnold, painter Jägerhofstr. 13 , in the address book of the mayor's office in Düsseldorf, to the year 1859, p. 61
  25. ^ Weber, August, painter, Jägerhofstr. 15 , in the address book of the Lord Mayor of Düsseldorf, 1859
  26. Jägerhofstr. 18, Schuback, Emil, Maler , in address book of the city of Düsseldorf, 1895, p. 573, in address book 1891, p. 494
  27. Jägerhofstrasse 20 and 21, Schnitzler, A., Eo. (= Owner, not resident); No. 20 von Randow, Bildh., V. (= administrator, representative of the owner) , address book of the mayor's office in Düsseldorf for the year 1859, p. 27
  28. ^ Hünten, Emil, Professor, Maler, E., Jägerhofstrasse 20 , in the address book of the city of Düsseldorf, 1894, p. 550
  29. ^ Hünten, Max, painter, Jägerhofstr. 20 , in the address book of the city of Düsseldorf, 1895, p. 741
  30. ^ Moritz Ulffers, painter, Jägerhofstr. 26 , in the address book of the Lord Mayor's Office in Düsseldorf, 1863
  31. Wend von Kalnein (ed.): Die Düsseldorfer Malerschule , Verlag Philipp von Zabern, Mainz 1979, ISBN 3-8053-0409-9 , p. 358, cat. No. 122
  32. ^ Moritz Ulffers, painter, Jägerhofstr. 27 , in the address book of the mayor's office in Düsseldorf, 1856
  33. Leu, August, painter, Jägerhofstr. 28 , in address book of the mayor's office in Düsseldorf, 1859
  34. Haniel & Lueg, machine factory, iron foundry, hammer mill and pipe foundry, Grafenberger Chaussee 330, owner: 1. Franz Haniel, Königsallee 19; 2. Heinrich Lueg, Sternstr. 18; 3. Hugo Haniel, Jägerhofstrasse. 28; 4. Thusnelda Haniel, wife of the painter Georg Oeder, Jacobistr. 10 , in address book of the mayor's office in Düsseldorf, 1890
  35. ^ Kraus, Anton, Hof-Gilder, Jägerhofstr. 30, owner , in the address book of the mayor's office in Düsseldorf, to the year 1859

Coordinates: 51 ° 13 ′ 49.9 ″  N , 6 ° 47 ′ 2 ″  E