Johann Christoph Eduard Dubbers

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Johann Christoph Eduard Dubbers (born June 27, 1836 in Bremen ; † August 25, 1909 there ) was a Bremen merchant and Danish honorary consul.

Life

Johann Christoph Eduard Dubbers was born in Bremen on June 27, 1836. His father was Johann Christoph Dubbers (1804–1877) and his mother Margarethe Dubbers, née Helmken (1802–1870). He married his wife Maria Albine Dubbers, née Borchers (1845–1925) on May 19, 1864. Their child was called Johann Gerhard August Dubbers (1873–1959).

Johann Christoph Eduard Dubbers was a Bremen merchant and from 1865 the first Danish honorary consul . In the municipality of Lübberstedt , about 40 km from Bremen , he created the Dubbers Park, named after his name, at the end of the 19th century near the train station . He designed this park with a wooden hunting lodge, four fish ponds and a so-called Wolfsschlucht. The park was also his own hunting ground, which he hunted with his guests. The Lübberstedter excursion restaurant Waldhaus , where he was the most famous guest, owes him a railway station. Thus, the property was even easier to reach back then.

The Dubbers family has held the post of Danish Honorary Consul since 1865. When Johann Christoph Eduard Dubbers died on August 25, 1909 in his birthplace Bremen, his son Johann Gerhard August Dubbers continued the job. From 1954 to 1972 the nephew of Johann Gerhard August Dubbers - Eduard Nebelthau - continued this job. This was followed by the granddaughter - Rita Dubbers-Albrecht (born December 15, 1928 in Bremen) - of Johann Christoph Eduard Dubbers. Today, the great-grandson Eduard Dubbers-Albrecht has continued this family tradition since 2000.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Gravestones - Bremen-Riensberg cemetery. In: grabsteine.genealogy.net. 2008, accessed on July 15, 2020 (see under: 3rd photo of the family grave).
  2. a b Local family books - Bremen and Vegesack. In: ortsfamilienbuecher.de. Retrieved July 15, 2020 .
  3. a b Kathrin Aldenhoff: Abandoned Places: The Forest in Lübberstedt - What connects hunters and sailors. In: Website Weser Kurier . March 30, 2014, accessed July 15, 2020 .
  4. Kathrin Aldenhoff, Milan Jaeger: Wolfsschlucht, fish ponds - and a castle: the forgotten forest in Lübberstedt. In: Website Weser Kurier. April 24, 2016, accessed July 15, 2020 .
  5. History - Waldhaus Lüberstedt. In: waldhaus-lübberstedt.de. Retrieved July 15, 2020 .
  6. Corinna Laubach: For us, Bremen is the center of the world. In: welt.de. August 17, 2000, accessed July 15, 2020 .
  7. ^ Honorary Consulate of the Kingdom of Denmark. In: konsulate-bremen.de. Retrieved July 15, 2020 .