Johanna Friesen School

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Johanna Friesen School
Johanna Friesen School Hanover
type of school primary school
founding 1883
address

Friesenstrasse 26
30161 Hanover

place Hanover
country Lower Saxony
Country Germany
Coordinates 52 ° 22 '54 "  N , 9 ° 45' 1"  E Coordinates: 52 ° 22 '54 "  N , 9 ° 45' 1"  E
carrier City of Hanover
management Bärbel Rudolph ( Rector )
Karsten Wandtke-Rumpf (Vice Rector)
Website www.johanna-friesen-schule.de

The Johanna-Friesen-Schule in Hanover , formerly also called Freischule III and later Citizen School 29/30 as well as Citizen School 26 and Friesenschule , is a co-educational elementary school founded in the 19th century . The educational institution named after the benefactor Johanna Friesen is located at Friesenstrasse 26 in the Oststadt district of Hanover .

history

As a result of by the industrialization rapidly growing population of Hanover in the early days of the German Empire , the architect built Oskar Wilsdorff 1882-1883 a public school , in the address book, city and business Manual of the Royal residence city of Hanover and the city of Linden first time in 1883 in the "3 Extended Friesenstraße" still widely undeveloped area "personal appearance metropolitan area" under the property of the magistrate found the city of Hanover. To the municipal school building, the first as a " free school out III" and in the ground floor of the school Vogt was inhabited Westenhoff, "Long Friesenstraße 4" joined in 1885 at the address one of the two deaconesses brown and Hagen and the assistant inhabited Heimberg waiting school and the parish hall of the Dreifaltigkeitskirche , where Pastor Theodor Gelpke lived, who had only moved from Eichstrasse 14 in April 1885, moved to the parish hall of the Holy Trinity Church .

At the beginning of the 20th century, the Bürgererschule at Friesenstrasse 26 was run as Bürgererschule 29/30 and its production costs of 123,617 were recorded. There was still a strict gender division into boys and girls.

During the Weimar Republic , from Easter 1926 onwards, Waldorf education in Hanover was also taught for the first time in the community school in Friesenstrasse : Mathilde Hoyer began there with an experimental class of 52 first graders before Hanover's first Waldorf School in 1932 in the Garvens Villa on George garden in the hunter 7 A moved away.

Also in the year before the seizure of power by the time of National Socialism , Citizens School 26 served as a polling station for constituency 122 .

During the air raids on Hanover in World War II , the school building on Friesenstrasse was destroyed by aerial bombs in 1943 . The pupils then had to be housed in the two elementary schools in Edenstrasse and Kollenrodtstrasse before many children were evacuated from the city after further heavy air raids in October 1943 .

It was not until the post-war period that, from Easter 1950, pupils from the Friesenstrasse catchment area could again be taught in the vicinity of the old school for the first time, after some rooms in Rumannstrasse had been converted into classrooms.

Until the summer of 1951, the rubble and debris removal of the destroyed school began in the Friesenstraße before October 1951, a new building of the school building could be built on the same site. After the inauguration ceremony on April 17, 1952, around 1000 pupils were able to receive their lessons divided into two shifts, but still without a gym , which could not be completed until 1954.

For several decades the name Friesenschule was the name of the elementary school , which was renamed "Johanna Friesen School" on February 22, 1995.

literature

  • Detlef HO Kopmann: The Bürgererschule 29 on Friesenstrasse , in ders .: Hannover-Oststadt (= time leaps ), with illustrations, Erfurt: Sutton Verlag, 2004, ISBN 978-3-89702-688-9 and ISBN 3-89702-688 -0 , p. 63

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f g o. V .: History of the school (in Friesenstrasse) , illustrated article on the school's website [undated], last accessed on July 3, 2018
  2. school management. In: www.johanna-friesen-schule.de. Retrieved March 6, 2020 .
  3. a b Compare the street and house directory in the address book from 1885, p. 158 (AB) as a digitized version of the Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Library - Lower Saxony State Library (GWLB)
  4. ^ A b c Administrative report of the magistrate of the royal capital and residence city of Hanover, 1906-1907 , Hanover: A. Eberlein, 1908, p. 316; limited preview in Google Book search
  5. ^ Helmut Zimmermann : Friesenstrasse , in ders .: The street names of the state capital Hanover . Verlag Hahnsche Buchhandlung, Hannover 1992, ISBN 3-7752-6120-6 , p. 85
  6. a b o. V .: History on the comeniusschule-hannover.de page [no date], last accessed on July 22, 2018
  7. a b Reinhard Glaß: Wilsdorff, Oskar Heinrich (often incorrectly called: Otto Heinrich Wilsdorff) in the database architects and artists with direct reference to Conrad Wilhelm Hase (1818–1902) [undated], last accessed on July 23, 2018
  8. ^ Compare the street and house directory in the 1882 address book, p. 152 of the GWLB
  9. Compare the AB, Division I, Alphabetical Directory of Authorities etc., p. 421 of the GWLB
  10. Detlef HO Kopmann: The Bürgererschule 29 on Friesenstrasse , in ders .: Hannover-Oststadt (= time leaps ), with illustrations, Erfurt: Sutton Verlag, 2004, ISBN 978-3-89702-688-9 and ISBN 3-89702- 688-0 , p. 63
  11. a b o. V .: “Everything was missing” , article on the website waldorfschule-maschsee.de from April 23, 2016, last accessed on July 23, 2018
  12. o. V .: History of the school on the site waldorfschule-maschsee.de [ undated ], last accessed on July 23, 2018
  13. ^ Wolfgang Leonhardt : Voting behavior of the Vahrenwalder on April 24 , 1932 , in ders .: Vahrenwald and List. Village and neighborhood stories. Books on Demand, Norderstedt 2013, ISBN 978-3-7322-2710-5 , p. 52ff .; here: p. 54; limited preview in Google Book search