Kakerbeck-Doosthof

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municipality Ahlerstedt
Coordinates: 53 ° 26 ′ 27 ″  N , 9 ° 25 ′ 8 ″  E
Residents : 80
Postal code : 21702
Area code : 04166
New Apostolic Church in Kakerbeck-Doosthof
New Apostolic Church in Kakerbeck-Doosthof

Kakerbeck-Doosthof ( Low German Kokerbeck-Doosthoff ) is a residential area of Kakerbeck in the municipality of Ahlerstedt in the Lower Saxony district of Stade .

Geography and transport links

Kakerbeck-Doosthof is located northeast of the core town of Ahlerstedt and northeast of Kakerbeck and touches the K 64, which leads from Kakerbeck to Bargstedt . A smaller road also leads to Brest . The floodplain flows southeast .

The place consists of two farms that are still in use and about 20 houses.

history

Population development

year Residents
1791 3 fire places
1824 3 fire places
December 1, 1871 37 people, 5 houses

religion

Kakerbeck-Doosthof is evangelical-Lutheran and New Apostolic . Most of the inhabitants of the village are of Protestant denomination and belong to the parish of the Church of St. Primus in Bargstedt. About a third of the residents are of the New Apostolic denomination and belong to the New Apostolic Church Congregation Doosthof .

Buildings

church

In 1921, the only New Apostle at the Doosthof, Claus Bargsten, who had become a New Apostolic during World War I , set up a prayer room. On August 12, 1922, the New Apostolic congregation was founded on Doosthof and at that time had 28 brothers and sisters.

In the post-war years the construction of a church began. The congregation saw a strong increase; it had grown from around 100 members in the 1930s to over 200 members due to displaced persons and the prayer room was gradually becoming too small. The building material came from the bombed-out Hamburg-Borgfelde church and was transported by train to Bargstedt , from where it was then brought to the construction site by horse-drawn cart. The church was consecrated on October 9, 1949. Renovation work was carried out in 1965 and the extension was added in 1976, which includes a sacristy and a multi-purpose room.

Today the community has 202 members.

Individual evidence

  1. Christoph Barthold Scharf: Statistical-topographical collections for a more precise knowledge of all the provinces that make up the electorate Braunschweig-Lüneburg . Author, 1791 ( google.de [accessed October 25, 2018]).
  2. CHCF Jansen: Statistical Handbook of the Kingdom of Hanover . In Commission of the Helwings̓chen Hofbuchhandlung, 1824 ( google.de [accessed on October 25, 2018]).
  3. Prussia (Germany) Royal Statistical Bureau: The communities and manor districts of the Prussian state and their population: Based on the original materials of the general census of December 1, 1871 . Publishing house of the Royal Statistical Bureau, 1873 ( google.de [accessed on October 25, 2018]).
  4. Home. November 7, 2017. Retrieved October 25, 2018 .
  5. Chronicle. March 3, 2018, accessed October 25, 2018 .