Korzyścienko

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Korzyścienko (German Neu Werder ) is a village in the West Pomeranian Voivodeship in Poland . It is located in the Gmina Kołobrzeg (rural municipality Kolberg) .

Geographical location

The village is located in Western Pomerania , about 100 kilometers northeast of Stettin and about 2 kilometers from the Baltic Sea . Neighboring towns to the west and north are the seaside resort of Grzybowo (Gribow) , to the east the town of Kołobrzeg ( Kolberg ), whose city center is about 5 kilometers away, but whose urban development is approaching and whose sewage treatment plant is directly adjacent, and to the south the village of Korzystno (Alt Werder ) .

The Koszalin – Goleniów railway (Köslin – Gollnow railway) runs south of the village .

history

The village was laid out in the 1770s under King Frederick the Great . Frederick the Great had ordered the Kolberg council to set up a workshop for wool spinners here. The boundary of the new settlement was separated from the boundary of the neighboring city owned village of Werder. The new settlement was named Neu Werder, the neighboring Werder was named Alt Werder . The new settlement was popularly known as Spinndorf until the 19th century because of the woolly spinners that settled there.

New Werder was created as a street village. Around 1780, twelve wool spinner families had settled in the newly founded Neu Werder. In addition, there was a wood-keeper's house and another wood-keeper's apartment, making a total of 14 households (“fire places”). The population of Neu Werder increased until the middle of the 19th century. But the residents gradually gave up wool spinning and limited themselves to agriculture, which, however, did not produce high yields in the relatively small district with its sandy to boggy soils. The population of Neu Werder gradually fell again.

Before 1945, Neu Werder was a rural community in the Kolberg-Körlin district of the Prussian province of Pomerania . It was the smallest rural community in the county.

After 1945, New Werder, like all of Western Pomerania, came to Poland. It received the Polish place name Korzyścienko .

Development of the population

  • 1816: 105
  • 1864: 141
  • 1885: 136
  • 1919: 090
  • 1939: 092

Borkenrähm residential area

In the years 1846 and 1864, the Borkenrähm wood guard's hut was run as a residential area for the Neu Werder community. It is not recorded on official maps; its location is unknown.

literature

  • Heinrich Berghaus : Land book of the Duchy of Pomerania and the Principality of Rügen . Part III, Volume 1, Anklam 1867, p. 150 ( online ).
  • Manfred Vollack : The Kolberger Land. Its cities and villages. A Pomeranian homeland book. Husum Druck- und Verlagsgesellschaft, Husum 1999, ISBN 3-88042-784-4 , pp. 463-465.

Web links

Footnotes

  1. a b c d e Manfred Vollack : The Kolberger Land. Its cities and villages. A Pomeranian homeland book. Husum Druck- und Verlagsgesellschaft, Husum 1999, ISBN 3-88042-784-4 , p. 464.

Coordinates: 54 ° 9 ′  N , 15 ° 31 ′  E