Kutenholz (main town)

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Kutenholz ( Low German Kutenhult / Kutenholt ) is the capital of the municipality of the same name in the Lower Saxony district of Stade .

community Kutenholz
Coat of arms of Kutenholz
Coordinates: 53 ° 28 ′ 52 ″  N , 9 ° 19 ′ 22 ″  E
Height : 24 m
Residents : 2121  (2017) [1]
Incorporation : July 1, 1972
Postal code : 27449
Area code : 04762
Kutenholz (Lower Saxony)
Kutenholz

Location of Kutenholz in Lower Saxony

Aerial photo of Kutenholz (2013)
Aerial photo of Kutenholz (2013)

geography

Neighboring places

Essel , Tinste Mulsum Fredenbeck , Wedel
Hesedorf , Sprakel Neighboring communities Frankenmoor
Byhusen Baaste Aspe

history

Kutenholz was first mentioned in 1313 as Cvtenholte .

The connection to the power grid took place in 1921/22.

At the end of the Second World War, some British tanks of the 7th Panzer Division came from Brest through Kutenholz. Two of the Sherman tanks were blown up by hand-detonated mines on April 30 and 31, 1945. Seven or eight soldiers were killed in the process.

42 Kutenholz soldiers died in World War I and 95 in World War II.

Administrative history

In the French era , Kutenholz belonged to Mairie Kutenholz in the canton of Harsefeld in the Kingdom of Westphalia from 1810 to 1811 . From 1811 to 1814 Kutenholz belonged to Mairie Ahlerstedt in the canton of Harsefeld, directly to the French Empire .

Before 1852 the place belonged to the Börde Mulsum in the district of Harsefeld . The Börde Mulsum changed in 1852 to the Stade office, which was added to the Himmelpforten office in 1859 .

On January 1st, Sadersdorf was incorporated into Kutenholz. As part of the regional reform , the new Kutenholz community was formed on July 1, 1972 from the communities of Kutenholz, Mulsum , Aspe and Essel . Until 1972, Kutenholz was also the seat of the Kutenholz municipality .

Population development

year Residents
1791 25 fire places
1824 31 fireplaces
1848 443 people, 79 houses *
1871 446 people, 81 houses
1910 623
1925 656 *
1933 419 *
1939 448 *

* with bull wood

religion

Kutenholz is evangelical-Lutheran and belongs to the parish of the St. Petri Church in Mulsum.

mayor

coat of arms

The coat of arms of Kutenholz is a silver oak with five golden acorns on a red background. This coat of arms was adopted by the council of the municipality of Kutenholz on November 5, 1947.

Culture and sights

Buildings

  • Heimathaus "Op de Heidloh"
  • "Peter Kors sien olet Huus"

Association

  • Hometown club
  • Shooting club (founded 1951)
  • VfL Kutenholz (founded 1906)

Economy and Infrastructure

fire Department

The volunteer fire brigade was founded on May 1933. Before that there was a compulsory fire brigade . In 2017/28 the syringe house got an extension, including a new vehicle hall with three parking spaces. The costs amounted to 1.1 million euros.

traffic

The L 123 runs through Kutenholz, which connects the town to Bremervörde in the west and the federal highway 73 in Horneburg in the east, which continues to Buxtehude , Stade and Hamburg . The district roads K 42, K 70 and K 2 leave the L 123. The K 42 leads in the southwest via Sadersdorf , Byhusen , Malstedt and Deinstedt to the federal road 71 . The K 2 goes from Bullenholz in the north via Mulsum to the federal highway 74 near Hagenah . The K 70 runs in the northeast to Fredenbeck .

The next motorway connection is about 20 km away in the northeast at exit 3 Stade-Ost to the A 26 .

The place has a stop on the Bremerhaven – Buxtehude railway line . The train station is about 2 km south of the town center.

Companies

In the Schulstrasse 12 has Volksbank Fred Beck-Oldendorf-Ahlerstedt a branch and the Kreissparkasse Stade on the main line 13 .

The largest employer is RPC Verpackung Kutenholz , which produces plastic bottles.

education

Kutenholz is one of two locations of the Kutenholz-Mulsum primary school .

literature

  • Heinz Hauschild: Kutenholz with the hamlets of Aspe and Essel - then and now. 1983

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Kutenholz, Stade district, Lower Saxony. Retrieved December 17, 2018 .
  2. 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 December 17, 2018]).
  3. CHCF Jansen: Statistical Handbook of the Kingdom of Hanover . In Commission of the Helwings̓chen Hofbuchhandlung, 1824 ( google.de [accessed on December 17, 2018]).
  4. FW Harseim: Statistical Manual for the Kingdom of Hanover . Schlüter, 1848 ( google.de [accessed December 17, 2018]).
  5. a b Prussia (Germany) Royal Statistical Bureau: The municipalities and manor districts of the Prussian state and their population: According to the original materials of the general census of December 1, 1871 . Publishing house of the Royal Statistical Bureau, 1873 ( google.de [accessed December 17, 2018]).
  6. Welcome to Gemeindeververzeichnis.de. Retrieved December 17, 2018 .
  7. ^ A b German administrative history of the province of Hanover, district of Stade. Retrieved December 17, 2018 .