Linderhausen

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Linderhausen is a former municipality in the Ennepe-Ruhr district and today's district of the city of Schwelm in North Rhine-Westphalia .

geography

Districts

In addition to the main town, Linderhausen consisted of several suburbs, which today are mostly districts of Schwelm. These include the farms, hamlets and local documents on Bleke, Am Eversbusch, Am Klothe, Am Cuckoo, on the ditch on the church width On the Worth, Auf'm Schliepers, Berghausen, flowers Roth (today Wuppertal Nächstebreck ) Doninghaus , Erlen, Erlenbecke, Erlenrode (today to Wuppertal-Nachbarebreck), Flasdiek, Gangelshausen, Heberge, Heibruch, Heide, Hellmannsbruch, Hemterberg, Hensbusch, Hoppenbruch, Hoppenhaide, Im Bruche, Im Kistchen, Im Listen-Hohl, Im Winkel, Kamp, Kämperbusch, Korthausen, Kronendahl, Lindenberg, Oberberge , Püttecke, Scharlicke or also Scharlücke, Schliepersbruch, Schloß, Siebeneiker, Sonntag, Uellendahl, Uhlenbruch (now part of Wuppertal-Nachbarebreck), Vossberg and Wiensiepen.

This list may not be complete.

history

Linderhausen was probably, but not with absolute certainty, first mentioned in the 11th century as Linniriahuson . 1302 was the first secure documentary mention as Lynderhusen . By 1400 we are talking about the brand Linder Huser , a cooperative unused Markwald the Linder Hausen peasantry , which is called the first time in the 1486th

As a result of the Thirty Years' War , more than half of the estate in Linderhausen was devastated. The first teacher can be identified around 1730, a Johann Peter Busch († 1732). The Schwelmer Johann Caspar Hellmann set up a brick kiln in the Bischofsbrucher Forest in 1783 . In 1824 the first school building in Linderhausen was built on the Lindenberg (corner of Scharlicker Straße / Kastanienstraße ), which burned down on December 6, 1911. The Korthausen school was opened in 1864. The “new” Linderhausen school was finally inaugurated on July 8, 1904.

In 1910, construction began on the railway tunnel through the Lindenberg , the Linderhauser Tunnel . However, the tunnel was only completed in May 1935 and initially only on a single track. During the First World War , the community of Linderhausen lost around 40 residents, who were commemorated with a memorial. In World War II, fell another 70 citizens. In 1967 another new school building was inaugurated by the mayor Dommasch.

On January 1, 1970, until then the lost office Haßlinghausen associated community Linder Hausen by the municipal reorganization its independence and was largely incorporated to Schwelm. With the beginning of the summer holidays, the Linderhausen elementary school was closed on July 2, 2009 due to a lack of students . A school for paramedics of the educational institute of the German Red Cross in the Ennepe-Ruhr district was built in their place. The gym was converted into a fire station for the Linderhausen fire engine .

The community Linderhausen had an area of ​​6.31 km².

Association

The following associations are active in Linderhausen:

  • Vereinring Linderhausen e. V.
  • Citizens' Association Linderhausen e. V.
  • Spvg.Linderhausen 1920 e. V. -Football-
  • Spvg.Linderhausen 1920 e. V. -handball-
  • Linderhauser Schützenverein 1894 e. V.
  • MGV Linderhausen 1950 e. V.
  • Motorsportfreunde Linderhausen e. V.
  • Country Friends EN e. V.
  • Linderhauser Treckerfreunde e. V.
  • Rabbit Breeding Association W 301 Linderhausen
  • Neighborhood Linderhausen e. V.
  • Linderhausen volunteer fire department
  • Ev. Linderhausen parish

See also

Individual evidence

  1. denkmalprojekt.org
  2. Martin Bünermann: The communities of the first reorganization program in North Rhine-Westphalia . Deutscher Gemeindeverlag, Cologne 1970, p. 113 .
  3. The West: School for Paramedics, online article, March 23, 2011
  4. Federal Statistical Office: Official register of municipalities for the Federal Republic of Germany with overviews of the administrative structure and information on the affiliation of the municipalities to local classes, postcode areas and some important administrative units. 1957 edition, p. 244

Web links

Coordinates: 51 ° 18 '  N , 7 ° 18'  E