Lindleinsmühle
Lindleinsmühle district of Würzburg |
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Coordinates | 49 ° 48 '21 " N , 9 ° 57' 33" E |
height | 193 m above sea level NHN |
surface | 0.94 km² |
Residents | 4914 (December 31, 2015) |
Population density | 5228 inhabitants / km² |
Post Code | 97078 |
prefix | 0931 |
Transport links | |
Federal road | |
bus | 12, 21, 24, 25, 45 |
Source: Würzburg.de |
Lindleinsmühle is one of the 13 city districts and at the same time a district of Würzburg . The relatively young district in the northeast of Würzburg emerged, based on a city council resolution in 1961, in largely undeveloped area on the outskirts of the city at the time, directly adjacent to the formerly independent municipality of Versbach .
The name of the district goes back to one of the three former mills on the Pleichach - Straubmühle, Neumühle and Lindleinsmühle. The Lindleinsmühle, named after the numerous linden trees that used to be there , was destroyed on March 16, 1945 when Würzburg was bombed by Allied bombers. Today there is a high-rise building at this point in Schwabenstrasse.
The settlement was planned for approx. 8000 inhabitants and now houses around 4900 inhabitants. Many young families from the city made a home here and met population groups from other parts of the city whose population density should be reduced. The ethnic groups from the eastern regions who came to Germany in three waves form a substantial part of the residents. Initially there were many expellees from the German eastern areas, then late repatriates and finally Russian Germans .
schools
- Gustav-Walle-Schule, elementary and secondary school, named after the city school councilor Gustav Walle, who was retired by the National Socialist city council in October 1933 according to the law to restore the civil service
- Wolffskeel secondary school with six grades
literature
- Catholic Parish Office St. Albert: Chronicle for the 40th anniversary of the parish of St. Albert . 2007.
Web links
- Club SC Lindleinsmühle
- wuerzburg-fotos.de/lindleinsmuehle.php - Photos and further information (private website)
Individual evidence
- ^ Bruno Rottenbach: Würzburg street names. Volume 2, Fränkische Gesellschaftdruckerei, Würzburg 1969, p. 84 ( Auverastraße [...] - Lindleinstraße [...] ).
- ↑ http://www.wuerzburgwiki.de/wiki/Lindleinsm%C3%BChle
- ↑ Peter Weidisch: Würzburg in the "Third Reich". In: Ulrich Wagner (Hrsg.): History of the city of Würzburg. 4 volumes, Volume I-III / 2, Theiss, Stuttgart 2001-2007; III / 1–2: From the transition to Bavaria to the 21st century. 2007, 2007, ISBN 978-3-8062-1478-9 , pp. 196-289 and 1271-1290; here: p. 225.