List of streets in Essen-Schönebeck
The list of streets in Essen-Schönebeck describes the street system in the Essen district of Schönebeck with corresponding historical references.
Introduction and overview
In Schönebeck, 9,879 inhabitants (March 31, 2020) live in an area of 3.31 square kilometers.
Because of the loose development, it was not customary to put name tags at the beginning and end of a street. This function was fulfilled by the house number plates which, in addition to the house number, recorded the street name in small letters. Those unfamiliar with the area also found such remote buildings. Given the small size of the signs, short names were appropriate - so the Borbeck mayor Rudolf Heinrich (1881–1907), whose district also included Schönebeck, developed short forms such as Ringstrasse, Südstrasse or Wolfstrasse around 1890. Several street names are reminiscent of Schönebeck's mining past in the 19th century.
The district is from the north starting clockwise follows limited:
The Frintroper road Borbeck-center , Altendorfer Strasse to Bochold , the Borbecker mill stream and a portion of the foot and cycle path to the former railway Mülheim-Hot-Altendorf (Ruhr) to Altendorf (Essen) , another part of the footpath and bike path and the Böhmerstraße to Frohnhausen , the Rosendeller Bach in the Winkhauser Tal nature reserve in Mülheim an der Ruhr and with the northern area of the Mülheim intersection of Aktien- / Hansberg- / Oberheidstraße, the street Heckelsberg , Aktienstrasse and Im Wulve zu Bedingrade .
In Schönebeck there are 55 named streets and paths, but no space . The streets Aktienstraße, Altendorfer Straße, Frintroper Straße, Nöggerathstraße, Herbrüggenstraße and Böhmerstraße are only partially in the district.
Bundesstrasse 231 runs through Schönebeck on Frintroperstrasse and Altendorfer Strasse and Landesstrasse 445 on Aktienstrasse.
List of streets
The following table gives an overview of the existing streets and paths in the Schönebeck district as well as some related information.
- Name : current name of the street or square.
-
Length / dimensions in meters:
The length information contained in the overview are rounded overview values that were determined in Google Earth using the local scale. They are used for comparison purposes and, if official values are known, are exchanged and marked separately.
The addition (in the district) indicates that the length of the street section within Schönebeck, as the street continues into neighboring districts.
The addition (without side streets) indicates the length of the "main street" in the case of branched streets.
The addition (all street sections together) indicates that the street is so winding that there is no “main street”. Instead, the length of all road sections is added together. - Derivation : origin or reference of the name
- Date of designation : first official designation
- Notes : additional information
- Image : Photo of the street or an adjacent object
Surname | Length / dimensions (in meters) |
Derivation | Date of designation | Remarks | image |
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Aktienstrasse | 1800 in the district |
Joint stock company to build the road | August 14, 1896 | Aktienstraße was created due to the coal mining industry and the resulting coal trade. By subscribing for shares, the Essenes mines involved Salzer & Neuack , Schölerpad and Crown Prince and 49 Essen and Mülheim citizens in the construction of the trade route to the Ruhr should result in Mülheim to from there by ship to the trade route from Ruhr place in the Netherlands tied to be. In 1839 the road was opened to the public and paid for with tolls . From 1847 onwards, the income was declining due to the emerging railways and the declining Ruhr shipping as well as new collieries in the north of the Ruhr area . The provincial administration took over the road, so that the barriers were superfluous. The name Aktienstraße was not officially introduced until 1896. | |
Altendorfer Strasse | 800 in the district |
Altendorf , Essen district | 4th December 1901 | On the occasion of the incorporation of Altendorf into the city of Essen on August 1, 1901 and in memory of the mayor's office of Altendorf , which was dissolved with it, the Limbecker Chaussee, which had been known since 1883, became Altendorfer Strasse. For the first time, the principle was adopted here to give the main street of a former district or municipality the name of the respective municipality in order to keep it in memory. The principle was later changed by naming a street after the place it led to. Bundesstraße 231 , which connects Essen with Oberhausen , runs along Altendorfer Straße . In addition, Altendorfer Strasse forms the border to the neighboring district of Bochold at its westernmost end . |
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Altstrasse | 950 | formerly Alte Essener Landstrasse, location name | August 14, 1896 | In old registers, parts of the street are called Alte Essener Landstrasse and led from the old Chaussee near Knotte along Borbeck Castle to the Fly Bush . The mayor Rudolf Heinrich (1845–1917), who was in office between 1881 and 1907, chose the short form Altstrasse for the name. After the expansion of the parallel Frintroper Straße, it lost its importance. | |
At the brewery | 260 | Brauhaus Essen AG | July 9, 1915 | This is where the Brauhaus Essen AG, founded in 1899 by the Frankfurt Binding Brewery , was located, which at the time was the second largest brewing company in the Essen district . It did not survive the difficult economic conditions after the First World War . The street Am Brauhaus is located in a residential area in the far east of Schönebeck. | |
At the fly bush | 230 | Flybush, family and field name | November 21, 1968 | In the land register of 1668 it is mentioned that Hermann Schulte zu Bockholt owns two and a half acres of land on the fly bush between Hülßmann and Pastors Land. In 1795 the name Wilhelm appears as a landlord and day laborer. In 1826 Heinrich Hasenbrink, known as Fly Buschers, leased an acre of land from the Steele orphanage . The fly bush itself was a seven acre parcel of forest and was part of the Schulte Herbrüggen estate (1825). The street on the Fly Busch runs in an arch from the street Dreigarbenfeld to the Fly Busch path. | |
At the Wolfshof | 90 | Kotten Wolf | May 20, 1964 | The Kotten Wolf was a royal eating inheritance. In the land registry of 1668, the farm including the leased land was 16 acres and tithe free. Johan Wolff was the rider. In 1795 the Werden Abbey was owned, the Kötter being called Wolff. In 1905 the Kotten passed to the Immobiliengesellschaft mbH Borbeck after several changes of ownership. The street Am Wolfshof is a cul-de-sac south of the Herbrüggenstraße. | |
At the gorge | 150 | Location at the gorge valley | September 18, 1974 | Named after the location of the road in the gorge valley (today the Schönebecker Gorge nature reserve ). At the gorge there is a cul-de-sac to the south of Schacht-Kronprinz-Straße, which was considered part of Schacht-Kronprinz-Straße from February 18, 1916 until it was renamed in 1974. | |
At the cable car | 100 (all road sections together) |
Cable car for mining | 17th October 200 | In the 19th century, a cable car transported the coal from the mine at the Kronprinz colliery through the ravine valley (today the Schönebecker Schlucht nature reserve ) via Heißener Strasse to the Mülheim-Heißen-Altendorf (Ruhr) railway line . The street An der Seilbahn opens up a small residential area and goes south from Schacht-Kronprinz-Straße. | |
Antoniushang | 510 without spur roads: 400 |
St. Antonius Abbas, church | 4th September 1963 | It was named after the Catholic Church of St. Antonius Abbas, see also → Antoniusstraße . The Antoniushang connects this with the Brausewindhang street. | |
Antoniusstrasse | 400 | St. Antonius Abbas, church | January 22, 1897 | On September 30, 1899, the first rector of the emergency church St. Antonius Abbas, which was designated on November 5, 1899 and belonged to the mother parish of St. Dionysius in Borbeck , was appointed. On March 1, 1908, she was parish from the mother parish and raised to a canonical parish. The current church was completed in 1927 and consecrated on May 8, 1927 by Auxiliary Bishop Joseph Hammels . Antoniusstrasse is a straight line connection between Heißener Strasse and Schönebecker Strasse. | |
Ardelhütte | 750 | Kotten , family name | July 9, 1915 | In 1795 the name Heinrich Ardelhütte appears in Schönebeck. In 1826 Heinrich Ardelhütte called Mühlenberg was named as the owner of the Kottens. In 1866 the miner August Mühlenberg was the owner. After the death of Johann Ardelhütte's widow, Anna Catharina nee Möllers, the Kotten passed to her son, the miner Johann Ardelhütte, in 1822. In der Weyen, who in 1828 threw off all burdens and became the owner. The street Ardelhütte, which was once called Bonnstraße, branches off from Schönebecker Straße in a north-easterly direction. | |
On the castle | 300 | Op de Burg, oral tradition | March 3, 1953 | It is an oral tradition of a location: op de Burg . However, there is no evidence that a castle could once have stood here. It may also be a linguistic change between mountain and castle. The street Auf der Burg runs parallel between Kalkstrasse and Heißener Strasse. | |
Bergkamp | 500 | Bergkamp, field name | July 9, 1915 | In 1826 Philip Kalthoff, known as Körntgen, was named as the owner of arable land on Bergkamp in Schönebeck. The Bergkamp road branches off south of the Brausewindhang and runs in the countryside to the Rosendeller Bach. | |
Böhmerstrasse | 100 in the district |
Johann Friedrich Böhmer , historian | May 16, 1902 | The Böhmerstraße is named after the historian and founder of the Regesta Imperii , Johann Friedrich Böhmer . Only a small branch of the Böhmerstraße to the terrace cemetery is in Schönebeck, the main street is in the Frohnhauser area. | |
Bonnemannstrasse | 500 | Bonnemann, family name | July 9, 1915 | It is named after the long-established Bonnemann family from Schönebeck. She ran a horticultural business on the corner of Schönebeckerstrasse and Bonnemannstrasse. In 1915 the pensioner Franz Bonnemann and his two single sisters donated their entire fortune to the Sisters of Mercy of St. Elisabeth , including 14 acres of horticultural land, orchards, greenhouses and an apartment building. Bonnemann had made it a condition to build an orphanage on the property, which was no longer possible due to the war. The Emmaus Monastery was built for this purpose and is now a senior citizens' monastery. The Sisters of Mercy of St. Elisabeth will leave her monastery in Essen- Schuir in 2016 and move to Emmaus monastery. Bonnemannstraße connects Aktienstraße with Schönebecker Straße. | |
Shower breeze | 800 | windy location on the slope | November 20, 1937 | An official justification from 1937 shows that the slope between Ringstrasse (previous name) and Schönebecker Strasse is particularly strong and often exposed to the roar of the prevailing south-westerly wind. The Brausewindhang road connects Schönebecker Strasse with Heißener Strasse on the northern edge of the Winkhauser Valley. | |
Deichmannweg | 160 | Deichmann , family name and company | December 19, 2006 | The dead-end street from Aktienstraße at the headquarters of the Deichmann shoe company was named Deichmannweg at the suggestion of the Borbeck cultural and historical association. The reason given was the merit of the family business in cultural, charitable and social areas. | |
Dreigbenfeld | 650 | Tax type of the Schulte Herbrüggen court | November 20, 1937 | The Gut Schulte Herbrüggen estate, to which the land belonged, originally had to deliver every third sheaf to the manor as a contribution in kind, cf. → Herbrüggenstrasse . The street Dreigarbenfeld leads as an eastern continuation of the Altstraße to Nöggerathstraße. | |
Frintroper Street | 1500 in the district |
Frintrop , Essen district | July 9, 1915 | Frintroper Straße forms Schönebeck's northern border with the Borbeck-Mitte district . The federal highway 231 running on it connects Essen with Oberhausen . Until 1915 it was called Essener Strasse here. | |
Fly bush path | 300 (without access roads: 260) |
Flybush, family and field name | October 18, 1921 | See → At the fly bush . The small Fly Buschweg connects in a northerly arch the street Amiegenbusch with the street Dreigarbenfeld. | |
Gimkenstrasse | 240 | Gimpken yard | October 8, 1896 | At the time of development, land in the street area belonged to the Gimken farm in Gerschede . It was originally part of the Ebdinghof fief of Deutz Abbey in Gladbeck . The Gimkens acquired the court from Chamberlain Baron von Fürstenberg zu Borbeck, the son of Baron von Fürstenberg von Adolphsburg. In the land registry of 1668 , Hermann Gymbken and Mr. Canonico Brecht alß Pastori zu St. Gertruden are named in the land register of the 40 acre farm. In 1795 the entire farmer Gimbken appears, the lord of the manor being Baron von Weichs zu Körtlinghausen. The cultivation took place since 1902 by the neighboring Hof Kirchmann. The Gimkens family leased it from Kirchmann until 1916, then from Friedrich Krupp AG . The old Gimken farm was closed in 1963 in favor of a school. Gimkenstrasse forms a northern cul-de-sac from Schönebecker Strasse. | |
Heckelsberg | 500 | Heckelsberg, field name | June 13, 1932 | The street Heckelsberg forms part of the border to Mülheim an der Ruhr and partly to the neighboring district Bedingrade and is a dead end street east of Aktienstraße . | |
Heidbusch | 230 | artificially formed field name | 22nd September 1971 | The street Heidbusch connects the Herbrüggenstraße with the street Pollerbecks Brink. | |
Hot street | 2100 | Mayor's office are called | March 30, 1891 | The street leads from Frintroper Straße to the mayor's office in Heißen, which was founded on April 1, 1878 and which was incorporated into the city of Mülheim an der Ruhr on April 1, 1910 . | |
Herbrüggenbusch | 560 (without access roads: 350) |
Forest of the Schulte-Herbrüggen farm | 15th January 1969 | Named after the Herbrüggenbusch, a wood of the Schulte-Herbrüggen farm (see also → Herbrüggenstraße ). In a report by the Essen chief forester Pasbach from 1802, the 35 acre Herbrügger forest is mentioned. Herbrüggenbusch street connects Herbrüggenstraße with Dreigarbenfeld street. | |
Herbrüggenhof | 600 (all road sections together) |
Schulte-Herbrüggen farm | September 21, 2004 | Herbrüggenhof street is between Herbrüggenstraße and Herbrüggenbusch street and thus in the area of the former Schulte-Herbrüggen farm. See also Herbrüggenstrasse . | |
Herbrüggenstrasse | 1800 (in the district) |
Schulte-Herbrüggen farm | July 9, 1915 | At the so-called third sheaf estate of the Essen monastery , the Schulte-Herbrüggen farm, the sitter had a hereditary right of use, which was first mentioned in a profit letter in 1526. In 1670 the natural delivery of the third sheaf was converted into a fixed cash levy. In the land registry of 1668, the yard is 74 acres and is tithe free. Jacob Schulte zu Herbrüggen was the rider. In 1795 the whole farmer and miller Schulte Herbrüggen is listed, the lordship has the princely abbey to eat. The last victim was Johann Heinrich Schulte Herbrüggen in 1773 as well as his wife Maria Francisca born Rasche as a second hand. As a widow, after long negotiations with Prussia, she was granted the hereditary right of use by the Prussian Ministry of Finance. With her only son Johann Heinrich, she replaced all fiscal burdens in 1882, so that the 188 acre farm became her unrestricted property. In 1900 the farm was transferred to the Mülheimer Bergwerks-Verein . Since 1896 it has been called in parts Schultestrasse or Rolandstrasse. This was renamed in 1915 in Düsterstrasse and Herbrüggenstrasse. Since 1931, both parts have formed Herbrüggenstraße, which extends from Aktienstraße to the border with Frohnhausen in further Altendorf . | |
Hopfenstrasse | 500 | Hops , botany | July 9, 1915 | The street refers to the Brauhaus Essen AG, which was founded in 1899 by the Frankfurt Binding Brewery and is neighboring here, which at that time was the second largest brewing company in the Essen district . It did not survive the difficult economic conditions after the First World War . Hopfenstrasse, previously known as Heerstrasse since 1901, connects Nöggerathstrasse with Altendorfer Strasse. | |
In the bulge | 350 | Im Wulve, court name | July 9, 1915 | Hannes im Wulve (Johann Wolf) came from Wolfshof and had set up a restaurant in the street. Hof Wolf used to be called Im Wulve in dialect. | |
In the thistle hollow | 540 (all road sections together) |
In the thistle hollow, field name | April 3, 1981 | In old cadastral documents the area through which the road leads is referred to as In der Distelkuhle. It is a dead end north of the Kaldenhoverbaum street. | |
Kaldenhof | 600 | Kaldenhof, farm name | July 9, 1915 | A first mention can be found in the chain book in 1332: Wennemar von Vronhausen is taxable because of Kaldenhoven. In the land registry of 1668 the widow Enne Kaldenhoven is named as the sitter. The 49 acre courtyard is subject to a ten-year fee to Oberhof Borbeck. In 1795 the whole farmer is called Kaldenhoff. The ownership structure was very complicated. There were several lawsuits due to the arrears of the levies. Eventually, the farm came to the Gimken family through Johann Kirchmann called Kaldenhoff and his widow Bernhardine, born Ridder, and their children in 1914, who are still running it today. The Kaldenhof street leads south from Bonnemannstraße into the Winkhauser Tal. |
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Kaldenhofs Kamp | 130 | Kaldenhof, field name | September 13, 1922 | On July 20, 1730, the inventory belonging to the Kaldenhof farm was recorded by the appraisers Kraienbroch and Tönnisbrock: two acres on Kaldenhoffs Kamp. Kaldenhofs Kamp street connects Aktienstraße with Heckelsberg street. |
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Kaldenhoe tree | 290 | Kaldenhoe tree, field name | July 9, 1915 | In the land register of 1668 Dietherich Paus from Bedingradt is named as the owner of two acres of field land on Kaldenhoverbrees between Ortman and Brinckman. According to a report from 1672 about the visitation of the barriers in Essen Abbey , the name goes back to a barrier at the Kaldenhof farm. Kaldenoverbaum Street is a cul-de-sac to the west of Heißener Strasse. | |
Kalkstrasse | 650 | Kalthoff, family name | January 22, 1897 | At the time it was named, Heinrich Kalthoff owned a house on this street. The word Kalk is an arbitrary modification of the first syllable of the Kalthoff family name. Kalkstrasse was extended on May 23, 1980 and has since connected Heißener Strasse to Schönbecker Strasse. | |
Kiek ut | 290 | Kiek ut, field name | February 27, 1928 | In 1826 Heinrich Amberge's widow is named as the owner of land on the Kikuth. You can also find the shapes Am Kickuhl and Kckuhlskuhle. The street Kiek ut is a dead end street south of the Schönebecker Straße. It is thus north of the St. Antonius Church. | |
Kleestrasse | 350 | Clover , botany | October 8, 1896 | At the time it was named, the not yet developed path led through a clover field. Today Kleestrasse leads from Frintroper via Herbrüggen to Pollstrasse. | |
Kreftenscheerweg | 350 | Kreftenscheer, name of a seam | October 18, 1921 | Kreftenscheer is the name of a coal seam which, with the seams Mausegatt , Geitling, Finefrau, Finefrau Nebenbank, Girondelle and Plaßhofsbank, belongs to the group of Witten layers. The Kreftenscheerweg connects the streets Riekenbank (also the name of a seam) and Dreigarbenfeld in an arch. | |
Lautstrasse | 300 | Elementary school, location description | August 14, 1896 | In the years 1870 and 1871, a Protestant elementary school was built on the corner of Atienstrasse and Lautstrasse, where the students learned to distinguish vowels from voices. Lautstraße connects Aktienstraße with Im Wulve street. | |
Leggewiestrasse | 450 | Leggewie, Kotten | February 24, 1970 | The Kotten Leggewie belonged to the Paus am Weidkamp farm and was named in the land registry of 1668 as three and a half acres with the kötter Johan Leggewie. In 1795 he is referred to as the Paus' tenant. Leggewiestraße connects Klee- with Herbrüggenstraße in an arch. | |
Liesenkotten | 160 | Liesen- Kotten | May 31, 1930 | In 1866 Johann Diedrich Ardelshütte was named In der Weyen as the owner of the Lysenkotten, which was also called In-der-Weyen-Kotten. It was a treatment item belonging to the Oberhof Ehrenzell . This street Liesenkotten connects the Schacht-Kronprinz-Straße with the street Ardelhütte. | |
Lockstrasse | 150 | Specialization, geology | August 14, 1896 | Lock or hole is the name for a recess. The road is located in the Winkhauser Tal nature reserve , on the southern slope between smaller side valleys near the Rosendeller Bach. | |
Malzweg | 670 (all road sections together) |
Malt , botany | May 13, 1987 | The street refers to the Brauhaus Essen AG, which was founded in 1899 by the Frankfurt Binding Brewery and is neighboring here, which at that time was the second largest brewing company in the Essen district . It did not survive the difficult economic conditions after the First World War . The Malzstrasse lies between Hopfenstrasse and Nöggerathstrasse. | |
Nöggerathstrasse | 400 in the district |
Johann Jacob Nöggerath , mineralogist and geologist | April 21, 1911 | The professor of geology and mineralogy and Geheime Bergrat Nöggerath was one of the most important Prussian miners. In the Rhineland and Westphalia he played a decisive role in the development of mining and metallurgy. The part belonging to Frohnhauser Strasse in the northern area since April 30, 1891 was called Gartenkamp from July 9, 1915. This part of the street was renamed Nöggerathstraße on November 20, 1937 and this was thus extended. Since then, it has continued south from Am Brauhaus street to the neighboring district of Frohnhausen . | |
Op de Heie | 320 without access roads: 220 |
dialect on the heath, location name | May 3, 1967 | This name, which has been passed down orally, probably goes back to the Heidbusch, which was an eleven acre oak forest and belonged to the former Schulte-Herbrüggen farm. Op de Heie street connects Herbrüggenstraße with Dreigarbenfeld street. | |
Pollerbecks Brink | 400 | Pollerbeck, field name | November 20, 1937 | The field name goes back to the Pollerbeck farm, which was treated by Oberhof Borbeck, see also → Pollstraße . | |
Pollstrasse | 180 | Pollerbeck farm, name of the farm | October 8, 1896 | Poll is the shortened form of Pollerbeck. The Pollerbeck farm was treated by the Borbeck farm. In the chain book of 1332 mansus is already mentioned in the Palderbeck . 1668 is mentioned in the land register of the Aufsitzer Arent Palderbeck and the 28 acre farm. In 1795 the half-builder Pallerbeck appeared. In 1815, Wilhelm and Wilhelmine Pollerbeck, nee Ardelmann, waived their personal profit on the Pollerbecksgut in favor of their daughter Anna Maria and her future husband Diederich Lockhoff from Gelsenkirchen. The siblings Josine Huyssen, née Wengeler, and Franziska Wengler, as owners of the farm, leased to the couple for their entire lives. In 1840, they transferred the hereditary right of use to their daughter Anna Catharina Möllhoff. The approval was given by the widow of Senator Carl Isaak Arnold Huyssen. Anna Catharina Pollerbeck died in 1843, so that her only four year old son, Franz Kleine Möllhoff, called Pollerbeck, became heir. A later contract with the heirs of v. Wengler he obtained ownership of the court. When Franz Kleine-Möllhoff, called Pollerbeck, moved away in 1870, he transferred the 40-acre farm to the miner Wilhelm Kleine-Möllhoff, his son. Compensation for the siblings severely affected the farm's holdings, so that further divisions finally led to the liquidation in 1912. Polstraße branches off to the east of Aktienstraße as a spur road. | |
Riekenbank | 470 (all road sections together) |
Riekenbank, name of a seam | October 18, 1921 | The street in a former miners' settlement is named after a coal seam called Riekenbank as early as 1764. Rieken means to make rich , this seam from the Upper Carboniferous is said to have been a particularly good one. Riekenstrasse connects Altendorfer Strasse with Dreigarbenfeld Strasse. | |
Schacht-Franz-Strasse | 300 | Franz, mining shaft | March 20, 1968 | From 1832 to 1834, Franz Haniel had the Franz shaft sunk south of Lockstrasse in Schönebeck , which first penetrated the marl layer . However, the shaft was not technically suitable for coal extraction. In 1836, Haniel sank a second shaft nearby, with which he reached the first coal seam two years later at a depth of 99 meters. The mutation was called Crown Prince of Prussia and belonged to the Kronprinz colliery , see → Schacht-Kronprinz-Straße . Schacht-Franz-Strasse connects Bonnemannstrasse with Schönebecker Strasse. | |
Schacht-Kronprinz-Strasse | 940 without access roads: 700 |
Crown Prince, mining shaft | February 18, 1916 | In 1836, Franz Haniel sank a second shaft near his first Franz shaft (see → Schacht-Franz-Straße ), with which he reached the first coal seam two years later at a depth of 99 meters. The mutation was called Crown Prince of Prussia and belonged to the Kronprinz colliery . Since Haniel could not find any coal that was urgently needed for his hut, operations were stopped in 1845. Later the mine field on the upper Aktienstrasse of the Rosenblumendelle colliery was closed. A new shaft sunk between 1901 and 1903, as shaft 3 of the Rosenblumendelle colliery, later reached a depth of 543 meters and was shut down in 1961. It was never used to mine coal, but to transport people and materials. Schacht-Kronprinz-Straße branches off to the east from Schönebecker Straße and runs parallel to Ardelhütte street. | |
Scheinstrasse | 240 | unclear, possibly location description | August 14, 1896 | The naming is not clear. On the one hand, the existing path did not yet deserve the name street at the time it was named, so it was only the appearance of a street. On the other hand, the name could refer to the neighbors of the name Scheiermann, from which the monosyllabic form Schei… nstraße could have originated. The Scheinstraße creates a connection from the Heißenerstraße to Kalkstraße. | |
Canyon road | 150 | Terrain cut in the gorge valley | August 14, 1896 | The gorge road is named after the cut of the terrain at today's nature reserve Schönebecker Schlucht . It leads south from Frintroper Strasse and crosses Altstrasse and Herbrüggenstrasse. | |
Schönebecker Strasse | 1200 | Schönebeck, farmers (today a district of Essen) | July 9, 1915 | The street is named after the former farmers , today's Schönebeck district, through whom it leads. It was called Kronprinzenstrasse until 1915 and today connects the Aktienstrasse with the Heißener Strasse. | |
Stoetzelweg | 75 | Stoetzel, name of a miner | June 15, 1966 | The miner Stoetzel was a close colleague and confidante of Franz Haniel when sinking the two mining shafts Franz and Kronprinz in Schönebeck. The Stoetzelweg is a cul-de-sac to the east of the Im Wulve street. | |
Therbeckenring | 250 | Hof ther Beck, court name | February 24, 1960 | The Therbeckenring is named after the Hof Ther Beck in Gerschede . In the land register of 1668, Adolff ther Beckhe, who is sitting on the 35 acre farm, is named. Part of it is titled to Hof Borbeck. Since a piece of the Kaldenhover trees in Schönebeck also belonged to the ten-free estates, it was felt compelled to name the street after the former Gerscheder Hof. The Therbeckenring runs from and to Aktienstraße in a ring shape . | |
Westerbergweg | 120 | Westerberg, family name | July 6, 1979 | The Westerberg inn owned by the owner of the same name was located at the confluence of Aktienstrasse and Frintroper Strasse, on an island, as the turning lane from Frintrop in the direction of Mülheim an der Ruhr passed the house on the right. The respected family Westerberg but also the area popularly called Westerberg are eponymous. The Westerbergweg belonged in parts to Lohstraße in the adjacent Bedingrade since 1895 . You can see it today as an extension of this. |
List of former street names
The list of former street names does not claim to be complete.
Surname | from | to | renamed to (current) | Derivation | Remarks |
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Old Essener Landstrasse | January 14, 1896 | → Altstrasse | The so-called Alte Essener Landstrasse in old registers led from the old Chaussee near Knotte along Borbeck Castle to the Fly Bush . The mayor Rudolf Heinrich (1845–1917), who was in office between 1881 and 1907, chose the short form Altstrasse for the official name in 1896. After the expansion of the parallel → Frintroper Straße , it lost its importance. | ||
Tree road | October 8, 1896 | July 9, 1915 | → Kaldenhoe tree | ||
Bonnstrasse | August 14, 1896 | July 9, 1915 | → Ardelhütte | ||
Gloomy Street | October 8, 1896 | July 9, 1915 | → Herbrüggenstrasse | On July 9, 1915 → Schultestrasse became Düsterstrasse. It was named on February 11, 1931 as an extension of the so-called Herbrüggenstrasse on July 9, 1915, also called Herbrüggenstrasse. | |
Essener Strasse | April 30, 1891 | July 9, 1915 | → Frintroper Strasse | The street led before the incorporation of Borbeck into the city of Essen. | The extension of Frintroper Strasse in Oberhausen is still called Essener Strasse today. |
Frohnhauser Strasse | April 30, 1891 | July 9, 1915 | partly today: → Dreigarbenfeld → Nöggerathstraße → Pollerbecks Brink |
The road led to Frohnhausen before the incorporation of Schönebeck . | After the incorporation into the city of Essen in 1915, the street had to be renamed in Essen- Frohnhausen due to the fact that it had the same name as Frohnhauser Straße . Initially it was called → Gartenkamp until 1937 . In 1937 it was given the current names Dreigarbenfeld, Pollerbecks Brink and Nöggerathstraße in parts. |
Garden camp | July 9, 1915 | November 20, 1937 | partly today: → Dreigarbenfeld → Nöggerathstraße → Pollerbecks Brink |
After the incorporation into the city of Essen in 1915, the former Frohnhauser Strasse in Schönebeck had to be renamed in Essen- Frohnhausen due to its identical name with Frohnhauser Strasse ; the name Gartenkamp was chosen. When it was next renamed in 1937, parts of it became Nöggerathstrasse, Dreigarbenfeld Street and Pollerbecks Brink Street. | |
Gertrudstrasse | January 22, 1897 | July 9, 1915 | → At the brewery | ||
Heerstrasse | June 25, 1901 | July 9, 1915 | → Hopfenstrasse | ||
Kronprinzenstrasse | October 8, 1896 | July 9, 1915 | → Schönebecker Strasse | Kronprinzenstraße had to be renamed in 1915 after the incorporation of Schönebeck into the city of Essen due to the same name. | |
Limbecker Chaussee | 1883 | 4th December 1901 | → Altendorfer Strasse | The street led directly to the Limbecker Tor of the Essen city wall . | Limbecker Chaussee was renamed Altendorfer Straße on August 1, 1901 , on the occasion of the incorporation of Altendorf into the city of Essen and in memory of the mayor's office of Altendorf that was dissolved . |
Mariusstrasse | May 16, 1902 | → Böhmerstrasse | |||
Mülheimer Strasse | April 30, 1891 | July 9, 1915 | → Bonnemannstrasse | The road led in the direction of Mülheim an der Ruhr . | After the incorporation into the city of Essen in 1915, the street had to be renamed to Essen- Frohnhausen due to the fact that it had the same name as Mülheimer Straße . |
Ring road | October 8, 1896 | July 9, 1915 | → shower breeze | The Ringstrasse commemorated the former mayor and innkeeper Karl Dietering. | |
Rolandstrasse | October 8, 1896 | July 9, 1915 | → Herbrüggenstrasse | Rolandstrasse was renamed Herbrüggenstrasse on July 9, 1915. On February 11, 1931, Düsterstraße was annexed to it as an extension, which has also been called Herbrüggenstraße since then. | |
Schultestrasse | October 8, 1896 | July 9, 1915 | → Herbrüggenstrasse | The Schultestrasse was reminiscent of the Schulte-Herbrüggen farm. | The Schultestrasse was renamed on July 9, 1915 in Düsterstrasse. Since February 11, 1931, it has been called Herbrüggenstrasse as an extension of the so-called Herbrüggenstrasse on July 9, 1915. |
Südstrasse | October 8, 1896 | July 9, 1915 | → Bergkamp | ||
Winkelstrasse | October 8, 1896 | July 9, 1915 | → Kaldenhof | ||
Wolfstrasse | October 8, 1896 | July 9, 1915 | → In the bulge | It was named after the Wolf farm. | Hannes im Wulve (Johann Wolf) came from Wolfshof and had set up a restaurant in the street. |
See also
- List of streets in Essen-Bedingrade
- List of streets in Essen-Borbeck-Mitte
- List of streets in Essen-Gerschede
Individual evidence
- ↑ Unless otherwise stated, the source used is: Erwin Dickhoff: Essener Straße . Ed .: City of Essen, Historical Association for the City and Abbey of Essen. Klartext, Essen 2015, ISBN 978-3-8375-1231-1 .
- ^ Statistics of the city of Essen. Retrieved July 19, 2016 .
- ↑ DerWesten.de of January 21, 2015: Selling the Schuir Monastery is not a sure-fire success ; Retrieved July 20, 2016