List of streets in Oberhausen-Barmingholten

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The list of streets in Oberhausen-Barmingholten describes the street system in the Oberhausen district of Barmingholten with the corresponding historical references.

overview

Barmingholten has 3,150 inhabitants (as of the end of 2012) on an area of ​​2.15 km². Barmingholten forms together with Holten , Schmachtendorf and Walsumermark the postcode district 46147.

Starting in the north, the district is bounded clockwise as follows: Forststraße, Hühnerheide and railway line Oberhausen – Arnhem to Schmachtendorf, Habichtstraße, Emmericher Straße, Hartfeldstraße, HOAG-Trasse and Emscher to Holten, line roughly parallel to Graßhofstraße and Jägerstraße to Dinslaken .

There are 19 designated traffic areas in Barmingholten, including no square. Of these, three streets are only partially in the district:
The forest road and the Rabenstraße continue in Schmachtendorf, the Emmericher Straße leads to Holten.

Landesstraße 4 runs through Barmingholten on Emmericher Straße. The following streets are part of the Oberhausen district road system:

Overview of streets and squares

The following table gives an overview of the existing streets, paths and squares in the 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.
    For squares, the dimensions are given in the form a × b.
  • The addition in the district indicates that the length is that of the street section within Barmingholten, provided that the street continues into neighboring districts.
  • The addition without spur streets indicates the length of the "main street" for 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
  • Notes : additional information
  • Image : Photo of the street or an adjacent object
Surname Length / dimensions
(in meters)
Derivation Date of designation Remarks image
At the ditch 420
(all road sections together)
"Landgraben", stream course The Landgraben is a small stream that drains the area northwest of the Hühnerheide and flows into the Schlenke. It takes its name from the Landwehr, which it accompanies. The street Am Landgraben is a small settlement on Graßhofstrasse.
At the Römerwall 140 old Landwehr 1917 The intended wall, the Landwehr, does not come from Roman times, but was created by Count Adolf von Kleve around 1400 to protect the settlements in his county. Later, however, it was widely held that structures of unknown origin like this Landwehr could only have been built by the Romans. This is how the street name of the small connection between Graßhofstrasse and Emmericher Strasse in the northwest of Barmingholten came about. Until 1917 the street was called Blumenstrasse .
At the Schlenke 480
without access roads: 230
"Schlenke", stream course 1917 The Schlenke comes from the Hühnerheide and flows into the Emscher at Barmingholten. The name comes from Urindo-European "slenk" and describes a stream that winds through the area. The street An der Schlenke connects Graßhofstrasse and Emmericher Strasse. Until 1917 it was called Seilerweg .
Barmingholtener Strasse 700
without access roads: 450
named after Barmingholten himself 1917 Barmingholtener Strasse is centrally located in the district and connects Graßhofstrasse and Tackstrasse in an arc. Until 1917 it was called Hirtenstrasse .
Bilsestrasse 100 Henbane , genus of plants 1937 Bilsestrasse forms a small cul-de-sac to Graßhofstrasse in the far northwest of Barmingholten. Until 1937 it was called Schlosserstrasse , previously Bilsestrasse. It is likely that henbane used to grow here.
Brusbachstrasse 1500
(all road sections together)
Brusbach, stream course 1934 The Brusbach (also "Nassenkampgraben") comes from Schmachtendorf, where it is called "Tüsselbeck" and flows on to Wehofen. The name comes from "Bruchbach" and means a body of water that flows through marshy terrain. The Brusbachstraße runs north of the brook between Emmericher and Graßhofstraße through fields. A southern section to Graßhofstraße lies directly on the stream. Originally the street was called Ackerstraße .
Dännenkamp 500 Field with fir trees Even if “Dännenkamp” means “fir field”, the name refers to the pines of the chicken heather north of the railway line. The Dännenkamp lies exactly along the railway line as a settlement behind the Emmericher Straße.
Dellerheide 750
(all road sections together)
"Dellerheide", heather area The name of the Dellerheide comes from a dent, a depression in the terrain. The settlement, which stands here and along the border weir, was built between 1950 and 1958 and expanded until 1977, largely by the non-profit housing association Sterkrade.
Emmericher Strasse 1800
in the district
Emmerich , city in the Lower Rhine 1929 The Emmericher Straße is the main arterial road towards the northwest, towards the Lower Rhine. It begins at the Holten train station, crosses Barmingholten and continues in Dinslaken as Sterkrader Straße. Until 1929 it was called Eltenstraße , before that until 1917 Hiesfelder Straße .
Forest road 500
in the district
runs through the Hühnerheide forest 1905 This road leads through the Hühnerheide and was originally just a bad, swampy and sandy road, which was often difficult to pass, especially in the area of ​​the Bachaue of the Tüsselbeck. When Hiesfeld was made mayor's office in 1905, the community built a connection between Barmingholten, Waldhuck and Schmachtendorf, the forest road.
Graßhofstrasse 1700 Graßhof, old farm Graßhofstraße forms the western axis of Barmingholten, it comes as an extension of Drostenkampstraße from Holten and ends at Emmericher Straße. It is named after the Graßhof, which was already known as "dye hove tor grashove" before 1400 and which was located on the Nassenkampgraben just before it flows into the Emscher.
Border weir 240 old Landwehr The street is named after the old Landwehr built by Count Adolf von Kleve. It forms a connection between the forest road and Dellerheide in the Dellerheide settlement, which was built between 1950 and 1958 and expanded until 1977.
Holtstegstrasse 1220
without access roads: 850
Footbridge that leads through the wood 1917 The Holtstegstraße is named after the "Holtsteg", which crossed the Nassenkampgraben in the woods. An old cottage, whose owner is already mentioned in a document from June 11, 1376, bears its name after the bridge. Holtstegstraße leads westwards from Emmericher Straße to behind Graßhofstraße to Dinslaken, where it continues as Turmstraße. It also bore this name in Barmingholten until 1917.
Rabenstrasse 150
in the district
Ravens and crows , genus of birds The Rabenstraße leads from the Emmericher Straße northwards through the Hühnerheide.
Scheiferskamp 800
without access roads: 550
"Scheifferskate", old farm The name of the Scheifferskate, which is mentioned around 1620 in the invoices of the Protestant parish of Hiesfeld, is derived from the Low German word "slate" for "shepherd". Scheiferskamp, ​​which was created in the fields of the farm, is a settlement north of Holtstegstrasse.
Scheiferstrasse 110 "Scheifferskate", old farm Scheiferstraße leads as a cul-de-sac to Emmericher Straße to the old Scheifferskate, today's farm of Ewald Köster.
Tackstrasse 450 "Tackenhof", old farm 1917 The two Tacken farms were mentioned in the mast registers of the Walsumer Mark even before 1400. The “Tacken Jann” farm was on Emmericher Strasse on the city limits of Dinslaken, the “Tacken Hendrich” farm in the marshland in front of today's Emscher. Tackstrasse, which connects Graßhofstrasse and Emmericher Strasse, was named after these courtyards in 1937. It was previously called Waldstrasse .
Trivia: In Dinslaken-Barmingholten there is a Tackenstrasse near the city limits of Oberhausen-Barmingholten , which is called that for the same reason.
Tellmannstrasse 90 "Tellmannshof", old farm 1917 Since the Middle Ages, the courtyard "am Bonn" was located on Graßhofstrasse, which was named after a spring horizon ("Born") on the edge of the terrace. The sitters of the farm were later called "Bornemann" and so the farm was called "Bornemannshof". This name lasted a long time. It was not until 1846 that a Stoefken married into the courtyard, and his daughter then married a Tellmann in 1869. The small cul-de-sac to An der Schlenke is named after the last Tellmann, who sold the farm to the Emschergenossenschaft in 1962. Until 1937 the street was called Weberstraße , previously until 1917 Hermannstraße .
Vogelsangweg 240 "Vogelsangs Hof", old farm To the west of Graßhofstrasse was a farm called “Vogelsangs Hof” around 1736, the name of which has nothing to do with birdsong, but comes from “singe” and means a slash and burn to create bird flocks. Vogelsangweg is a settlement between Tackstrasse and Barmingholtener Strasse that contains geothermal solar houses.

List of no longer existent streets in Barmingholten

Surname from to renamed to (current) Derivation Remarks
Ackerstrasse 1917 →  Brusbachstrasse
Bilsestrasse 1917 →  Bilsestrasse Here grew earlier hyoscyamus . After 1917 the street was initially called Schlosserstraße , before being given its old name back in 1937.
Flower Street 1917 →  At the Römerwall
Eltenstrasse 1917 1929 →  Emmericher Strasse Elten , district of Emmerich Before 1917 the street was called Hiesfelder Straße .
Hiesfelder Strasse 1917 →  Emmericher Strasse Hiesfeld , district of Dinslaken After 1917 the street was called Eltenstraße until 1929 .
Hirtenstrasse 1917 →  Barmingholtener Strasse
Schlosserstrasse 1917 1937 →  Bilsestrasse Before 1917 the street was already called Bilsestrasse .
Seilerweg 1917 →  At the Schlenke
Turmstrasse 1917 →  Holtstegstrasse
Forest road 1937 →  Tackstrasse
Weberstrasse 1917 1937 →  Tellmannstrasse Before 1917 the street was called Hermannstrasse .

See also

Individual evidence

  1. Unless otherwise stated, the following sources are used: Karl Lange: Between Sterkrader Venn and Wehofener Bruch . Ed .: Association for Transport and Local History Oberhausen-Schmachtendorf. Oberhausen 2007, ISBN 978-3-00-023280-0 . and: Alfred & Ulrich Lindemann: 500 kilometers of Oberhausen street history , 1997
  2. ^ Social space talk Sterkrade - North. (PDF; 2.1 KB) Retrieved June 25, 2016 .
  3. OpenStreetMap. Retrieved June 26, 2016 .