List of streets in Schmachtendorf
The list of streets in Schmachtendorf describes the street system in the Oberhausen district of Schmachtendorf with the corresponding historical references.
overview
8,458 people live in Schmachtendorf (as of December 31, 2015) on an area of 3.33 km². Schmachtendorf forms with Holten , Barmingholten and Walsumermark the postcode district 46147.
Starting in the north, the district is bounded clockwise as follows: roughly through Jägerstraße and Brinkstraße to Dinslaken - Hiesfeld , federal motorway 3 to Walsumermark, Königshardt and Alsfeld , railway line Oberhausen – Arnhem to Holten, the Hühnerheide and the forest road to Barmingholten.
There are 58 designated traffic areas in Schmachtendorf, including one square. Of these, nine streets are only partially in the district:
Buchenweg, Zum Ravenhorst and Zum Steinacker continue in Walsumermark, Schmachtendorfer Straße and Sternstraße end on Weseler Straße just behind the railway line to Arnhem in the Holten area. The Bürgermeistersweg leads to Königshardt, the forest road and the Rabenstraße to Barmingholten and the Hiesfelder Straße to Alsfeld.
The federal motorway 3 runs along the Schmachtendorf border, whose exit 9 Dinslaken-Süd is on the north-western edge of the district. In addition, Landesstraße 397 (on Schmachtendorfer Straße) crosses the district. The forest road - Im Heeck - Hiesfelder Straße forms the Oberhausener Kreisstraße 16.
Most of the street names in the district date back to 1917, when the mayor's office in Hiesfeld was dissolved and the southern part (Schmachtendorf, Walsumermark, Königshardt) came to Sterkrade. Because of the certainty of victory and enthusiasm for the war, the thematic group of streets was created, which is related to battles of the First World War. These include Antwerpener Strasse, Beselerstrasse, Emmichstrasse, Flandernstrasse, Genter Strasse and Lütticher Strasse. Many streets are named after old farms and cottages.
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 of the street section within Schmachtendorf is, 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 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Aachener Strasse | 140 | Aachen | Aachener Straße is a short connection between Am Leitgraben and Kempener Straße. | ||
At the guide ditch | 270 | Leitgraben, stream course | The road crosses the stream of the same name, which carries the water from the Walsumermark into the forest pond ditch and then into the new Emscher. It has been completely piped since 1989/90. The street Am Leitgraben connects Schmachtendorfer Strasse and Oranienstrasse. | ||
At the Mattenshof | 140 | Mattenshof, old farm | The street Am Mattenshof branches off from Waldhuckstraße in the north of Waldhuck and is located at the medieval Mattenhof, which is mentioned as early as 1400 as "Martensche Kate toe suselbeeck". The “Im Mattensfeld” settlement is also named after this farm. Today, right at the end of the street, is the "Möllekenhof", which goes back to the Mattenhof. The last Matten who ran the farm was Dietrich Matten, who died around 1934 and whose daughter Gertrud Matten married Gerhard Mölleken from Sterkrad, which is why the farm is now at Owned by the Mölleken family. | ||
At the Pagenkamp | 170 | "Horse pasture", formerly part of the Parkampshof | “Page” means the farmer's workhorse. The courtyard, which was originally called "Süselbeck", was given the nickname "Pagenkamp", which later became "Parkamp". It was hidden under tall linden trees on the edge of the terrace above the Tüsselbeck and was built around 1770. In 1997 the last remains were removed. The street Am Pagenkamp is a dead end to the forest road, there is a connection to the Waldhuckstraße. | ||
At the Tüsselbeck | 900 | Tüsselbeck, stream course | 1917 | The name of the stream "Tüsselbeck" originally appeared as "Susilbeke" and means "purring stream". The Hof Südelbeck, one of the oldest farms in the city of Oberhausen. The road Am Tüsselbeck leads directly past the stream from the forest road to behind the Norbert road. It was originally called Viktoriastraße . | |
Antwerp Street | 400 | Antwerp , Belgian port city | 1917 | After the city of Antwerp was captured by German troops in the First World War, Antwerpener Strasse was named out of patriotism, as were Beseler, Emmich, Flandern, Genter and Lütticher Strasse. Originally the Antwerpener Strasse was called Brunhildstrasse . It leads north from Genter Straße to the forest road, behind which it continues as Waldhuckstraße. | |
Arnheimer Strasse | 450 | Arnhem , Dutch city | Arnhem is particularly connected to Oberhausen by the Oberhausen – Arnhem railway line , which is why the street was named after the Dutch city. The Arnheimer Strasse, which has sunk deeply due to mountain damage, connects the Oranienstrasse and the Forststrasse in an arc. | ||
Arnoldstrasse | 65 | Arnold , male first name | 1917 | Arnoldstrasse is a short connection between Am Tüsselbeck and Kempkenstrasse in the Bergmannsiedlung of Gutehoffnungshütte at the Evangelical Church. Originally it was called Oskarstrasse . | |
Auguststrasse | 210 | Stupid August , clown figure | Originally there was the “funny quarter” in the mayor's office of Hiesfeld with Maxstraße (today Sudetenstraße in Walsumermark), Moritzstraße (today Lönsstraße ) and Auguststraße, of which only the latter remains after the incorporation of the south from Hiesfeld to Sterkrade. Auguststrasse lies in the east of Schmachtendorf and leads from Buchenweg to Schmachtendorfer Strasse. | ||
Bachaue | 120 | Floodplain of the guide ditch | The brook floodplain runs on the old brook route of the Leitgraben and is therefore named after this floodplain. The road connects Buchenweg and Untere Walsumermarkstraße. | ||
Bergische Hooves | 270 | "Bergische Hufe", the original name of the area | 1917 | The name "Bergische Hufe" is the original name for the area on which Schmachtendorf is located. It is derived from the high drifting sand dunes that characterized the entire area. The native flora here corresponded to that of typical heathland areas. In the past, the area was mainly used as a sheep pasture, only with the settlement of soldiers did a settlement emerge that was later called "Schmachtendorf". The street name "Bergische Hufe" reminds of the original character of the area to this day, the street is centrally located in Schmachtendorf and connects the forest road and the Flandern road diagonally. Until 1917 it was part of the forest road. | |
Beselerstrasse | 210 | Hans von Beseler , 1850–1921, Prussian Colonel General | 1917 | Beselerstraße belongs to the group of street names that were named out of patriotic thinking during the First World War, because Colonel General von Beseler took Antwerp in October 1914. This group also includes Antwerpen, Emmich, Flandern, Genter and Lütticher Strasse. Beselerstraße connects Arnheimer Straße and Forststraße. Before 1917 it was called Hagenstrasse . | |
Bremenkampstrasse | 1600 | "Bramkamp", field on the edge of the wasteland | 1917 | On the northern edge of the Hühnerheide lies the Bremenkampshof, which is named after the "Bramkamp", a field on the edge of the wasteland and wasteland, just like the road. This comes from the Hühnerheide and leads to Waldhuck, where it ends at the Tüsselbeck. Originally called Brömmekampstraße , it was later called Kreuzstraße west of Waldhuckstraße until 1917 , and Peterstraße eastwards . | |
Buchenweg | 550 in the district |
Beech , tree genus | 1917 | Between Buchenweg and Ebereschenweg in Walsumermark there were many tall beeches until 1917, which probably gave rise to the name. The Buchenweg begins in Schmachtendorfer Mitte and leads from Schmachtendorfer Straße northeast to Walsumermark, where it ends at the Höhenweg. Until 1917 the street was called Königstraße . | |
Mayor's Way | 500 in the district |
Mayor of Sterkrade | The Bürgermeistersweg is located in the Sterkrader Forest and is named in memory of the Sterkrader Mayors. It ends in Schmachtendorf on Hiesfelder Straße. | ||
Cäcilienstraße | 300 | Cäcilia , first name | The Cäcilienstraße connects Flandernstraße and Norbertstraße. The settlement on the street was built in the late 1950s by the Treuhandstelle für Bergmannswohnstätten. | ||
Dudelerstrasse | 230 | Dudeler Hof, old farm | Dudelerstraße, Schmachtendorf's business street, is centrally located in the district and connects Schmachtendorfer Straße and Oranienstraße. The Dudeler Hof, which burned down in 1926, used to be located here. The Heinrich Böll Comprehensive School is located on its premises today. The name of the Dudeler Hof is probably derived from a musician who owned the farm around 1700 and played the bagpipes. | ||
Eichendorffstrasse | 350 | Joseph von Eichendorff , 1788–1857, poet | 1917 | Eichendorffstraße is located in the east of Schmachtendorf and connects Buchenweg and Hiesfelder Straße in an arch. This is where the Catholic Josefskirche is located, after which the street was also called Josefstraße until 1917 . | |
Emmichstrasse | 480 without access roads: 350 |
Otto von Emmich , 1848–1928, general in the First World War | 1917 | Emmichstrasse belongs to the group of street names that were named out of patriotic thinking during the First World War, because General von Emmich took Liège in August 1914. This group includes Antwerp, Beseler, Flandern, Genter and Lütticher Strasse. The Emmichstrasse is located in the south of Waldhuck and leads from the Hühnerstrasse eastwards to the sports field of SV Sterkrade-Nord. Until 1917 it was called Jahnstraße . | |
Ferdinandstrasse | 650 | Ferdinand , first name | 1936 | Ferdinandstraße leads north from Franzstraße to behind Im Heeck. Originally it was called Glückaufstraße in relation to the nearby Hugo Haniel colliery , previously Jakobstraße until 1917 . | |
Flanders Road | 450 | Flanders , landscape in Northern France and Belgium | 1917 | The Flandernstrasse was named out of patriotism after the region became the scene of many battles in the First World War, just like Antwerpener, Beseler-, Emmich-, Genter- and Lütticher Strasse. The Flandernstrasse was originally called Paulstrasse and leads from the Oranienstrasse westward to behind Am Tüsselbeck. | |
Forest road | 2000 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. This is Schmachtendorf's west-east axis to this day and, coming from Barmingholten, ends at Schmachtendorfer Strasse, behind which it continues as Im Heeck. | |
Frankenstrasse | 150 | Franconia , Germanic tribe | 1917 | Frankenstrasse is located in the southeast of Schmachtendorf and leads from Sternplatz to Handbachstrasse. Until 1917 it was part of Südstraße . | |
Franzstrasse | 290 | Franz , first name | Franzstraße is located in the southeast of Schmachtendorf and leads from Schmachtendorfer Straße to Sternplatz. | ||
Ghent Street | 850 without access roads: 800 |
Ghent , city in Belgium | 1917 | Genter Strasse was named out of patriotism after the city became the scene of fighting in World War I, as were Antwerpener, Beseler, Emmich, Flandern and Lütticher Strasse. Originally Genter Strasse was called Siegfriedstrasse , it connects Hühnerstrasse and Oranienstrasse. | |
Grabenstrasse | 350 | Nassenkampgraben, former stream course | The Grabenstrasse is named after the Nassenkampgraben creek that once passed here and flowed from Brink into the Brusbach (Holten). The road leads in Waldhuck from Nassenkampstraße to Zum Steinacker. In 1844 the first Schmachtendorfer school was set up here in the "Bruckmannskate" (the building that was first erected on this street). | ||
Handbachstrasse | 450 | Handbach, stream course | 1917 | The Handbach ("Hardbeek", creek that comes from the Hardt (= Königshardt)) is a creek in the north of Oberhausen, which flows southeast of Schmachtendorf. The Handbach settlement was established in 1750, the name of which goes back to a faulty map by the engineer Major Enbers, who wrote "Handbach" instead of "Hardbach". The name became common through the settlement. Handbachstrasse connects Frankenstrasse and Kirchhofstrasse. | |
Hiesfelder Strasse | 950 in the district |
Hiesfeld , district of Dinslaken | Since 1905 the north of Oberhausen belonged to the mayor's office of Hiesfeld, which was divided between Dinslaken and Sterkrade in 1917, with the south (Schmachtendorf, Walsumermark, Königshardt) coming to Sterkrade. The Hiesfelder Straße thus formerly led from Sterkrade to Hiesfeld and is therefore named after the mayor's office. It comes from Alsfeld, crosses the Sterkrader Forest and bends north in Schmachtendorf on Sternstrasse / Im Heeck, where it ends at Buchenweg. | ||
Chicken Street | 700 | Chickens , a genus of birds often found in the adjacent chicken heath | 1917 | The Hühnerstraße is named after the chickens that live there, just like the nearby chicken heath. The road leads north from Holten to behind the forest road and was originally called Grünstraße . | |
In the Heeck | 350 | "Heeck", remote forest | The "Heeck" was a small piece of forest owned by the state between Martinstrasse and Sternstrasse, the name of which means "remote land" or "forest piece". The street Im Heeck leads as an extension of the forest street from Schmachtendorfer Straße to Hiesfelder Straße. It was originally called Dietrichstrasse . | ||
In Heidesiepen | 200 | "Siepen", damp, swampy surfaces | The road is in the area of the former Hühnerheide, at a point where there were many damp areas through the Tüsselbeck and the loamy soil. In times of rain, these parts were "soft as soap" and were therefore called "soap" or "sieve". The name "Heidesiepen" is derived from it. The street Im Heidesiepen forms a dead end to Emmichstraße. | ||
In the Mattensfeld | 340 | Field of the Mattenhof | The settlement in Mattensfeld lies on the entire area of the medieval Mattenhof, which is mentioned as early as 1400 as "Martensche Kate toe suselbeeck". The street lies in the northern part of Waldhuck between Waldhuckstraße and Tüsselbeck. | ||
In the Wies | 100 | Pastureland | The Tüsselbeck brook meadow in Waldhuck used to be used as pastureland, so the settlement that was created there as a cul-de-sac to Bremenkampstrasse was named after the meadow. | ||
Kaplan-Mertens-Weg | 50 | Matthias Mertens, 1906–1970, chaplain in Schmachtendorf and resister | 1985 | Matthias Mertens was ordained a priest in 1932 and had been chaplain to St. Josef in Schmachtendorf since 1935. He belonged to the young generation of priests who resolutely fought against National Socialism. He often criticized the Nazi regime in his sermons, so that in 1935 he was already before a special court. In 1936 he and Pastor Albring refused to vote in the Reichstag elections because the envelopes were labeled. On Boxing Day 1941 he read sermons from Cardinal von Galen , which is why he was arrested on January 16, 1942 and sent to the Dachau concentration camp on April 17 . On April 9, 1945, he was released from the concentration camp due to his lung disease and returned to Schmachtendorf, where he worked until 1947, after which he went to Switzerland. Between 1953 and 1970 he was procurator of the Episcopal Gymnasium in Gaesdonck until he finally died on February 1st.
The Kaplan-Mertens-Weg is a cul-de-sac to Hiesfelder Straße at the Josefskirche. Until 1985 it was called Gregorstraße . |
|
Kempener Strasse | 300 | Kempen , city on the Lower Rhine | Kempener Strasse is located between Schmachtendorfer Strasse, Am Leitgraben and Oranienstrasse. | ||
Kempkenstrasse | 500 | Kempkenhof, old farm | 1917 | The Kempkenhof derives its name from a small oak camp that surrounded the building and protected it from the weather. The Kempkenstraße leads northwards from the forest road to Norbertstraße. The Schmachtendorf Evangelical Church is located here. Until 1917 the street was called Wilhelmstrasse . | |
Gravel path | 350 | gravelly area | 1917 | The gravel path is located directly on the motorway in the east of Schmachtendorf and connects Buchenweg and Schmachtendorfer Straße. Until 1917 it was called Sandstrasse . | |
Kirchhofstrasse | 100 | Schmachtendorf Catholic cemetery | 1917 | In the past, cemeteries were often called “churchyards” because the dead were originally buried directly at the church. Therefore, when it was renamed in 1917 , the former Friedhofstraße was given the name Kirchhofstraße after the cemetery of the Catholic parish of St. Josef that was laid out in 1902. Kirchhofstrasse leads from Sternstrasse to Handbachstrasse. | |
Krefelder Strasse | 300 without access roads: 260 |
Krefeld , city on the Lower Rhine | Krefelder Strasse leads in an arch from Oranienstrasse to Kempener Strasse. | ||
Loensstrasse | 150 | Hermann Löns , 1866–1914, poet | 1917 | Lönsstraße is located in the east of Schmachtendorf between Auguststraße and Kiesweg. Until 1917 it was called Moritzstraße , previously Heidstraße . | |
Losenstrasse | 110 | Lots, landowners | 1917 | Losenstraße is a short street that leads from Zum Ravenhorst to Dinslaken and continues there as Erlenstraße. It also bore this name in Schmachtendorf until 1917. There are no houses on Losenstrasse. | |
Liège Street | 550 | Liege , city in Belgium | 1917 | Lütticher Strasse was named out of patriotism after the city was conquered by German troops in World War I, just like Antwerpener, Beseler, Emmich, Flandern and Genter Strasse. Originally the Lütticher Strasse was called partly Gudrunstraße , partly Krimhildstraße , it leads from Schmachtendorfer Straße westwards to the sports field of Spvgg.Sterkrade-Nord . | |
Martinstrasse | 450 | Martin , first name | 1917 | Martinstrasse connects Vandalenstrasse and Hiesfelder Strasse. Until 1917 it was called Hüttenstrasse . | |
Nassenkampstrasse | 700 | "Wet field", field name | 1917 | The pasture area around the Nassenkampgraben is called "Nassenkamp" because the brook only insufficiently drains the fields and it used to be a swampy area. The Nassenkampstraße leads south from Zum Ravenhorst to Waldhuck. Originally it was called Baustraße . | |
Neustraße | 400 | new street | Neustraße was built later than the surrounding streets of the old Handbach settlement. It connects Vandalenstrasse and Kirchhofstrasse. | ||
Norbertstrasse | 290 | Norbert , first name | 1917 | Norbertstrasse is located in the northwest of Schmachtendorf and leads from Oranienstrasse to Am Tüsselbeck. Originally it was called Kronprinzenstrasse . | |
Oranienstrasse | 1400 without access roads: 1300 |
Orange , royal family of the Netherlands | 1945 | The House of Orange has been the King of the Netherlands since 1815. The road is located directly on the Oberhausen arterial road to the north and thus in the direction of the Netherlands. The name Oranienstrasse was intended to express the bond with the neighboring country. Until 1945 the street was called Hans-Schemm-Straße , previously until 1937 Rolandstraße . | |
Pollsenweg | 220 | Pollsens Kate, old farm | 1917 | The small farm on the road has been called "Pollschens Kath" since around 1807. It burned down in 1905. The SV Sterkrade-Nord sports field was built on Pollsenweg in 1931/32. The street is a cul-de-sac to Oranienstrasse and was called Jahnstrasse until 1917 . The Schmachtendorfer elementary schools, the community elementary school Schmachtendorf and the Catholic Dunkelschlagschule are also located here. | |
Rabenstrasse | 1200 in the district |
Ravens , genus of birds | Rabenstraße is a narrow north-south connection in the Hühnerheide between Zum Ravenhorst and the Hühnerheide landfill. It ends in Barmingholten on Emmericher Straße. | ||
Schmachtendorfer Strasse | 1600 in the district |
named after Schmachtendorf itself | 1917 | Schmachtendorfer Strasse is the district's main street. It begins at the Holten train station and leads north through Schmachtendorf to Walsumermark, where it continues as Neuköllner Straße. Until 1917 it was called Poststrasse . | |
Sternplatz | 40 × 30 × 30 | star-shaped convergence of the three streets | 1917 | At Sternplatz, Frankenstrasse, Franzstrasse and Sternstrasse meet in a star shape. Until 1917 it was called Hubertusplatz . | |
Sternstrasse | 550 | leads past Sternplatz | 1917 | The Sternstraße begins in Holten and leads northeast to Schmachtendorf, past the Sternplatz, after which it is named, and ends at the intersection of Hiesfelder Straße / Im Heeck. The street was originally called Hugostraße , after the neighboring Hugo Haniel colliery. | |
Tenterstrasse | 230 | Tenterhof, old farm | 1917 | Tenterstraße in Schmachtendorfer Mitte is named after the Tenterhof, which stood east of the motorway. In the original course of the street, today interrupted by the comprehensive school, the street still led past the old cottage, mentioned for the first time in 1671. Until 1917 the Tenterstraße was called Försterstraße . It connects Forststrasse and Dudelerstrasse. | |
Lower Walsumermarkstrasse | 290 | Walsumermark , district of Oberhausen | Untere Walsumermarkstrasse is the southern part of Walsumermarkstrasse in the neighboring district of Walsumermark, separated from the rest by the construction of the autobahn, which was named there because it opened up the area for development. The street leads from Schmachtendorfer Straße to Kiesweg. | ||
Vandal Street | 400 | Vandals , Germanic tribe | 1937 | Vandalenstrasse is located in the southeast of Schmachtendorf and connects Schmachtendorfer and Handbachstrasse. The Hitler Youth of Schmachtendorf named themselves after the tribe "Vandals". At their request, the street was given that name in 1937 after it was previously called Stephanstraße . Before 1917, the part between Sternstrasse and Schmachtendorfer Strasse was called Heinrichstrasse , and the part between Handbachstrasse and Sternstrasse was called Connection Strasse . | |
Waldhuckstrasse | 1100 | Waldhuck , northwestern part of Schmachtendorf | 1917 | The Waldhuck is an old settlement in Schmachtendorf, which is now considered part of the district. The name is derived from the fact that the few farms were hidden in the forest, they "crouched" in the forest. The Waldhuckstraße crosses the district in a north-south direction, it begins at the forest road as a continuation of the Antwerpener Straße and ends at Zum Steinacker. Until 1917 it was called Krumme Straße . | |
To the Ravenhorst | 1100 in the district |
Hill overgrown with bushes on which ravens perch | 1917 | The Ravenhorst is the hill above the federal highway 3 . He was first mentioned in 1672 in the church book of Hiesfeld. The street Zum Ravenhorst leads from Dinslaken to the area east of the autobahn, which belongs to Brink and Walsumermark. Until 1917 the street was called Horststraße . | |
To the Steinacker | 900 in the district |
Steinackers Hof, old farm | 1936 | In Brink, in the neighboring district of Walsumermark, there was already a farm called "steynackers hove" at the end of the 14th century. This takes its name from its stony, gravel-rich fields. Until 1917 the street was called Herzogstraße , later until 1936 Kampstraße . It leads from Walsumermark to Schmachtendorf and there northwards to Zum Ravenhorst. |
List of streets that no longer exist in Schmachtendorf
The list of no longer available streets shows some of the previous or deleted street names mentioned in the overview. It does not claim to be complete. Before 1917 there were a number of thematic groups in Schmachtendorf that are no longer recognizable today. These include:
- First names (in the miners' settlement of the GHH at the Protestant church): Cäcilienstraße, Oskarstraße , Paulstraße , Viktoriastraße , Wilhelmstraße
- Figures from the Nibelungen saga : Brunhildstrasse , Gudrunstrasse , Hagenstrasse , Krimhildstrasse , Siegfriedstrasse
- “Funny Quarter”: Auguststrasse, Maxstrasse (in Walsumermark), Moritzstrasse
Surname | from | to | renamed to (current) | Derivation | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Antonstrasse | 1936 | moved in | The street used to be called Herwarthstraße , it is a connection between Schmachtendorfer Straße and Ferdinandstraße that is still available today as a footpath. | ||
Construction road | 1917 | → Nassenkampstrasse | |||
Brömmekampstrasse | → Bremenkampstrasse | "Bramkamp", field on the edge of the wasteland | Later the street was called Kreuzstrasse west of Krummen Strasse and Peterstrasse east of it . | ||
Brunhildstrasse | 1917 | → Antwerpener Strasse | Brunhild , figure from the Nibelungen saga | In the vicinity, some streets were named after characters from the Nibelungen saga, it was a thematic group. | |
Dietrichstrasse | 1917 | → In the Heeck | |||
Erlenstrasse | 1917 | → Losenstrasse | Alder , tree genus | ||
Foersterstrasse | 1917 | → Tenterstrasse | |||
Friedhofstrasse | 1917 | → Kirchhofstrasse | Cemetery of the Catholic parish of St. Josef | ||
Glückaufstrasse | 1917 | 1936 | → Ferdinandstrasse | Glückauf , miner's greeting | The street was named after the miner's greeting in relation to the nearby Hugo Haniel colliery. Before 1917 it was called Jakobstrasse . |
Gregorstrasse | 1985 | → Kaplan-Mertens-Weg | |||
Grünstrasse | 1917 | → Hühnerstrasse | |||
Gudrunstrasse | 1917 | → Lütticher Strasse | Gudrun, figure from the Nibelungen saga | In the vicinity, some streets were named after characters from the Nibelungen saga, it was a thematic group. | |
Hagenstrasse | 1917 | → Beselerstrasse | Hagen von Tronje , figure from the Nibelungen saga | In the vicinity, some streets were named after characters from the Nibelungen saga, it was a thematic group. | |
Hans-Schemm-Strasse | 1937 | 1945 | → Oranienstrasse | Hans Schemm , 1891–1935, politician of the NSDAP | Before 1937 the street was called Rolandstraße . |
Heidstrasse | → Lönsstrasse | There used to be a heather here. | The street was later called Moritzstraße . | ||
Heinrichstrasse | 1917 | → Vandal Street | In 1917 Heinrichstrasse was initially merged with the connecting road to Stephanstrasse . | ||
Herwarthstrasse | moved in | Later the street was called Antonstraße , it is a connection between Schmachtendorfer Straße and Ferdinandstraße that still exists today as a footpath. | |||
Herzogstrasse | 1917 | → To the Steinacker | After 1917 the street was initially called Kampstraße . | ||
Horststrasse | 1917 | → To the Ravenhorst | |||
Hubertusplatz | 1917 | → Sternplatz | |||
Hugostrasse | 1917 | → Sternstrasse | nearby Hugo Haniel colliery | ||
Huettenstrasse | 1917 | → Martinstrasse | Gutehoffnungshütte , a company that owned the neighboring Hugo Haniel colliery | ||
Jahnstrasse | 1917 | → Emmichstraße and → Pollsenweg | Friedrich Ludwig Jahn , 1778–1852, founder of the gymnastics movement | ||
Jakobstrasse | 1917 | → Ferdinandstrasse | After 1917 the street was initially called Glückaufstraße . | ||
Josefstrasse | 1917 | → Eichendorffstrasse | Catholic Church of St. Joseph | ||
Kampstrasse | 1917 | 1936 | → To the Steinacker | The road used to lead to an area called “Behind the Kämpen”. | Before 1917 the street was called Herzogstraße . |
Koenigstrasse | 1917 | → Buchenweg | |||
Kreuzstrasse | 1917 | → Bremenkampstrasse | Originally, Kreuzstrasse was part of Brömmekampstrasse . In 1917 it was merged with Peterstrasse to form Bremenkampstrasse. | ||
Krimhildstrasse | 1917 | → Lütticher Strasse | Kriemhild , figure from the Nibelungen saga | In the vicinity, some streets were named after characters from the Nibelungen saga, it was a thematic group. | |
Kronprinzenstrasse | 1917 | → Norbertstrasse | |||
Crooked road | 1917 | → Waldhuckstrasse | |||
Moritzstrasse | 1917 | → Lönsstrasse | Moritz , literary figure from a picture story by Wilhelm Busch | Together with Maxstrasse in what is now Walsumermark and Auguststrasse , Moritzstrasse formed the “fun district” of the Hiesfeld mayor's office. Originally it was called Heidstrasse . | |
Oskarstrasse | 1917 | → Arnoldstrasse | Oskar , male first name | ||
Paulstrasse | 1917 | → Flanders Road | |||
Peterstrasse | 1917 | → Bremenkampstrasse | Originally, Peterstrasse was part of Brömmekampstrasse . In 1917 it was merged with Kreuzstrasse to form Bremenkampstrasse. | ||
Poststrasse | 1917 | → Schmachtendorfer Strasse | |||
Rolandstrasse | 1937 | → Oranienstrasse | Roland , follower of Charlemagne | Between 1937 and 1945 the street was initially called Hans-Schemm-Straße . | |
Sand road | 1917 | → gravel path | The road is in a gravel, sandy area. | ||
Siegfriedstrasse | 1917 | → Genter Strasse | Siegfried the Dragon Slayer , figure from the Nibelungen saga | In the vicinity, some streets were named after characters from the Nibelungen saga, it was a thematic group. | |
Stephanstrasse | 1917 | 1937 | → Vandal Street | Before 1917, the street was divided into Heinrichstrasse and Linkstrasse . | |
Südstrasse | 1917 | → Frankenstrasse and → Handbachstrasse | The street was in the south of Schmachtendorf. | ||
Connecting road | 1917 | → Vandal Street | In 1917, the connecting road was initially merged with Heinrichstraße to form Stephanstraße . | ||
Viktoriastrasse | 1917 | → At the Tüsselbeck | |||
Wilhelmstrasse | 1917 | → Kempkenstrasse | Wilhelm , first name |
See also
- List of streets in Oberhausen
- List of streets in Oberhausen-Barmingholten
- List of streets in Oberhausen-Holten
- List of streets in Walsumermark
Individual evidence
- ↑ 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
- ↑ Oberhausen social structure atlas. Retrieved June 7, 2016 .
- ↑ The Mattenhof. (No longer available online.) Archived from the original on February 6, 2017 ; accessed on February 5, 2017 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.