List of streets in Walsumermark
The list of streets in Walsumermark describes the street system in the Oberhausen district of Walsumermark with the corresponding historical references.
overview
Walsumermark is the northernmost district of Oberhausen. It is located in the district of Sterkrade and together Holten , Barmingholten and Schmachtendorf form the zip code district 46147. The district also includes the small towns of Brink and Neuköln with the settlement Im Fort , which are not separate districts. Walsumermark alone had 8,320 inhabitants on 3.46 km² at the end of 2012, plus Brink with 850 inhabitants on 1.83 km² and Neuköln with 150 inhabitants on 2.48 km².
The district - together with Brink and Neuköln and starting in the north - is bounded clockwise as follows: Rotbach to Bottrop-Kirchhellen , Pfalzgrafenstraße, Buchenweg, Adlerstraße and Sterkrader Wald to Königshardt, Federal Motorway 3 to Schmachtendorf and a line northeast of Hünenbergstraße, the Veilenfurth brook and another line north of Borbruchstrasse to Dinslaken .
There are 74 designated traffic areas in Walsumermark, including no square. Six of these streets are only partially in the district:
Buchenweg, Zum Ravenhorst and Zum Steinacker will continue in Schmachtendorf and Franzosenstraße in Dinslaken. The Höhenweg continues in Königshardt, while the Pfalzgrafenstraße serves as the border between Königshardt and Walsumermark.
Some streets in the Walsumermark are named after tree species. These include the Buchenweg, Ebereschenweg, Eibenstraße, Kiefernstraße, Lärchenstraße and Rüsterweg.
The federal motorway 3 runs at the border of Walsumermark, whose exit 9 Dinslaken-Süd is located on the north-western edge of the district, in Brink. In addition, the state roads 21 (on the Hünenbergstrasse and the Höhenweg) and 397 (on Neukölner and Franzosenstrasse) cross the district. No street is 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.
- Traffic routes not listed in the official street directory are marked with *.
- 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 Walsumermark, 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 Barmscheidsgrund | 290 | Barmscheidsgrund, district of the old Barmscheidshof | The Barmscheidshof is already mentioned in the founding document of the Premonstratensian Abbey of Hamborn from 1139 as “in Bantzscheid unum mansum” and was probably founded at the end of the 11th century as a clearing yard for the abbey on a hill of the Ravenhorst. Since the 16th century it belonged to the Catholic parish of Dinslaken, so that it could better finance the Vicarie St. Antonius. It was not until Napoleon dissolved Hamborn Abbey in May 1806 that the Barmscheidshof became private property. In 1913 the farm was sold to Gutehoffnungshütte , and the dilapidated building was finally demolished in 1974 by Thyssen AG.
The street Am Barmscheidsgrund lies between Gabelstraße and Zum Ravenhorst in a hollow. |
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At nightfall | 450 | Darkfall , wooded area | The part of the Sterkrader Wald between Hiesfelder and Weseler Straße was formerly known as Dunkelschlag , as there used to be a dense, dark stand of coniferous wood here. The name was later carried over to the entire forest area.
The street Am Dunkelschlag leads from Neukölner Straße as an extension of fork street to Buchenweg. |
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At Flachskamp | 210 | Field with flax | Flax was cultivated on the areas of the main Rhine terrace until the twentieth century. The street Am Flachskamp is curved in the street Am Heisterkamp. | ||
At the Flasdieck | 350 | " Flax pond" | When preparing the linen, the flax was left to rot in water holes ("flat ponds"). Such a flax hole used to be on the road, which is why it bears this name. In the east of Walsumermark it leads from Meisenstrasse to Pfalzgrafenstrasse. | ||
At the Heisterkamp | 200 | Heisterkamp , the place where young plants are raised | A Heisterkamp is a field in which young trees - mainly beeches and oaks - are planted to compensate for felled trees. One of these was located near the road that forms a cul-de-sac to the flax road. | ||
At the ring furnace | 260 | Ring kiln for brick production | Between 1880 and 1920 there were several brick factories here, which made tiles and roof tiles from the clay deposited in the central and main terrace of the Rhine. The kiln of the Kahlen brickworks was only demolished in 1955.
The street Am Ringofen leads in an arch with a few side streets from Tüsselstraße to Walsumermarkstraße. |
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On the sand hill | 660 all road sections together |
Sand hill | 1954 | An elongated sand hill was formed here by winds of erosion. Between 1954 and 1956 a non-profit settlement cooperative set up 61 agricultural sideline jobs for displaced persons and refugees on the streets Am Sandhügel and Köstersfeld.
The street Am Sandhügel leads away from Lickumstraße and back to it in an arc. It is close to Brink. |
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At the fir bush | 190 | old spruce stand | A small spruce forest that used to exist here was noticeable in the wide Walsum Heath, which is why the area was called "Tannenbusch". The street Am Tannenbusch connects the Kiefernstraße with Auf der Haardt. | ||
At the Uhlensterz | 170 without access roads: 100 |
"Uhlensterz", name of the southern part of the Hiesfeld forest | The name Uhlensterz indicates the end of a forest in which many owls live. The street Am Uhlensterz is a small cul-de-sac to Walsumermarkstraße. | ||
At the Veenteich | 150 | "Pond in the boggy area" | "Veen" means a boggy area. To the south of the road there is still a biotope around a small pond, but it cannot be the old “Veenteich”. It is a former clay pit of the Möllenbruck brickworks . The street Am Veenteich is a dead end to the Kramtsweg. | ||
At the Vogelherd | 280 | Vogelherd | In the entire Walsumermark there used to be a lot of field thrushes (Krammetsvögel), the catch of which was an important source of income for Königshardt families. The thrushes were lured with flocks of birds and caught with nets. The last Königshardter Krammetsvogeljäger, Alfred Luft, still owned a Vogelherd between the Uhlensterz and the Immenhöfken until 1920.
The street Am Vogelherd connects the Meisenstraße with Zum Brunsloh in the east of Walsumermark. |
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At the pollard willows | 130 | Basket willow , genus | This area was only to be used as a wet meadow that was drained from ditches leading to the Buchenbach. The trenches still exist today and are lined with wicker, the thickening of which at the end of the trunk, the "head wood", is used for basket weaving. The street An den Kopfweiden is a small cul-de-sac to In der Mark. | ||
At the Pannhütte | 240 | "Roof tile brick factory" | This street used to be the kiln of the Kahlen brickworks , which was founded in 1894 by master bricklayer H. Kahlen from Rees. At her weddings, she mined 5,000 roof tiles a day. In 1951 the brick factory was closed, in 1955 the kiln was broken down. The street An der Pannhütte leads from Gabelstraße to Köstersfeld. | ||
At the clay pit | 230 | old clay pit | Like the streets An der Pannhütte and An Kahlens Kuhle, this street takes its name from the Kahlen brickworks , of which there was a large clay pit near this street. The street An der Tongrube leads in an arch from the Tüsselstrasse to Walsumermarkstrasse. | ||
At Kahlen's hollow | 290 without access roads: 210 |
old marl hollow | Like the streets An der Pannhütte and An der Tongrube, this street takes its name from the Kahlen brickworks , whose marl cave was located near this settlement. At Kahlens Kuhle is south of Neukölner Straße, there is a foot connection to Eichsfeldstraße. | ||
On the Haardt | 500 | reminds of the old name "Walsumer Haardt" | around 1960 | As early as 1736, a map of the parish recorded the "Walsumer Haardt" as a sub-area of the "Walsumer Mark", which at that time meant the entire area with Walsum as the center. A wooded ridge is called “Haardt”, but later the term was also used for a heather or a lightly overgrown area. The street Auf der Haardt leads from Im Steinhaidchen to Auf der Höhe. The Königshardt branch of the Heinrich Böll Comprehensive School is located here. The street was part of Heidstraße until 1917 , then Lönsstraße . When the A3 autobahn was built, it was cut off and renamed "Auf der Haardt". | |
At the height | 130 | highest point of the Walsumermark | There used to be only a footpath here that led up a slope from the clay pit of the Heiermann brickworks to the street Auf der Haardt. At the crossing is the highest point of the Walsumermark, from which you can see far beyond Schmachtendorf and Holten to Walsum and Bruckhausen on the Rhine. At the height is today a dead end to Auf der Haardt. | ||
On the guard | Sheep used to be tended here. | The street on the guard leads away in an arc from In the parish grounds, around the Catholic Church of St. Theresa of the Child Jesus and then back to Im parish grounds. Behind this road it is continued as Rüsterweg. | |||
Borbruchstrasse | 900 | "Borbruch", part of the Schlägerheide | 1917 | The name "Borbruch" which refers to the east part of the northern bat heath of the French street, comes from the Old High German. Brunno , mhd. Innate meaning "source." Borbruchstrasse leads eastwards from Franzosenstrasse into Schlägerheide. Until 1917 it was called Herderstraße , previously Höllenstraße . | |
Bruckmannskate | 130 | "Bruckmannskate", old farm | March 12, 2015 | The "Bruckmannskate", a small half-timbered house that still had a draw well and no water connection around 1920, was located here. The Bruckmannskate road branches off from the northern Höhenweg. | |
Bruckmannsweg | 1400 | "Bruckmannskate", old farm | At the intersection of Bruckmannsweg / Höhenweg there used to be the "Bruckmannskate", a small half-timbered house that still had a draw well and no water connection around 1920. The Bruckmannsweg leads northeast from the Höhenweg into the Hiesfeld Forest. | ||
Buchenweg | 1700 in the district |
Beech , tree genus | 1917 | Between Buchenweg and Ebereschenweg there were many tall beeches until 1917, which probably gave rise to the name. The Buchenweg leads from Schmachtendorfer Straße in Schmachtendorf north-east to the Höhenweg, behind which it continues as Pfalzgrafenstraße. The Evangelical Church of Königshardt is located on the street. Until 1917 the Höhenweg was called Königstraße . | |
Daniel-Luft-Weg | 415 without access roads: 280 |
Jan Daniel Lufft (1720–1796) was one of the first Palatinate settlers who emigrated to the Walsumermark and founded Königshardt. | The Daniel-Luft-Weg is a settlement in the northeast of the Walsumermark, on the Höhenweg. | ||
Ebereschenweg | 1600 without access roads: 800 |
Mountain ash , tree genus | The Ebereschenweg is a widely branched settlement south of the Buchenweg. | ||
Eibenstrasse | 55 | Yew , tree genus | 1936 | Eibenstrasse is a short strait to Walsumermarkstrasse. It used to be the entrance to the Hirschkamp School (today the Königshardt branch of the Heinrich Böll Comprehensive School). Until 1917 it was called Querstraße , then until 1936 Zwischenweg . | |
Eichsfeldstrasse | 830 without access roads: 480 |
Eichsfeld , landscape between Lower Saxony and Thuringia | Eichsfeldstrasse leads from Walsumermarkstrasse at right angles to Am Dunkelschlag and behind this road at right angles back to Walsumermarkstrasse. Many spur roads are assigned to it. Eichsfeldstrasse was originally divided into several streets: the part that ran parallel to Walsumermarkstrasse was called Ringofenstrasse , later Sudetenstrasse , the connection between the two streets, Hügelstrasse . | ||
Bucket path | 280 | Gerhard Eimers, 1856–1913, Brink's first grocery store owner | around 1960 | Gerhard Eimers came to Brink from Sterkrade in 1895 and set up a grocery store. He bought up the marshland around Brink and left Pfeilstrasse and Starenweg in it. The Eimersweg is located in Brink and leads from Hünenbergstraße to Pfeilstraße. Until the construction of the A3 motorway, Eimersweg was part of the Zum Steinacker street. | |
Eitelstrasse | 210 | Eitel Friedrich von Prussia , 1883–1942, Prussian Prince and Major General | 1883 | In the east of Walsumermark, Eitelstraße leads from Neukölner Straße to Sudetenstraße. It was named out of joy at the birth of the second son of Kaiser Wilhelm II. | |
Boulder path | 120 | March 12, 2015 | The Foundlingsweg branches off from the northern Lickumstraße. | ||
Flax road | 400 | flax | In Walsumermark, growing flax used to be one of the main activities. Flachsstraße leads from Neukölner Straße to Walsumermarkstraße. | ||
Fort Street | 1300 in the district |
Fort , side valley of the Rotbach | The name of the fort has nothing to do with fortresses, but is derived from the small, local stream, the "Vellenfurth". A nature reserve west of the street is called “Im Fort”, as is the colloquial name of the small settlement at the intersection with Hünenbergstraße. The Fortstraße leads northwards from this settlement to Dinslaken, where it ends at Lingermannstraße. | ||
Franzosenstrasse | 2000 in the district |
The road was a retreat for the French army during the wars of liberation . | The Franzosenstrasse is in the northeast of Walsumermark, at the Hiesfeld forest. It leads from the junction of Hirschkampstrasse / Höhenweg in Brink as a continuation of the Lickumstrasse northwards through the Hiesfeld forest to Dinslaken, where it ends after about 3 kilometers and continues as the Franzosenweg. | ||
Fork road | 850 | Course of the road | Before the construction of the A3 motorway, the fork road connected Waldhuckstraße and Neukölner Straße, so that it formed a fork with Waldhuckstraße. This was the reason for the naming. Today the fork road leads from Neukölner Straße as a continuation of Am Dunkelschlag northwards to Brink, where it continues as Starenweg. | ||
Hirschkampstrasse | 800 | Hirschkamp , part of the Hiesfeld forest | The name "Hirschkamp" originally meant a millet field that belonged to the old Barmscheidshof. Later, out of ignorance, the name was transferred to the adjacent forest. During the Second World War, the Hirschkamp and the adjacent Hiesfeld Forest were a huge ammunition depot, of which the hollows and walls in the forest still testify today.
The Hirschkampstraße leads in Brink as a continuation of the Höhenweg after the crossing Franzosenstraße / Lickumstraße to Hünenbergstraße. |
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Höhenweg | 1400 in the district |
Path level with the main terrace of the Rhine | 1937 | The Höhenweg runs on the highest surface of the main Rhine terrace from Königshardt to Hirschkamp. It also serves as a watershed: all waters west of the Höhenweg flow into the Emscher, those east of the Höhenweg into the Rotbach. The Höhenweg begins in Königshardt as a continuation of Hartmannstrasse and ends in Brink at the Franzosenstrasse / Lickumstrasse junction, behind which it continues as Hirschkampstrasse. | |
Hünenbergstrasse | 1600 | old hallway name | 1917 | There are three interpretations of the name "Hünenberg": Either it is
The Hünenbergstraße is located in Brink and leads from the Franzosenstraße westwards to Brink as far as Dinslaken, where it continues as Brinkstraße. It also bore this name in Oberhausen until 1917. |
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In the parish grounds | 350 | formerly communal area | Until 1858, this area was designated as "nastiness", an area shared by the entire village. The street in the community grounds connects Walsumermarkstrasse and Buchenweg. | ||
In the source base | 260 all road sections together |
Source horizon | Since the soil of the high-lying Walsumermark and Königshardt consists largely of impermeable clay, a spring horizon, after which the street is named, is created here at the slope of the terrace edge in the direction of Schmachtendorf. The street Im Quellgrund is arched at the end of the Kramtsweg. | ||
In the Steinhaidchen | 220 | old hallway name | After the third ice age, a lot of moraine debris remained in the Walsumermark area. The area was called "Großsteinhaidchen" after these boulders. The street Im Steinhaidchen leads in an arch from the Lärchenstraße to Auf der Haardt. | ||
In Torfveen | 740 without access roads: 260 |
boggy area with layers of peat | In Torfveen, the Walsumermark connects Meisenstraße and Zum Brunsloh in the east. Six cross streets to Am Vogelherd are assigned to it. | ||
In the Weidenkamp | 120 | former pastureland | The area between Rüsterweg and Walsumermarkstraße had been the quarrying site for the clay that was burned into roof tiles in the brickworks of the Walsumermark since 1890. When this was completely dismantled, the land was cultivated and used as pasture until 2005. The street Im Weidenkamp is a dead end to the Rüsterweg. | ||
Imhöfchen | 60 | Immenhöfken , part of the Walsumermark | The Immenhöfken was the beehive of the Walsumermark. The short spur road to Immenstrasse was named after this. | ||
Immenstrasse | 800 | Immenhöfken , part of the Walsumermark | The Immenhöfken was the beehive of the Walsumermark. The Immenstraße leads from the Pfalzgrafenstraße northwards into the Hiesfeld forest. | ||
In the marrow | 270 without access roads: 240 |
Walsumer Mark | The “Mark” refers to the core area of the Walsumermark through which this street leads. It is a cul-de-sac to Stollenstrasse and ends shortly before Am Uhlensterz. | ||
Julius-Brecht-Anger | 440 all road sections together |
Julius Brecht, 1900–1962, initiator and promoter of social housing | On Julius-Brecht-Anger, between Buchenweg and Ebereschenweg, on the edge of the Sterkrader Forest, there is the winding old people's settlement of the Hermann Albertz Foundation. | ||
Pine road | 400 | Pine , tree genus | Based on the old name Tannenstraße , this street was named in 1917 after the pine conifer. The Kiefernstraße leads from the Walsumermarkstraße to the Buchenweg, but it is only a footpath for a part between Auf der Haardt and Walsumermarkstraße. | ||
Kostersfeld | 900 all road sections together |
Köstershof, old farm | The farm has been managed by the Köster family since 1868, which they acquired from the farmer Gerhard Tenter for 3400 thalers. The Köstersfeld is located north of Neukölner Straße, several branch roads are assigned to it. | ||
Kooksweg | 100 | Kookskotten, old farm | In 1900 Gerhard Kook built a house for 4,700 marks, the Kookskotten, on the site of the old Trappmannshof on Buchenweg. He ran the farm until 1938, later his son and then his grandson de Kotten took over. In 1972 the grandson sold the property to the city of Oberhausen, which had the old house demolished. Gerhard Kook's great-grandson is still the fourth generation to live on the Kooksweg. The Kooksweg is a cul-de-sac to Auf der Haardt, which meets a side street assigned to the Buchenweg. | ||
Kopernikusstrasse | 560 | Nicolaus Copernicus , 1473–1543, astronomer and canon | Kopernikusstraße is a dead end to Zum Ravenhorst and ends in a large circle. It is in Brink. | ||
Kramtsweg | 350 | Common juniper here, even Krammet or very rarely fumbles called | Many juniper bushes used to grow on the Kramtsweg, which led to the name. The Kramtsweg leads from Neukölner Straße to just before Walsumermarkstraße. | ||
Kreienbergweg | 1000 | "Kreienbergskate", old farm | The Kreienbergskate is on Hünenbergstrasse. The Kreienbergweg leads from the Franzosenstraße into the Hiesfeld forest. He served during | ||
Lärchenstrasse | 450 | Larch , tree genus | 1917 | Lärchenstraße connects Buchenweg and Walsumermarkstraße in the east of the district parallel to Kiefernstraße. Until 1917 it was called Karlstrasse . | |
Lickumstrasse | 450 | "Clearing" | The old name "Lickum" (formerly "Lykum" , "Loykum" ) describes part of the forest area of the Walsumermark, the name goes back to a settlement on or in the forest, which probably means the Barmscheidshof. Lickumstraße leads northwards from Neukölner Straße to the crossing Höhenweg / Hirschkampstraße / Zum Ravenhorst, behind which it continues as Franzosenstraße. | ||
Meisenstrasse | 500 | Titmouse , species of bird | 1917 | Meisenstraße leads in the east of the Walsumermark from the Höhenweg to Immenstraße. Until 1917 it was called Bussardstrasse . | |
Mergelkuhle | 110 | old clay pit | The Mergelkuhle is a side street in the arch of Auf der Hüte. The settlement at the Mergelkuhle was created in a hollow in which "marl", a mixture of lime and clay, was mined by farmers because they needed it as fertilizer. From 1870 a roof tile shop was operated by the Sterkrader Wilhelm Heiermann in the Kuhle, later Johannes Klasen took over the hut. In 1921 the operation was shut down, in 1932 the city of Sterkrade had the buildings demolished.
In 1971 the Catholic Church acquired a piece of land on the Mergelkuhle from the Evangelical Parish of Königshardt and had the parish church of St. Theresa of the Child Jesus built on it. Since 2008 St. Theresia has been part of the parish of St. Clemens in Sterkrade. |
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Neukölner Strasse | 1600 | Neuköln | 1917 | With Neuköln the settlement is meant both sides of the French road that so aptly named because it was once part of a district Electoral Cologne. The Neukölner Siedlungsgemeinschaft came into being around 1900 after a lottery club won the main prize in the restaurant “Zum Hirschkamp” and several winners were able to build a house on Franzosenstrasse.
Neukölner Straße, the northernmost of the three main axes of Walsumermark, leads from the federal highway 3 as a continuation of Schmachtendorfer Straße north-east to the Höhenweg. Until 1917 it was called Ritterstrasse . |
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Olbergsholz | 230 without access roads: 210 |
"Forest of the Eulerich" | The settler Adolf Eulerich used to live in the area, and the hilly terrain on Buchenweg Olbergs Berg was named after him . Part of this area consisted of light forest and was therefore called Olbergsholz. The Olbergsholz is a continuation of the Olbergsweg behind Am Dunkelschlag. | ||
Olbergsweg | 550 without access roads: 350 |
"Path of the Eulerich" | 1917 | The settler Adolf Eulerich used to live in the area, and the hilly terrain on Buchenweg Olbergs Berg was named after him . The Olbergsweg leads in an arch from Walsumermarkstraße to Am Dunkelschlag, after the intersection it continues as Olbergsholz. Until 1917 it was part of the old Heidstrasse . | |
Pfalzgrafenstrasse | 2000 | Count Palatine , noble rulers | 1934 | The Pfalzgrafenstraße is named after the rulers of the Rheinpfalz , from which the first residents of the Königshardt and the Walsumermark fled. The Pfalzgrafenstraße forms the border between Königshardt and Walsumermark, it leads from the Höhenweg as a continuation of the Buchenweg to behind the Königshardter Straße in the Hiesfeld Forest. Until 1934 it was called Hardtstraße between Höhenweg and Königshardter Straße , and then Grenzstraße . | |
Arrow road | 700 | arbitrary naming | 1917 | The name of the Pfeilstrasse was made without any special meaning. The road is in Brink and leads in an arc from Starenweg to Hünenbergstraße, behind which it continues in the forest to the city limits to Dinslaken. In Dinslaken, the sequel is called Hinter den Kämpen. Until 1917 the Pfeilstrasse was called Grundstrasse . | |
Prinzenstrasse | 350 | Prince , title for non-ruling members of royal houses | The Prinzenstrasse was named after the ruling house at the time of Kaiser Wilhelm II. It leads from Buchenweg in an arch to Lärchenstraße. | ||
Rua Hiroshima | 260 | Hiroshima , Japanese city, target of the first military use of nuclear weapons | 2004 | The name "Rua Hiroshima" refers to the connection between the Oberhausen aid organization Friedensdorf International , which is located on this street and where children from war and crisis areas with injuries are cared for, with Japan. | |
Rüsterweg | 270 | Armor , tree genus | The Rüsterweg leads from Buchenweg in an arch to Im Gemeindegrund, after the intersection it continues as Auf der Hüte. | ||
Schlägerheidstrasse | 850 | Schlägerheide , part of the Hiesfeld Forest | The Schlägerheide is part of the Hiesfeld Forest in which this road is located. The name indicates that the wood is ready for harvest. The Schlägerheidstraße leads from the Franzosenstraße into the Hiesfeld forest. | ||
Starenweg | 700 | Starlings , genus of birds | 1936 | The Starenweg leads in Brink from Hünenbergstraße to Zum Ravenhorst. In the core of Walsumermark it will continue as a fork road. Until 1936, the Starenweg was called Hühnerbergstraße . | |
Stöffkensfeld | 190 | Stöffkenskathe , old farm | The Stöffkenskathe was one of the oldest farms in the Walsumermark, mentioned as early as 1570 as owned by the Holten Citizens' Rifle Guild. Since 1683 the Stöffkens have always been given the addition "int Waldhuck" ( Waldhuck ). The Stöffkensfeld is a small, arched connection between An der Pannhütte and Köstersfeld. | ||
Stollenstrasse | 220 | Tunnels , related to mining | 1917 | The Stollenstrasse connects Sudetenstrasse and Walsumermarkstrasse in the east of the Walsumermark. Until 1917 it was called Friedrichstrasse . | |
Sudetenstrasse | 100 | Sudetes , mountain range in the Czech Republic | The Sudetenstraße leads in the east of the Walsumermark from Kramtsweg to Stollenstraße. Until 1917 it was called Weiherstrasse , after which it was part of Maxstrasse and Ringofenstrasse . | ||
Tüsselstrasse | 350 | Tüsselbeck , nearby stream | The Tüsselstraße is named after the nearby brook. It leads from Neukölner to Walsumermarkstraße. | ||
Walsumermarkstrasse | 1700 | named after Walsumermark itself | 1917 | The Walsumermarkstraße as the middle street of the Walsumermark between Buchenweg and Neukölner Straße is named after the district itself. This is also where the Walsumermark School from 1879 is located. It leads from the federal motorway 3 to the Höhenweg, but between the Olbergsweg and Am Ringofen it is only a footpath. Until 1917 it was called Mittelstrasse . | |
Weiselweg | 65 | Feb 2, 2012 | The Weiselweg forms a short cul-de-sac to Immenstrasse in the east of the Walsumermark. | ||
To Brunsloh | 290 | "Brown forest" | The term “brown forest” indicates the boggy soil of the forest area. The street Zum Brunsloh leads in the east of the Walsumermark from the Immenstraße to Im Torfveen. | ||
To the Buchenbach | 90 | Buchenbach, nearby stream | The Buchenbach seeps from several rivulets from the wet meadows between Höhenweg and Stollenstraße. It crosses under the Höhenweg and flows into the Hiesfeld forest to the Rotbach . The street Zum Buchenbach is a dead end to Neukölner Straße. | ||
To the Ravenhorst | 1300 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 road to Ravenhorst leads between Brink and the core of the Walsumermark to the area west of the motorway, which Schmachtendorf is included. Until 1917 the street was called Horststraße . |
See also
Individual evidence
- ↑ Unless otherwise stated, the following sources are used: Karl Lange: Between Sterkrader Venn and Wehofener Bruch. 2007, ISBN 978-3-00-023280-0 as well as Alfred and Ulrich Lindemann: 500 kilometers of Oberhausen street history. 1997.
- ^ The population in Oberhausen on December 31, 2012. (PDF) City of Oberhausen, accessed on September 12, 2015 .
- ^ Official Journal for the City of Oberhausen, August 2015. (PDF) Retrieved on December 2, 2016 .
- ^ Official Journal for the City of Oberhausen, August 2015. (PDF) Retrieved on December 2, 2016 .
- ^ Official Journal 2012-06 City of Oberhausen. (PDF) Retrieved September 14, 2016 .