Corn oak

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Corn oak
City of Wuppertal
Coordinates: 51 ° 12 ′ 37 ″  N , 7 ° 3 ′ 7 ″  E
Height : about 225 m above sea level NHN
Postal code : 42719, 42329
Area code : 0212, 0202
Corn oak (Wuppertal)
Corn oak

Location of Maiseiche in Wuppertal

Maiseiche is a location through which the city boundary between Solingen - Gräfrath and Wuppertal - Vohwinkel runs.

geography

Maiseiche is located on a hill in the north of Solingen and in the west of Wuppertal south of the federal motorway 46 along the Westring road. The bypass road, Landesstraße 357, leads to the southwest to the Haan -Ost junction on the A 46, where the Haan-Ost commercial and industrial area is also located on the Backesheide. South of Maiseiche, on the Solingen side, are the Fürkeltrath , Eipaß and Buxhaus farms and the Holzer Bachtal . In the north, in the Wuppertal city area, there are Bolthausen and Wibbeltrath . There is reason to the east .

history

Corn oak (around 1901)

Corn oak may not have appeared until the turn of the 19th century. The place originally belonged to the Supreme Honschaft Haan within the Solingen office . The topographical survey of the Rhineland from 1824 lists the place as Maiseich . The Prussian first recording from 1843 lists the place without a name, in the topographical map of the administrative district of Düsseldorf from 1871 the place is not recorded.

After the Mairien and later mayor's offices were founded at the beginning of the 19th century, the place belonged to the mayor's office in Haan in the Elberfeld district (from 1861 in the Mettmann district ). In 1830, twelve people lived in as Kothen designated corn oaks . The municipality and estate district statistics of the Rhine Province list the place in 1871 with five houses and 35 inhabitants. In the municipality lexicon for the Rhineland province of 1888, four houses with 29 inhabitants are given for Maiseiche.

In the course of the division of the Haan mayor's office on April 1, 1894, the rural communities of Gruiten , Millrath , Obgruiten and Schöller were separated from the Haan mayor's office and merged into the Gruiten mayor's office . At the same time, Maiseiche was incorporated into the town of Vohwinkel. In the southern part of Maiseiches, a few buildings were also built in the area of ​​the forest mayor's office at the end of the 19th century .

In the course of the municipal reorganization of the Rhenish-Westphalian industrial area , both the independent municipalities of the Wuppertal and those of the upper district of Solingen were restructured with effect from August 1, 1929 . The Vohwinkel part of Maiseiche became a district of Barmen-Elberfeld, which was renamed Wuppertal in 1930. The forest part of Maiseiche became a district of Solingen.

In order to improve the connection between the Haan-Ost junction and the A 46 from the direction of Gräfrath and Vohwinkel, a bypass road was built past Maiseiche between mid-2003 and early 2005 . Since then, designated as a section of Landesstraße  357, it has relieved the Gräfrather Straße (in the Haaner urban area) and the Westring street (in the Wuppertal urban area) of through traffic. According to today's city district boundaries, the Solingen part of Maiseiche belongs to Gräfrath. In the course of the designation of the area south of the Westring street as the Fürkeltrath I industrial area and the creation of Hermesstraße, the remaining buildings in the Solingen city area were demolished in 2011.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Topographic map of the Düsseldorf administrative district . Designed and executed according to the cadastral recordings and the same underlying and other trigonometric work by the Royal Government Secretary W. Werner. Edited by the royal government secretary FW Grube. 4th rev. Edition / published by A. Bagel in Wesel, 1859 / Ddf., Dec. 17, 1870. J. Emmerich, Landbaumeister. - Corrected after the ministerial amendments. Ddf. d. Sept. 1, 1871. Bruns.
  2. Friedrich von RestorffTopographical-statistical description of the Royal Prussian Rhine Province , Nicolai, Berlin and Stettin 1830
  3. Royal Statistical Bureau Prussia (ed.): The communities and manor districts of the Prussian state and their population . The Rhine Province, No. XI . Berlin 1874.
  4. Königliches Statistisches Bureau (Prussia) (Ed.): Community encyclopedia for the Rhineland Province, based on the materials of the census of December 1, 1885 and other official sources, (Community encyclopedia for the Kingdom of Prussia, Volume XII), Berlin 1888.