New Horn barracks

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The Neue Hornkaserne was a barracks in Trier that was built in 1937/38. It is located in the Trier-Nord district in Dasbachstrasse, east of the Nells-Ländchen park , between a car dealership and the former Jäger barracks Jäger zu Pferde No. 7 , and has been home to the Trier State Institute for Persons Requiring to Leave (Lufa) since 2003.

history

New construction of the employment agency on the grounds of the Neue Hornkaserne

The first Horn barracks was also a barracks in Trier, which was built between 1889 and 1892. It was named after the Prussian general Heinrich Wilhelm von Horn . This was in the Trier-West / Pallien district . For reasons of space, it was decided to build a new building on the other side of the Moselle.

. On July 1, 1938, the II moved Battalion of Infantry - Regiment 105 for first time in the new barracks. The 1st battalion was in the immediate vicinity in the "New Göben barracks" and the III. Battalion in Wittlich . In the late summer of 1942, the 124th Grenadier Replacement Battalion began basic training for recruits of the fourth quarter of the 1924 class. After the end of the Second World War it was used by the French armed forces . First a repair regiment , followed by a telecommunications regiment and it was named "Caserne Casablanca". After the 5.5 hectare barracks were abandoned by the French Army in 1985, the rear buildings were converted to accommodate resettlers and asylum seekers . The reception center for asylum seekers Trier (AfA) has existed since May 1992. It is designed to accommodate 700 asylum seekers. For this purpose, the AfA 3 accommodation buildings are available. She is responsible for accepting asylum seekers from all over the world. The Trier-Saarburg job center , the Trier employment agency , is also located there and is responsible for the surrounding towns. The State Office for Mobility , the Federal Office for Migration and the Trier Federal Treasury are housed in other former barracks buildings.

French units stationed

Long text abbreviation at the location
148 ° Battalion de Transmissions 148 ° BT January 1, 1948 to March 1, 1960
451 ° Compagnie de Commis et Ouvriers Militaires d'Administration COMA 451 April 1, 1951 December 31, 1957
51 ° Battalion de Transmissions 51 ° BT March 1, 1960 November 26, 1969
51 ° Regiment de Commandement et de Transmissions 51 ° RCT November 26, 1969 July 1, 1978
7 ° Section Mobile de Réparation du 1 ° GRDB 1 ° GRDB / 7 ° SMR July 1, 1978
Détachement du Matériel des Transmissions 51 DMT 51 1st January 1969

literature

  • Adolf Welter: Trier during the occupation 1918–1939. Petermännchen-Verlag der Trier Münzfreunde, Trier 1992, ISBN 3-923575-11-4 .
  • Elisabeth Dühr, Frank G. Hirschmann, Christl Lehnert-Leven: Trier Garrison Book . City Museum Simeonstift Trier, Trier 2007, ISBN 3-930866-22-6 .
  • Achim Weber: New tasks in old walls from: The building administration with building authority and municipal housing, year 67 1994, No. 5, fig., Pp. 218–219

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Off for the last stop of the desperate Trierischer Volksfreund from April 28, 2011
  2. ^ Adolf Welter: Trier during the occupation 1918-1939. P. 22, Petermännchen-Verlag der Trier Münzfreunde, Trier 1992, ISBN 3-923575-11-4 .
  3. Reception facility for asylum seekers ( Memento from March 3, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) Internet presence of the Supervision and Service Directorate (ADD) of the State of Rhineland-Palatinate
  4. ^ Employment Agency Trier ( Memento from May 20, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) retrieved from Arbeitsagentur.de
  5. Overview of French units stationed in Trier ( Memento from May 14, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) (PDF; 262 kB) Veterans Association of military personnel stationed in Germany (French).

Remarks

  1. From October 1, 1942, the infantry regiments and battalions were renamed grenadier regiments and battalions. The abbreviation for infantry replacement battalions is available in two versions: IEBtl / Inf.Ers.Btl or incorrectly translated / derived from the Fraktur font JEBtl / Jnf.Ers.Btl.

Coordinates: 49 ° 46 ′ 17.1 "  N , 6 ° 40 ′ 14.9"  E