Niederdahlhausen

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Niederdahlhausen
City of Hückeswagen
Coordinates: 51 ° 10 ′ 32 ″  N , 7 ° 22 ′ 3 ″  E
Height : 330 m above sea level NN
Residents : 14  (2007)
Postal code : 42499
Area code : 02192
Niederdahlhausen (Hückeswagen)
Niederdahlhausen

Location of Niederdahlhausen in Hückeswagen

Niederdahlhausen is a court in Hückeswagen in the Oberbergischer Kreis in the administrative district of Cologne in North Rhine-Westphalia ( Germany ).

Location and description

Niederdahlhausen is located in northeastern Hückeswagen near the Bevertalsperre on the border with Radevormwald . Other neighboring towns are Scheuer , Herweg , Zipshausen , Neuenherweg , Eckenhausen , Siepersbever , Heinhausen , Fockenhausen , Oberbeck , Pleuse and Radevormwald- Lichteneichen . Left Oberdahlhausen and Brechen .

The Hofschaft can be reached via an access road that branches off from Bundesstraße 483 (B483) at Neuenherweg and also connects to Scheuer. The Niederdahlhausener Bach flows north past the place.

history

In 1518 the place is listed for the first time under the name "Dahlhusen" in the church accounts of the Protestant parish in Hückeswagen. The map Topographia Ducatus Montani from 1715 shows the farm as Dahlhusen . In the 18th century the place belonged to the Bergisches Amt Bornefeld-Hückeswagen .

In 1815/16 there were 22 inhabitants in the village, but no distinction is made between Ober- and Niederdahlhausen. In 1832, Dahlhausen belonged to the Herdingsfelder Honschaft , which was part of the Hückeswagen external citizenship within the Hückeswagen mayor (also no distinction between Ober- and Niederdahlhausen) . The place, categorized as a hamlet according to the statistics and topography of the administrative district of Düsseldorf , had five residential buildings and eight agricultural buildings at that time. At that time, 21 residents lived in the village, all of whom were Protestant.

In the municipality lexicon for the Rhineland province in 1885, three houses with 16 inhabitants are given. At that time the place belonged to the rural community Neuhückeswagen within the Lennep district . In 1895 the place had three houses with eleven inhabitants, in 1905 three houses and 20 inhabitants.

The hamlet, consisting of seven houses, originally only consisted of an old courtyard. The Wirth family , who still live there today , managed it until the 1960s. After that, they gave up on him and sold the land and built other buildings in the village. The courtyard still exists today, but only the masonry and cellars of the building on the right are old. All other parts, such as barns and stables, have now been converted into living spaces. Today it belongs to the Gruhn family . Other long-established families are the Meyer and Schwipper families . All other tenants have just moved in, as all 7 buildings are owned by the families mentioned.

Hiking and biking trails

The following hiking trails lead through the village:

  • The Radevormwald local circular hiking trail A2 (Hölterhof)

Individual evidence

  1. Wupperverband; River basin geographic information system
  2. ^ Klaus Pampus: First documentary naming of Oberbergischer places (= contributions to Oberbergischen history. Sonderbd. 1). Oberbergische Department 1924 eV of the Bergisches Geschichtsverein, Gummersbach 1998, ISBN 3-88265-206-3 .
  3. ^ Johann Georg von Viebahn : Statistics and topography of the administrative district of Düsseldorf. Part 2: Containing the statistical table of places and distances and the alphabetical index of place names. Schreiner, Düsseldorf 1836, p. 12 .
  4. ^ Royal Statistical Bureau (Prussia) (Ed.): Community encyclopedia for the Rhineland province. Based on the materials from the census of December 1, 1885 and other official sources (= community encyclopedia for the Kingdom of Prussia. Vol. 12, ZDB -ID 1046036-6 ). Publishing house of the Royal Statistical Bureau, Berlin 1888.
  5. ^ Royal Statistical Bureau (Prussia) (Ed.): Community encyclopedia for the Rhineland province. Based on the materials from the census of December 1, 1895 and other official sources (= community encyclopedia for the Kingdom of Prussia. Vol. 12). Publishing house of the Royal Statistical Bureau, Berlin 1897.
  6. ^ Royal Statistical Bureau (Prussia) (Ed.): Community encyclopedia for the Rhineland province. Based on the materials from the census of December 1, 1905 and other official sources (= community encyclopedia for the Kingdom of Prussia. Vol. 12). Publishing house of the Royal Statistical Bureau, Berlin 1909.
  7. Topographical Information Management TIM-online, provided by the Cologne District Government