Pannhütte

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Pannhütte
City of Wuppertal
Coordinates: 51 ° 18 ′ 39 ″  N , 7 ° 14 ′ 48 ″  E
Height : 314 m above sea level NHN
Area code : 0202
Pannhütte (Wuppertal)
Pannhütte

Location of Pannhütte in Wuppertal

Pannhütte is a locality in the north of the mountainous city ​​of Wuppertal .

Location and description

The location is at an altitude of 314  m above sea level. NHN on the watershed of the river systems of the Wupper and the Ruhr directly at the junction Wuppertal-Oberbarmen of the federal motorway 46, which runs south . The location is seamlessly connected to the larger Alteschmiede district .

The location is on the outskirts of the residential district Nachbarebreck-Ost ( Oberbarmen district ) on the border with the Sprockhövel districts of Gennebreck and Haßlinghausen . To the north of the locality are the villages of Kuxloh and Sundern in the Sprockhövel area . On the watershed east of Pannhütte is the neighboring district of Schmiedestrasse . Neighboring towns to the south are Kattenbreuken and Hasenkamp .

History and etymology

Pannhütte is a derivative of Pfannenhütte and refers to a brick kiln mentioned in 1748 owned by the blacksmith Johann Henrich vom Lehn , in which roof tiles were made. The clay was won on site.

In the early modern period, Pannhütte belonged to the weather office of the Counts of the Mark . After the conquest of the County of Mark by France , Pannhütte was part of the Mairie Haßlinghausen in the Hagen arrondissement of the Ruhr department in the Grand Duchy of Berg from 1806 to 1813 . In 1815 the French-occupied area came to Prussia , which Mollenkotten allocated to the newly created district of Hagen the following year . From 1887 to 1922 Pannhütte belonged to the office and the municipality of Haßlinghausen in the Schwelm district, which was split off from the Hagen district . In 1929, the Ennepe-Ruhr district was founded, to which Haßlinghausen and Pannhütte belonged. 1970 Haßlinghausen came to Sprockhövel, the area around Schmiedestraße with Pannhütte was split off from Haßlinghausen and incorporated into Wuppertal.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Gerd Helbeck : Next Breck. History of a rural area on the Bergisch-Märkische border in the area of ​​influence of the cities Schwelm and Barmen (= contributions to the history and local history of the Wuppertal. Vol. 30). Born-Verlag, Wuppertal 1984, ISBN 3-87093-036-5 .