Peugenhammer

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Peugenhammer mansion (2015)

The Peugenhammer is a former iron hammer in the Upper Palatinate town of Pleystein in the Neustadt an der Waldnaab district . The plant was operated by the water of the Zottbach , from which several other hammer mills, mills, stamp mills and glass grinding also benefited. The listed manor house of the hammer mill is preserved; next to it is the span pond for the hammer mill, which was able to supply the water wheels with stored water in the event of a water shortage .

history

An iron-working hammer mill is mentioned here from the 15th to the 17th century. In 1845, the Hammergut owner's wife, Mad. Haberstumpf, is mentioned in the Regensburger Zeitung . It is known that the hammer master Johann Haberstumpf , who comes from Peugenhammer, bought the Eisenhammer shell hops in 1860 and shut it down. In 1866 Josef Pieler and Peter Bergler founded a grinding plant here. In 1880 the company was sold to Alois Kupfer von Frankenreuth . From 1911 the Bayerische Spiegelglas AG from Fürth is the owner. After a turbine was installed in place of the water wheels in 1942, the delivery of electricity to OBAG began . From 1943 to 1945, locomotive parts were stored in the former grinding room. From 1948 to 1961, the Karla Drabsch company produced clothes here, later also ceramics and furniture. In 1959 a contract was signed to convert the building into a school campus.

Peugenhammer (formerly Peugenrieth ) belonged in 1805 to the second quarter of the municipalities of the Pleystein maintenance office. Here the hammer and another building are mentioned. In 1830 the previously independent community of Peugenhammer was incorporated into Miesbrunn . Since January 1, 1972, this has again been a district of Pleystein.

Peugenhammer today

The historical building is a hipped roof with stone door walls and later additions. Today it is known under the name Zottbachhaus ; This is a well-known hotel where Minister of State August Lang in particular held many meetings with his party colleagues and business leaders in the 1980s. Today the hiking area along the Zott, Tröbesbach and Loisbach is known as the Glasschleiferweg .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Franz Michael Ress: History and economic importance of the Upper Palatinate iron industry from the beginning to the time of the 30-year war. Negotiations of the Historical Association for Upper Palatinate and Regensburg, Volume 91, Regensburg 1950, p. 174.
  2. ^ Regensburger Zeitung: 1845, 1
  3. ^ Johannes Ibel: The mirror glass grinding and polishing in the district of Neustadt an der Waldnaab including the city of Weiden: A contribution to the industrial and economic history of the northern Upper Palatinate. eurotrans-Verlag, Weiden in der Oberpfalz 1999, p. 76/77.
  4. Dieter Bernd: Vohenstrauss . In: Historical Atlas of Bavaria , part of Old Bavaria . Series I, issue 39. Komm. Für Bayerische Landesgeschichte, Munich 1977, ISBN 3-7696-9900-9 , p. 148 ( digitized version - and p. 224).
  5. Hike on the Glasschleifererweg

Coordinates: 49 ° 39 '32.7 "  N , 12 ° 23' 54.1"  E