Rosenthal (Bergneustadt)
Rosenthal
City of Bergneustadt
Coordinates: 51 ° 3 ′ 33 ″ N , 7 ° 40 ′ 6 ″ E
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Height : | 410 m above sea level NN |
Residents : | 8 (May 31, 2017) |
Postal code : | 51702 |
Area code : | 02763 |
Location of Rosenthal in Bergneustadt
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Rosenthal is one of 22 districts of the city of Bergneustadt in the Oberbergischer Kreis in the administrative district of Cologne in North Rhine-Westphalia , Germany .
Location and description
Rosenthal is a farm on the way from Lieberhausen to Niederrengse . The place is about 8.4 kilometers east of Bergneustadt as the crow flies. Neighboring towns are Lieberhausen, Wörde and Rosenthalseifen , which belong to Gummersbach .
history
First mention
The name Rosenthal appears for the first time in tax lists of the 16th century.
History of the main building
1762-1835
Pastor Stolle from Lieberhausen built the house in July 1762. The income from the farm, which was run by servants, the so-called " Halfen ", was used for the pastor's income. The farm was owned by the church until a fire in 1835, after which it was acquired by Johann Salomo Vedder from Pustenbach on July 31, 1835. The parish seat was moved from the more rural area to Lieberhausen.
1835-1857
During this time Johann Salomo Vedder ran the farm.
1857-1874
After his death, an inheritance dispute developed among those entitled to inheritance. The property was publicly auctioned , the second son, Friedrich Wilhelm Vedder, bought and took over the estate, a daughter, Caroline Vedder, inherited a fruit mill in Bergneustadt and married the Bergneustadt stocking manufacturer Moritz Leopold Krawinkel .
1874-1939
After 1874 Gustav Adolph Vedder was the owner of the farm. In his time, a barn was added in 1878. He also initiated the construction of a water pipe in 1890, which made it unnecessary to go to the well. A team of horses was purchased from retreating soldiers of the First World War . From 1922, Lieberhausen and the surrounding area were connected to the electrical network, and the mill wheel as drive energy became superfluous.
1939-1965
The property had meanwhile passed to Wilhelm Friedrich Vedder, but the administration was incumbent on his daughter Elisabeth, since he was drafted in April 1943. It was not until 1948 that the owner came home from a Soviet prisoner of war. Towards the end of the Second World War , German guns stood next to the courtyard and fired in the direction of Dümpel.