SC Schlesien Haynau
SC Schlesien Haynau | |||
Full name | Sports Club Schlesien Haynau | ||
place | Haynau | ||
Founded | 1921 | ||
Dissolved | 1945 | ||
Club colors | White yellow | ||
Stadion | Sports field on the embankment | ||
Top league |
Gauliga Silesia Gauliga Lower Silesia |
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successes | |||
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The Sport-Club Schlesien Haynau was a German sports club from the Lower Silesian town of Haynau (today Chojnów, Poland).
history
From TV 1861 , SC Schlesien emerged in 1921 , which was brought into being by Walter Preussner and which was brought to its peak with Walter Lemke, Herbert Bulnheim, Herbert Schnorr and the long-standing first chairman, Pape. In 1930 the club rose to the top division, the Lower Silesia District League .
In 1933 the Gauliga Schlesien was founded. Since teams from the Lower Silesian football championship were not given a starting place in this, Haynau played in the second-rate district league Lower Silesia . The team was promoted to the Gauliga in the first season . The Haynauer benefited from the fact that the actual winner, TuSV Weißwasser , had to change the Sportgau and the Haynauer moved up into the promotion round to the Gauliga Schlesien. The Gauliga season was not very successful, so that Haynau was the last to relegate to the Lower Silesia district class. His most sensational victory in the Gauliga was the 1-0 win against Vorwärts-Rasensport Gleiwitz in Haynau, which meant that the then Silesian champions suffered a defeat in Haynau.
In 1938 there was a merger with TV 1861 Haynau to form TSV Schlesien 1861 Haynau . For the 1943/44 season , all lower football classes in Lower Silesia were dissolved and all teams still capable of playing were classified in the Lower Silesia Gauliga . Haynau finished the season in 6th place in the Liegnitz relay . A game operation in the 1944/45 season is not recorded. After the end of the Second World War, the city of Haynau became Polish and TSV Schlesien Haynau was dissolved.
literature
- Hardy Greens : Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 7: Club Lexicon . AGON-Sportverlag, Kassel 2001, ISBN 3-89784-147-9 .
- Hardy Greens: Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 1: From the Crown Prince to the Bundesliga. 1890 to 1963. German championship, Gauliga, Oberliga. Numbers, pictures, stories. AGON-Sportverlag, Kassel 1996, ISBN 3-928562-85-1 .
- German sports club for soccer statistics : Soccer in Silesia 1933/34 - 1944/45 , publisher: DSFS e. V., Berlin 2007
Individual evidence
- ↑ Goldberg-Haynauer Heimatnachrichten, July 15, 1957, No. 7, p. 3