Steinmarner Strasse
The Steinmarner Straße in Cuxhaven - Döse is about 1.0 km long. It runs in an east-west direction parallel to the North Sea / Elbe dyke from Strichweg / Stickenbütteler Weg / near the church to Cuxhavener Straße and to Duhnen .
Back streets
The side and connecting roads were named as Strichweg after the dash as a way on or on the dike, Stickenbütteler Weg 1910 after the district, Bei der Kirche , Pastoratsweg 1915 after the place to which it leads, Kreuzweg 1915 after the intersection with Steinmarner Straße , Strandhausallee after the Strandhaus Döse, to which it leads, Steinmarner Trift 1915 after the Viehtrift (= drift), Alter Duhner Weg as the old way from Döse to Duhnen, Windrosenweg 1979 after the depiction of the cardinal points and Cuxhavener Straße 1910 after the renaming of the Duhner Chaussee from 1899.
history
Surname
The main connecting road between Döse and Duhnen was named in 1899 after the old village Steinmarne, first mentioned in 1310.
development
Döse developed from the village of Steinmarne and the Strichsiedlung. At the beginning of the 16th century, the two settlements grew together. The cantor school in Döse was built in 1814 and was sold in 1847 after a new building opposite was built. The larger St. Gertrud Church was built for the rapidly growing town by 1886 . In 1896 the volunteer fire brigade was founded in the street near the church . In 1898 the street was paved, later an asphalt surface.
In terms of traffic, the road is opened up by the KVG bus routes 1006, 1007 and 1010 .
Buildings, plants (selection)
On the street there are mostly one to two-story buildings with mostly saddle and hip roofs . Depending on the location, there are many holiday apartments, guest houses and small hotels on the street. The houses marked with a D are under monument protection.
- No. 2: Single-storey clinkered old cantor school in Cuxhaven from 1814 ( D ) with thatched hipped roof
- No. 3: Former 1-stor. Half-timbered house ( D ), demolished in 2017
- No. 5a: Evangelical Church of St. Gertrud ( D ); After the dilapidated half-timbered church was demolished, the single-nave historicizing , neo-Romanesque brick church with 500 seats, a recessed choir and an open, visible supporting structure was built according to plans by the architect Gustav Kirchenpauer, Hamburg
- Church cemetery with gravestones from the 17th and 18th centuries ( D )
- Newer meeting house
- 1-sch. St. Gertrud day care center (day care center)
- No. 10: House with restaurant
- Stumbling block for Hanna Erdmann (* 1896–?), Deported to the Theresienstadt concentration camp in 1940 , she survived
- No. 21: 2-sch. Hipped roof house from 1931 of the Döse voluntary fire brigade from 1896; behind it a single-storey fire station from 2018
- No. 43/45: 1-cut. hotel
- No. 74: Hotel
- No. 78 to Strandhausallee: green area towards the beach
- No. 83/89: 2-cut. Hipped roof house with hotel and restaurant
- No. 94: House with a restaurant
- No. 110: 2-sch. New building as a hotel
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ Cuxpedia: roads .
- ^ List of architectural monuments in the outskirts of the city of Cuxhaven
Coordinates: 53 ° 53 ′ 5 " N , 8 ° 39 ′ 57.3" E