Stubben (Beverstedt)

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Stumps
municipality Beverstedt
Stubben coat of arms
Coordinates: 53 ° 24 ′ 31 ″  N , 8 ° 47 ′ 8 ″  E
Height : 9 m above sea level NHN
Area : 8.62 km²
Residents : 1500  (Nov. 20, 2019)
Population density : 174 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : November 1, 2011
Postal code : 27616
Area code : 04748
Stubben (Lower Saxony)
Stumps

Location of Stubben in Lower Saxony

Stubben in the municipality of Beverstedt
Stubben in the municipality of Beverstedt
Localities of the municipality of Beverstedt

Stubben ( Low German Stubben ) is a place in the unified municipality Beverstedt in the south of the Lower Saxony district of Cuxhaven .

geography

Local division

Stubben is divided into the following districts :

Neighboring places

Lunestedt Beverstedt village
Bokel Neighboring communities waves
Holste
( Osterholz district )

(Source:)

history

Archaeological finds show that 10,000 years BC Reindeer hunters lived in this area. Large stone graves and finds from the younger Stone Age indicate continuous settlement.

When the Bremen – Bremerhaven railway line was built and a train station was built there, commuters who did their work in the cities settled in the immediate vicinity. The individual communities of Adelstedt, Brunshausen and Elfershude emerged near the train station. The Erbhof Plein (also called Stubben), which belonged to the neighboring village of Bokel until 1926 , was transferred to Adelstedt in the same year. In 1927 Adelstedt was renamed Stubben. In 1929 Brunshausen, Elfershude and Stubben were combined to form the new municipality of Stubben.

Due to the railway station, Stubben developed into an important transshipment point for cattle, wood, fertilizer and agricultural products. In 1904, a dairy was established near the train station. At this point of the former Mäder dairy there is now a concrete block factory .

Place name

The name Stubben means tree stump in Low German . The former forest area was called Rehloge , after deer and loge, an old word for forest. The trees were cleared for settlement and the place was named after the tree stumps.

Incorporations

In the 1960s, the attempt to unite Stubben and the neighboring community of Bokel into one political community failed. In 1971, Stubben became one of the nine member communities of the Beverstedt joint community .

On November 1, 2011, the previously independent Stubben became a village in the unified municipality of Beverstedt.

Population development

year Residents source
1910 0383 ¹
1933 613
1939 648
1950 11960
1956 13030
1973 12590
1975 1241 square
1980 1252²
year Residents source
1985 1250 square meters
1990 1270 square meters
1995 1422²
2000 1522²
2005 1521²
2010 1537²
2016 14690
2019 15000

¹ consisting of the towns of Stubben (until 1927 Adelstedt; = 279 inh.), Brunshausen (= 55 inh.) And Elfershude (= 49 inh.), Which were merged in 1929
² as of December 31st

religion

About 60% of the Stubben population are members of the Evangelical Lutheran parish of Beverstedt .

From 1947 to 2012, the St. John's Congregation, founded by displaced persons, existed . It belonged to the Independent Evangelical Lutheran Church and forms a parish with the Sankt Andreas Community in Bremerhaven. Its roots lay in the Evangelical Lutheran Confessional Church . Her church was consecrated in 1956 and divorced in 2012.

politics

City council and mayor

At the municipal level, the village of Stubben is represented by the Beverstedt municipal council.

Mayor

The mayor of Stubben is Gerhard Tienken ( SPD ). The term of office runs from 2016 to 2021.

coat of arms

The design of the municipal coat of arms of Stubben comes from the heraldist and coat of arms painter Albert de Badrihaye , who designed around 80 coats of arms in the district of Cuxhaven.

Stubben coat of arms
Blazon : "In silver, a red roebuck with golden horns ,jumpingto the right over a floating green stump ."
Justification for the coat of arms: The stump indicates the place name. The roebuck reminds us that the community's houses are built on the “Rehloge” corridor.

Culture and sights

Railway station in Stubben

Buildings

Associations and associations

  • Civic Association Dorfzentrum Stubben e. V.
  • JSG Bokel / Langenfelde / Stubben
  • Breed poultry breeding association from 1968 Hagen und Umgebung e. V. Paul Wicknig

Economy and Infrastructure

Public facilities

The public facilities include sports facilities with a gym, soccer, beach volleyball and tennis courts and the Stubben volunteer fire department .

education

The schoolchildren in the first four years of school go to the primary school in Bokel, 2 km away . 4 km away in spots Beverstedt the secondary schools (see junior high school and the private school "Forest School"). At the moment a full-day school is gradually being sought.

In the former school building, the community initially ran a kindergarten . In 2011 a new kindergarten was built and the building became the village community center.

traffic

Today, the Bremen – Bremerhaven railway is the most important part of regional public transport for Stubben . The RS2 line of the Bremen / Lower Saxony regional S-Bahn , operated by NordWestBahn GmbH , has connections to Bremen and Bremerhaven every hour . Together with the state road  134 leading through the village , which connects Beverstedt with Hagen and the federal motorway 27 , there are favorable transport connections for the village. They contributed to the strong settlement activities, and gradually the areas between Stubben and Elfershude (the Ohfeld and the long moor) were developed as building areas.

Personalities

Sons and daughters of the place

  • Martin Börsmann (1851–1903), collector of Low German literature, writer and graphic artist as well as writer, the local Martin-Börsmann-Straße was named after him, born in the district of Elfershude
  • Emil Memmen (1905–1998), captain and government director, born in the Adelstedt district

People connected to the place

  • Wilhelm Lührs (1885–1974), farmer and politician (DNVP, NSDAP), died in Stubben
  • Heinrich Hünecke (1891–1971), sports teacher, sports official and administrative officer, he was the first President of the Lower Saxony State Sports Association and founding vice-president of the German Sports Association, was a primary school teacher in the Adelstedt district

literature

  • Fritz Hörmann, Ude Meyer, Christian Morisse, Eberhard Nehring, Irmgard Seghorn, Egon Stuve, Else Syassen: Wesermünde field names collection - the field names of the property tax cadastre from 1876 . Ed .: Kulturstiftung der Kreissparkasse Wesermünde (=  new series of special publications by the men from Morgenstern , Heimatbund an Elb- und Wesermuende eV Volume 27 ). Men from Morgenstern Verlag, Bremerhaven 1995, ISBN 3-931771-27-X , p. 20 ([ digitized version ( memento of October 26, 2007 in the Internet Archive )] [PDF; 431 kB ; accessed on October 23, 2019]).
  • Erich Waldmann u. a .: Stubben - The history of the place shaped by the train and train station . Self-published by the author, Stubben (available from: Erich Waldmann, 27616 Stubben, Brunshausener Str. 50, Tel. 04748-1338).

Web links

Commons : stumps  - collection of images

Individual evidence

  1. a b Information on the village of Stubben. (No longer available online.) In: Website of the municipality of Beverstedt. November 16, 2016, archived from the original on October 2, 2018 ; accessed on August 25, 2020 .
  2. a b c Information on stumps. In: Website of the municipality of Beverstedt. November 20, 2019, accessed August 25, 2020 .
  3. Overview map of the Cuxhaven district. In: cuxland-gis.landkreis-cuxhaven.de. November 2016, accessed August 25, 2020 .
  4. ^ Fritz Hörmann, Ude Meyer, Christian Morisse, Eberhard Nehring, Irmgard Seghorn, Egon Stuve, Else Syassen: Field names collection Wesermünde - The field names of the property tax cadastre from 1876 . Ed .: Kulturstiftung der Kreissparkasse Wesermünde (=  new series of special publications by the men from Morgenstern , Heimatbund an Elb- und Wesermuende eV Volume 27 ). Men from Morgenstern Verlag, Bremerhaven 1995, ISBN 3-931771-27-X , p. 20 ([ digitized version ( memento of October 26, 2007 in the Internet Archive )] [PDF; 431 kB ; accessed on October 23, 2019]).
  5. ^ Law on the reorganization of the Beverstedt community. In: Lower Saxony Regulations Information System (NI-VORIS). District of Cuxhaven, February 17, 2011, accessed on September 18, 2018 .
  6. ^ Law on the reorganization of the Beverstedt community, Cuxhaven district . In: Niedersächsische Staatskanzlei (Ed.): Niedersächsisches Gesetz- und Verordnungsblatt (Nds. GVBl.) . No.  5/2011 . Hanover February 17, 2011, p. 61 , p. 3 ( digitized version [PDF; 155 kB ; accessed on September 26, 2018]).
  7. Ulrich Schubert: Community directory Germany 1900 - Geestemünde district. Information from December 1, 1910. In: gemeindeververzeichnis.de. January 5, 2020, accessed August 25, 2020 .
  8. ^ Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. Wesermünde district. (See under: No. 83; online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
  9. Statistisches Bundesamt Wiesbaden (Ed.): Official municipality register for the Federal Republic of Germany - 1957 edition (population and territorial status September 25, 1956, for Saarland December 31, 1956) . W. Kohlhammer, Stuttgart 1958, p.  193 ( digitized version ).
  10. Lower Saxony State Administration Office (ed.): Municipal directory for Lower Saxony . Municipalities and municipality-free areas. Self-published, Hanover January 1, 1973, p. 48 , Wesermünde district ( digitized [PDF; 21.3 MB ; accessed on August 25, 2020]).
  11. ^ Municipalities in Germany by area and population. (XLSX; 895 kB) In: Destatis website. Federal Statistical Office, December 31, 1975, accessed on June 12, 2019 (see: Lower Saxony, No. 1933).
  12. a b Community directory - archive - regional structure - annual editions - Lower Saxony. (All politically independent municipalities in EXCEL format). In: Destatis website. Federal Statistical Office, accessed on August 25, 2020 .
  13. ^ Michael Schätzel (arrangement): Independent Evangelical Lutheran Church in Germany. A guide through the communities . Ed .: Independent Evangelical Lutheran Church. Verlag der Lutherische Buchhandlung Heinrich Harms, Groß Oesingen 2000, ISBN 3-86147-206-6 , p. 148 .
  14. a b Landkreis Wesermünde (Ed.): Coat of arms of the Landkreis Wesermünde . Grassé Offset Verlag, Bremerhaven / Wesermünde 1973, ISBN 3-9800318-0-2 .