Staple mill

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Staple mill
City of Remscheid
Coordinates: 51 ° 11 ′ 36 ″  N , 7 ° 13 ′ 46 ″  E
Postal code : 42897
Area code : 02191
Tackermill (Remscheid)
Staple mill

Location of Tackermühle in Remscheid

The Tackermühle is a court in the Remscheid district of Lüttringhausen . It lies between Lennep and Hermannsmühle .

history

The Tackermühle farm was once used as a fruit mill by the farmers of the free aristocratic village of Lüttringhausen and was first mentioned in 1487 as the Heintzenmühle. The current name was left by the Tacke family from Kotthausen, who owned the mill from 1651. In 1683 a grain merchant was named Tacke zu Tackermühle and in 1710 his son was given as the owner. Around 1819 Ferdinand Moll converted the fruit mill into a textile company. On February 3, 1836, an agreement was reached between PM Wirths (later Wülfingfabrik) and Ms. Moll as the owner of the factory in Tackermühle, in which PM Wirths is allowed to follow the Endringhauser Bach by creating a pond and a channel behind the Clevinghaus to use its upper factory. In 1828 the owner changed with Ferdinand Moll. The original cadastre reads: “Spinning with overshot waterwheel.” However, because the water was often insufficient for daily use, a “horse mill” or Göpel was used: the horses ran in circles and powered the transmissions with muscle power. In 1853 the staple mill was operated by Sigismund Schürmann as a cloth factory. It worked with a steam boiler and was also performed in 1862 by Sigismund Schürmann's “Cloth Factory on Walkbach”.

Tackermühle used to belong to the Lenneper foreign citizenships . The court is called “Tackenmüöhl” in Low German. The pond was reduced in size in 1925 and thereafter, but was still used for punting. Today it is only a third of its former volume at most.

geography

A series of narrow passageways connects Stursberg I and Hermannsmühle with the Tackermühle and Lennep . The Lüttringhauser Bach flows through the yard. Hiking trails branch off in different directions - including to Lüttringhausen, Sirachskotten, Nüdelshalbach and Hohenhagen .

literature

  • Hans Kadereit: Where there is still celebrations, reels and delights , a historical illustrated book Lüttringhausen, RGA-Buchverlag, 2009, ISBN 978-3-940491-07-7
  • Dr. Wilhelm Rees: Local history booklets of the Remscheid City Archives No. 7.
  • Günther Schmidt: Hammer and Kotten research in Remscheid Volume 4.
  • Gustav Hermann Halbach: Bergischer Sprachschatz .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Lower monument authority of the city of Remscheid: List of monuments of the city of Remscheid. (PDF) In: remscheid.de. Archived from the original on November 6, 2014 ; Retrieved November 5, 2014 .