Wargowo (Czarna Dąbrówka)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Wargowo
Wargowo does not have a coat of arms
Wargowo (Poland)
Wargowo
Wargowo
Basic data
State : Poland
Voivodeship : Pomerania
Powiat : Bytów
Gmina : Czarna Dąbrówka
Geographic location : 54 ° 26 '  N , 17 ° 32'  E Coordinates: 54 ° 25 '34 "  N , 17 ° 31' 43"  E
Residents : 82 (March 31, 2011)
Telephone code : (+48) 59
License plate : GBY
Economy and Transport
Street : MikorowoŁupawa
Rail route : no rail connection
Next international airport : Danzig



Wargowo (German Vargow , Kasch . Wôrgòwò ) is a small Kashubian village in the Polish Pomeranian Voivodeship and belongs to the municipality of Czarna Dąbrówka ( Schwarz Damerkow ) in the Bytowski powiat ( Bütow district ).

Geographical location

Wargowo is located southeast of the former district town Słupsk ( Stolp ) and north of the current district metropolis Bytów ( Bütow ) on an old postal route between Mikorowo ( Mickrow ) and Łupawa ( Lupow ). There is no rail connection.

Place name

The Polish place name Wargowo is used again in the Greater Poland Voivodeship .

history

The former Vargow is its historic village of shape after a row village . Vargow A and B were fiefs of the von Lostin (also: von Loske ) and remained in the possession of this family for a long time. Vargow C and D were fiefdoms of the von Malschitzky (also: von Kokoske ).

By 1784 Vargow had six small outbuildings or yards with six fireplaces. In 1804 it was owned by Wilhelm Gneomar von Lostin , and in 1832 it was bought by the Jarke family . The last owners were Eugen Jarke (1884) and Leo von Zelewski (1928) before it was owned by the Pomeranian Landgesellschaft Stettin in 1931 . Then Vargow was resettled.

In 1910 there were 150 inhabitants in Vargow. Their number was 188 in 1933 and dropped to 172 by 1939. Today, Wargowo has 81 inhabitants.

The municipality of Vargow with the three localities Alt Vargow, Neu Vargow and Rehhof belonged to the district and registry office district Mickrow and the district court district Lauenburg in Pomerania until 1945 . It was in the district of Stolp in the administrative district of Köslin in the Prussian province of Pomerania .

Towards the end of World War II , the Red Army occupied the village of Vargow on March 9, 1945 at 10 a.m. A Soviet staff took up residence in the school and a little later handed over the administration to the People's Republic of Poland . They renamed Vargow to Wargowo and began the settlement of Poles . The local residents had to vacate their houses within an hour on June 8, 1946 and were evicted . The transport went to the Pöppendorf camp near Lübeck .

The village now belongs to the Gmina Czarna Dąbrówka in the powiat Bytowski in the Pomeranian Voivodeship (1975 to 1998 Slupsk Voivodeship ). Wargowo is the seat of a Schulzenamt .

church

Before 1945, Vargow and its predominantly Protestant population belonged to the parish of Mickrow (now in Polish: Mikorowo) in the church district of Stolp-Altstadt in the church province of Pomerania of the Church of the Old Prussian Union . The last German clergyman was Pastor Gustav Oehrn .

After 1945 the ecclesiastical connection to the parish seat of Mikorowo ( Mickrow ) remained, which now as a Catholic parish belongs to the newly formed deanery Łupawa ( Lupow ) in the diocese of Pelplin of the Catholic Church in Poland . Evangelical church members are now incorporated into the Kreuzkirche parish in Słupsk ( Stolp ).

school

In 1932 there was a single-class elementary school in Vargow, in which a teacher taught 24 school children. The Vargower School was also attended by the children from Neu Karwen (now in Polish: Nowe Karwno).

Sons and daughters of the village

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ CIS 2011: Ludność w miejscowościach statystycznych według ekonomicznych grup wieku (Polish), March 31, 2011, accessed on June 26, 2017