Waldhof (Bernsdorf)

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Waldhof
Commune Bernsdorf
Coordinates: 51 ° 21 '36 "  N , 14 ° 2' 31"  E
Height : 146 m above sea level NN
Incorporation : 1935
Incorporated into: Rhinestone
Postal code : 02994
Area code : 035723
Aerial view
Aerial view

Waldhof is a residential area in the town of Bernsdorf in the northwest of the Bautzen district in the Free State of Saxony .

geography

location

Waldhof is located immediately southwest of Bernsdorf on federal highway 97 . East is located on the railway line Lübbenau-Kamenz of Straßgräbchen-Bernsdorf (Oberlausitz) Bahnhof . The settlement is part of the largely flat and wooded Königsbrücker Heideland, to the north there is an insignificant elevation with the Wiednitzer Berg ( 151  m ). To the south, the Wutschkenwiesen extend to the Saleskbach and the two large ponds.

Neighboring places

Sella New Wiednitz Bernsdorf
Forstmühle, Grüngräbchen Neighboring communities Grünberg
Bulleritz , grave Rhinestone

history

Straßgräbchen and the surrounding area, Oberreitscher Atlas, 1844–46
Saxon-Prussian boundary stone No. 136

As a result of the Congress of Vienna in 1815 the Saxon-Prussian border line was drawn between Großgrabe , Straßgräbchen and Bernsdorf ; Bernsdorf became Prussian. The owner of the manor Großgrabe, Friedrich Leopold zu Stolberg-Stolberg , had the inn "Waldhof" built in 1816 near Fuchslöchern in front of the border on the Poststrasse leading through the Langenholz from Dresden via Königsbrück to Hoyerswerda . A row of cottages soon arose around the inn along Poststrasse, which continued to the northeast, where the road formed the border, on the Straßgräbchener Rittergutsflur and was called "Extension to the Waldhof". In 1840 a post office was built on the Waldhof. From 1843 both parts of Waldhof belonged to the district court district of Bautzen.

With the reorganization of the Saxon administrative structures, Waldhof was assigned to the Königsbrück court office in 1856 and to the Kamenz administration in 1875 . In 1874, the Lübbenau – Kamenz railway line built by the Berlin-Görlitzer Railway Company was completed; the line ran between Waldhof and Bernsdorf; The Bernsdorf train station was built on the district of Straßgräbchen . The AG für Glasfabrikation, formerly Gebrüder Hoffmann, founded the fourth Bernsdorf glass factory in 1891 with the " Wanne I "; it was created immediately northeast of Waldhof opposite the customs house in the Prussian part of the Lange Holz between the Wiednitzer Berg and the railway. At the end of the 19th century north of Waldhof on the Wiednitzer Berg, where the road from Ortrand to Bernsdorf formed the state border, the Neu-Wiednitz settlement was laid out on the Prussian side in the southern part of the Wiednitz district . At the beginning of the 20th century, several villas were built in Waldhof. Both parts from Waldhof to Großgrabe were parish . Großgrabe-Waldhof was separated from Großgrabe as a separate community at the beginning of the 1930s; In 1935 the communities Großgrabe-Waldhof and Straßgräbchen merged. In 1950, Waldhof was reassigned to Bernsdorf in the Hoyerswerda district, which was also associated with the reclassification from Saxony to Brandenburg. Since the administrative reform in the GDR in 1952, Waldhof has belonged to the Hoyerswerda and Cottbus district , from 1996 to 2008 to the Kamenz district and since then to the Bautzen district .

Monuments

  • Villa Dresdener Str. 122 with garden house and garden, built around 1910
  • Villa Dresdener Straße 98, built around 1915
  • Residential building at Dresdener Strasse 92, built in 1899
  • Prussian-Saxon boundary stone Pilar No. 136, corner of Dresdener Straße / Fabrikstraße
  • Path stone and boundary stone at Dresdener Straße 92

Web links

  • Waldhof in the Digital Historical Directory of Saxony

Individual evidence

  1. https://www.bernsdorf.de/strassgraebchen.html
  2. Pressed Glass Correspondence 2005-2
  3. ^ Association of the communities Großgrabe-Waldhof and Straßgräbchen
  4. https://www.bernsdorf.de/grossgrabe.html