Tavern Zum Adler (Hessenpark)

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On the left the Gasthaus Zum Adler, in the middle of the fruit store from Nidda and on the right the house from Idstein

The Wirtshaus Zum Adler is an inn in the Hessenpark . It consists of two monumental half-timbered houses that degrade in the places of origin and in the Hessenpark translocated were. World icon

The fruit store from Nidda

The fruit store from Nidda was opened on April 1, 1981 as the first part of the gastronomy in Hessenpark. It offers space for 60 guests inside. There are also 80 outdoor seats available.World icon

Heinrich Walbe published a picture of the fruit store in 1942 and dated the construction of the fruit store to around 1700.

The fruit store was part of the manorial castle courtyard. Together with three other barns, it served as a fruit store or tithe barn . The tithe that the farmers in the area had to pay was stored in these barns . In 1796, the grand ducal bailiff Hofmann reported that when General Jean-Baptiste Jourdan's army was retreating , French soldiers had blown up the gates of the granary and plundered it.

In Nidda the tithe was abolished as a payment in kind between 1832 and 1838. The former tithe recipients received a compensation payment that was paid in cash. The fruit stores had become inoperable. The barns and the fruit storage were leased. Since the rent did not cover the maintenance costs, the two larger barns were demolished. The fruit store remained in the possession of the rent chamber of the Grand Duchy of Hesse . A grand ducal Hessian storage administrator was responsible for the building. The W. Kirchhof was from 1824 to 1839, Johannes Ringshausen II from 1839 to 1860, Peter Ringshausen II from 1860 to 1877, then Louis Lehr.

In 1887 it became the property of the city of Nidda. In 1895 the Jewish couple Levi Zimmermann bought the building and ran an agricultural trade in it. Their daughter Clementine and her husband Mayer Stern took over the house and the business in 1908. In 1938 the Stern couple were deported and the Adolf Lupp couple became the new owners. It served as a building yard for the Lupp company until 1970/71. During this time, the front door was expanded and the rear door was installed.

In 1974 the city of Nidda took over the building again. Before that, Krugische Gasse and Schlossgasse had already been designated as redevelopment areas in 1973 . In 1977 it was dismantled and rebuilt in the Hessenpark in 1980/81.

Inn from Fürth

The second building of the Adler Inn was built in 1712 as a small farm stable house in Fürth (Odenwald) . In 1750 it received the Schildrechtlichkeit so the liquor license . Probably during the construction of the new thoroughfare from 1840 to 1845, it was dismantled and turned 180 degrees and rebuilt with the decorative side facing the market square. In 1976 it was dismantled again and rebuilt in the Hessenpark from 1980 to 1982.World icon

literature

  • Rolf Reutter: The stately fruit store in the former castle courtyard at Nidda, Schloßgasse 34 ; in: Hessenpark 1/82, pp. 5-7
  • Renate Lanio: The Adler inn was handed over to its destination ; in: Hessenpark 2/82, pp. 5-7

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. The Hessian-Franconian framework. (= Schriften des Volks- und Heimatforschung , Volume 4.) Wittich, Darmstadt 1942. / extended edition, 1954.