Zdroje, Szczecin

Zdroje ( German Finkenwalde ) is a southeastern suburb of Stettin on the eastern arm of the lower Oder. The village lies at the Szczecin Landscape Park Buchheide ( Szczeciński Landscape Park " Bukowa ").

The district is bordered to the south on the community Stare Czarnowo (Neumark ), the boundary runs along the Autostrada A6 motorway.

History

The town was founded in 1750. By 1945 he was one of Germany after the Second World War, he was Polish and was renamed from Finkenwalde in Zdroje. The incorporation to Stettin was made in 1948.

The Szczecin organ building family Grüneberg built in 1905 to 1912 in Finkenwalde a new organ-building factory in which up to 65 people were employed. Built in the time next to the factory Nouveau villa of the family in 2010 was threatened by demolition plans as a new tram line and sewer lines were planned through the park.

Admits became the site by the seminary of the Confessing Church, led by Dietrich Bonhoeffer 1935 to state prohibition in 1937 and then illegally continued resulted in large Schlönwitz. 2012 was in Zdroje a garden of peace and meditation in honor of Dietrich Bonhoeffer ( ' Ogród ciszy i medytacji Dietricha Bonhoeffera ') opened.

Sons and daughters of the town

  • Friedrich Stephany (1830-1912), German journalist, correspondent Theodor Fontane
  • Karl Berg (1868-1936), German forensic pathologist
  • Hans pageboy (1901-1983), German economist and local politicians
  • Klaus Dylewski (* 1916), German former SS sergeant and member of the camp Gestapo at Auschwitz
835156
de