Haslochbach

The Haslochbach at the cutting mill

The lower Haseltal at the Fechermühle

The Haslochbach or Haselbach is about 12 km long right tributary to the Main in the Bavarian Spessart. Its source is the hazel wells located near the Haseltalbrücke. It is located at the foot of Mount Vulture, the highest elevation in the Spessart.

  • 3.1 Zwieselmühle
  • 3.2 mill horror
  • 3.3 Nickel mill
  • 3.4 Fechermühle

Name

1328 was the name of the stream dye Hasela. This consists of the determination of word hazel and the Middle High German word ahe reason together for water. So he appoints a overgrown with hazel watercourse. The creek was the community Hasloch and the Haseltal their names.

Geography

Course

The Hazel Fountain, located about 370 m above sea level. NN on the border between the districts of Aschaffenburg and Main-Spessart in Hochspessart. To the north, the dry Mordgrund continues to Geiersberg. In summer the water source below the source version of the hazel fountain. Then it feeds two small ponds. After his source of Haslochbach flows through the narrow upper Haseltal and crosses under the Haseltalbrücke the A 3 From there on he is the river of the district of Miltenberg. At the Zwieselmühle he enters the so-called Valley of the Mills. Here it flows to the coming of the grinding mill grinding Bach. Past the mill horror, the Dutch bridge and nickel mill Haslochbach reached the Fechermühle the ruins of St. Mark's Chapel. These mills are all operated by the Haslochbach. At the Fechermühle is the entrance to the Mills. There flows from the right goiter Bach, or monastery stream that flows past the monastery Grunau.

In Hasloch the Haslochbach reached the Main valley, where it flows into the Main.

Inflows

  • Höllgrundgraben (right)
  • Wolfskehl reason (right)
  • Grinding Bach ( left)
  • Klingenbachstrasse (left, temporarily dry)
  • Klingelbach (right)
  • Kropf Bach ( right)
  • Calibration Brunngraben (right, temporarily dry)

Mills

The Haslochbach flows through the so-called Valley of the Mills, where he operated five mills. The Zwieselmühle, terror mill, nickel mill Fechermühle and Barthelsmühle.

Zwieselmühle

The Zwieselmühle (position ) 49.8402194444449.4805555555556 is the top mill in Haseltal, consisting of a total of 15 buildings. There, the abrasive stream flows into the Haslochbach. The mill was first mentioned in 1424. Since 1906 there is a chapel next to the mill. In the same year opened the restaurant business. In the 1960s, the hamlet Zwieselmühle of Bischbrunn was incorporated into Schollbrunn.

Terror mill

The horrors mill, or Schreckemühle, ( location ) 49.8309361111119.4872333333333 today consists of two buildings with separate house numbers. It was first mentioned in 1328. The name comes from an operator called fright. By 1803 the mill belonged to the monastery Grunau. She is still a grain mill in operation. The horrors mill existed until the 18th century from an old (lower) mill and a recent (upper) mill. In 1961, the restaurant was opened.

Nickel mill

The nickel mill, or Upper Iringsmühle, ( location ) 49.8249166666679.50075 stands where the blade brook empties into the Haslochbach. It currently consists of four buildings. For the first time it is mentioned in 1674 as a possession of the monastery Grunau. In 1896 a sawmill was built at the mill. This was equipped with a steam engine that was used in water entering deficiency. Since 1974, there is a restaurant.

Fechermühle

The Fechermühle, also granulator or Lower Iringsmühle, ( location ) 49.8166583333339.4942888888889 stands at the entrance to the Mills on the ruins of the St. Mark's Chapel. From there, from the Haslochbach is accompanied by a state road. Today, located on the Fechermühle a sawmill; further south of the iron hammer. The mill is not farmed.

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