Dat ole Huus
Dat ole Huus Heath Museum is a local history museum in Wilsede in the German state of Lower Saxony. It was founded in 1907 which makes it one of the oldest open-air museums in Germany. The name is Low German for "That ol' house".
Museum
The Nature Conservation Park Society (Verein Naturschutzpark or VNP) together with its foundation, the Lüneburg Heath Nature Conservation Park Foundation (Stiftung Naturschutzpark Lüneburger Heide) are the operators of the museum, its contents being supported by the Kiekeberg Open Air Museum (Freilichtmuseum am Kiekeberg). Since 2004 the Emhoff sheep pen has belonged to the museum. This exhibit provides information about the historic forms of farming used by heath farmers around 1850. It shows a typical house inventory and the tools used on a heath farm.
Exhibition
The exhibition provides information about farming on the Lüneburg Heath around 1850.
History
The house was built in 1742 as a traditional Low German house and is the oldest farmhouse in the Lüneburg Heath Nature Park. In 1907 the building was dismantled in Hanstedt and reconstructed in Wilsede by the teacher Bernhard Dageförde as a farmhouse museum. The museum is affiliated with the larger open-air museum "Freilichtmuseum am Kiekeberg" (near the southern border of Hamburg). Since 2004 a renovated sheep shed on the "Emhoff" farmstead is used for exhibitions.
Sources
- Ulrich Klages: Siedlungen und Baugeschichte. In: Cordes et al. (Hrsg.): Naturschutzgebiet Lüneburger Heide. Geschichte - Ökologie - Naturschutz. Hauschild, Bremen 1997, ISBN 3-931785-36-X.
- Verein Naturschutzpark e.V. (Hrsg.): Wilsede - ein altes Heidedorf. Mundschenk, Soltau 1999.
External links
- Description of the museum on the site of the "Verein Naturschutzpark e.V. (VNP)" that runs the museum. (in German)
- Short description in German with a picture each of the inside and outside of the building.
- Website about the museum