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[3] Station 3 - Former first feudal estate. The Brucklacher family provided three Schultheißen.

House at Degerschlachter Strasse 3 around 1930
This semi-detached house, a rather rare type of house in Wannweil, belonged to Heinrich Bauer and the siblings Wilhelm and Pauline Brucklacher. Their ancestor from Betzingen, Johann Jakob Brucklacher, married into Wannweil in 1776 and became mayor and eagle landlord here in 1799. The year 1785 at the entrance to the cellar indicates a building or remodelling project. It is not certain whether the Adlerwirtschaft was in this building. The fiefs of the hospital remained in the family for generations as hereditary fiefs. Even today, the left half of the house still belongs to a fourth great-grandson.
Half-timbered gable facing west, around 1930
Georg Gaißer and Johannes Heniß are listed as owners in the 1711 stock ledger. Johannes Heniß (1667 - 1717) was the mayor of the village and a judge. At that time, the farm included 18 mansquares of meadows, 46 mansquares of fields and land and 1 1/2 mansquares of gardens. A Mannsmad was equivalent to about 30-40 ares, which one man could mow in a day. A Jauchart is about the same size. The term comes from Jochacker, a team of oxen under a yoke could plough this area in one day.
Family picture Martin Brucklacher, Schultheiß and Maria Katharina Müllerschön with children Karl August and Karoline
Martin Brucklacher (1843-1910) was the last farmer mayor in Wannweil from 1878 to 1909. Martin Brucklacher was born in Wannweil on 21 December 1843. He grew up here with five older siblings. On 17 September 1878, the unmarried 34-year-old Brucklacher was appointed mayor by the royal government of the Black Forest district. He died in 1910.
House Degerschlachter Straße 3
current state

Description

Opposite stood the 13th fief Link: https://simonwolperth.blogspot.com/2009/06/wannweil-und-seine-15-lehenshofe-der-13.html

House at Degerschlachter Straße 3 around 1930.  
This semi-detached house, a rather rare type of house in Wannweil, belonged to Heinrich Bauer and the siblings Wilhelm and Pauline Brucklacher. Their ancestor from Betzingen, Johann Jakob Brucklacher, married into Wannweil in 1776 and became mayor and eagle landlord here in 1799. The year 1785 at the entrance to the cellar indicates a building or conversion project. It is not certain whether the Adlerwirtschaft was in this building. The fiefs of the hospital remained in the family for generations as hereditary fiefs. Even today, the left half of the house still belongs to a fourth great-grandson.

Link to the description of the fiefdoms: https://simonwolperth.blogspot.com/2009/04/wannweil-und-seine-15-lehenshofe-des.html (link will be added to “Description of the fiefdoms”).

Schultheiß Johann Jakob Brucklacher died in 1806 at the age of 53, his son Johann Georg (1793-1862) was Schultheiß in Wannweil from 1822 to 1853 and his son Martin (1843-1910) was the last farmer Schultheiß in Wannweil from 1878 to 1909. He died in 1910. Martin Brucklacher was born in Wannweil on 21 December 1843. He grew up here with five older siblings. He was not yet of age when his father died at the age of 68. On 17 September 1878, the unmarried 34-year-old Brucklacher was appointed mayor by the royal government of the Black Forest district. His mother was also not to live to see his marriage to Maria Katharina Müllerschön from Mittelstadt on 25 November 1879 in the Wannweiler church. His son Karl August was born in 1880, his daughter Karoline in 1881 and his son Adam Georg in 1886. In 1901, the daughter married Karl Eberhardt, a merchant and innkeeper. In 1902, son Karl August married Maria, the daughter of master blacksmith Johann Georg Gaiser. Martin Brucklacher did not live to see the marriage of his son Adam Georg to Pauline Schäfer. He was able to enjoy four grandchildren. After suffering a stroke, he requested retirement on 31 August 1909 and died in Wannweil on 13 August 1910. Mayor Albert Zanzinger wrote in his local chronicle: " Schultheiß Brucklacher ... still lives in the memory of the people of Wannweil today. During his term of office, he experienced the strongest development of our community and led the community to its satisfaction in good and bad days and brought it forward".