Wildemann

Wildemann (German pronunciation: [ˈvɪldəˌman] ⓘ) is a town and a former municipality in the district of Goslar, in Lower Saxony, Germany.

The forecast after they sighted a while penetration into the inhospitable Innerstetal Wilden Mann, who with a savage lived wife.

Silver was first extracted from raw ore in 1533 at the Wildemanns Fundgrube mine, which was built on Badstubenberg .

In the years that followed, mining was intensified, the Stuffenthaler Gangzug running in the direction of Zellerfeld was built and several pits were dug there.

After Tilly's troops raided the mountain town of Lautenthal, 100 of them reached Wildemann in 1626, which they then captured and plundered.

In 1875, the town was opened up to rail traffic with the Innerstetalbahn, after a 278 m long tunnel had been created through the Gallenberg.

At first, Wildemann did not have a corresponding reception building: after the construction of a new access road - today's Bahnhofstrasse - it was not completed until 1879 and significantly expanded in 1904.

Wildemann, street view: the Bohlweg
The Innerste river between Wildemann and Lautenthal