Real Estate Market Greifswald & Umgebung

Median purchase price 2.230 €/sq. ft. · 4.133 listings

AhrenshoopCulture and enjoymentKröslinMuseumsPOI base entry: CategoriesPOIsProduct linesRegionsTMVUsedomUsedomWestern PomeraniaWestern PomeraniaWestern PomeraniaWestern Pomeraniato-mv.devorpommern.deGreifswald & Umgebung

Freest Local History Museum

Freest · Greifswald & Umgebung · 54.1369° N, 13.7205° E
Freest Local History Museum

The small museum houses a collection of a wide variety of everyday objects that were part of daily life in fishing and agriculture and were gathered by the town’s residents to create a lovingly arranged exhibition.

The famous Freest fishing rugs are particularly worth seeing. The idea for the local history museum came decades ago from Erich Mundstock, a teacher and principal at the Freest school. He collected many everyday objects from times past. In 1962, Erich Mundstock established the local history museum at the Freest school, thereby giving his collection a permanent home. Upon his death in 1987, the original local history museum was closed. After the political transition in the GDR, the former customs house—which had been used as an NVA base for decades—was handed over to the municipality of Kröslin. In 1992, the Freester Heimatstube was reopened in the building’s rooms. Today, it comprises seven rooms for permanent exhibitions as well as spaces for temporary exhibitions and lectures. Visitors to the local history museum can take a journey back in time to an old-fashioned living room and kitchen, as well as a bedroom and a schoolroom. All of the items—including dolls and doll carriages, a sewing room, and a hairdressing salon—were donated by people from the region. The most famous exhibits in the local history museum, however, are the Freest fishermen’s rugs. Crafted by residents of the community, each rug tells its own story.

Freest Local History Museum – A Journey Through Time into the Everyday Life of Fishermen on the Baltic Sea

The Freest Local History Museum, located in the small fishing village of Freest near Greifswald, offers a vivid glimpse into the daily lives of past generations on the East Pomeranian Baltic Sea coast. Today, the museum features seven rooms with permanent exhibitions, as well as additional spaces for temporary exhibitions and lectures. Everyday objects from fishing and agriculture, an old-fashioned living room, a historic kitchen, a bedroom, and a schoolroom make a visit here a true journey through time. All of the objects on display were donated by people from the region.

The Freest Fishermen’s Rugs—the museum’s most famous exhibits

Particularly worth seeing are the Freest fishermen’s rugs, which are among the local history museum’s most famous exhibits. Crafted by residents of the community, each of these handmade rugs tells its own story and reflects the traditional way of life of the fishing community on the Baltic Sea. They are a unique cultural testament to this region in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania.

History of the Freester Heimatstube—from Erich Mundstock to the present day

The idea for the local history museum can be traced back to Erich Mundstock, a teacher and school principal who spent decades collecting everyday objects. In 1962, he founded the first local history museum at the Freest School. After his death in 1987, it was closed. It wasn’t until 1992—after German reunification—that the collection found a new, permanent home in the former customs house, which had previously been used as an NVA base, and was reopened as the Freest Local History Museum.

Nearby

Other attractions in Freest

Fishing port Freest

Fishing port Freest

Freest

The fishing village of Freest is located directly at the mouth of the Peene to the Greifswald Bodden and is home to the largest fishing port in MV. Every 5th fish in MV is caught here, mostly herring, flounder and cod. The oldest smokehouse in Western Pomerania is also located near the harbor. From May to October, guests can take the ferry to Peenemünde on the island of Usedom every hour. Bicycles can also be taken on board. The harbor was renovated with EU funds between 1995 and 2005. 26 fishermen's huts were erected on the quayside. A functional building with sanitary facilities was part of the overall project. It also houses a branch office of the pilots and the German Maritime Search and Rescue Association. Adjacent are restaurants serving fish, ice cream and coffee and cake. Converted fishing boats take visitors out on the Bodden and to the island of Ruden. A bicycle and pedestrian ferry takes visitors to the island of Usedom and back. The Historical-Technical Museum in Peenemünde is well worth a visit. The Freest fishing festival takes place every year in August. You can buy fresh fish directly from the fisherman in the early morning or enjoy it on site in one of the restaurants, which offer both traditional and more unusual fish specialties. You can also gain an insight into typical regional crafts by visiting the Freest boatyard and the local museum. Freest fishing carpets The Freest fishermen's rugs, also known as "Persians of the Baltic", are a traditional handicraft product from Pomerania that was woven by women and children in fishing villages as an additional source of income, particularly during the global economic crisis of the 1920s. Each rug is unique and consists of thousands of hand-knotted knots. Route of North German Romanticism: Freet fishing village - Romantic travel An old, unpaved country road connected the towns of Wolgast, Katzow, Boltenhagen, Rappenhagen and Kemnitz. In bad weather or in winter, this road was difficult to travel. Runge therefore occasionally made his way to Ludwigsburg or Greifswald on foot. Like Caspar David Friedrich, he also passed through the fishing village of Freest, presumably during his honeymoon. Fishing played a major role here: salt huts, smokehouses and fishing nets still characterize this place today.

Thurow smokehouse

Thurow smokehouse

Freest

As the oldest fish smokehouse in Western Pomerania, the Thurow smokehouse is both a technical monument and an EU-approved producer of a wide range of smoked fish products. See the difference for yourself - both compared to industrially prepared mass-produced goods and to products from the smoke barrel. You can buy our smoked fish in our store directly from the smokehouse - or we can send the goods directly to you freshly smoked and packaged.