Stadtallendorf borders in the north on the town of Rauschenberg and the community of Gilserberg, in the east on the town of Neustadt, in the southeast on the town of Kirtorf, in the south on the town of Homberg , and in the west on the towns of Amöneburg and Kirchhain.
Constituent communities (Ortsteile)
Niederklein
Schweinsberg
Erksdorf – This village of 1,000 inhabitants was amalgamated in the 1970s; the name comes from a long-ago settler named Eric von Erkersdorp.
Hatzbach
Wolferode
History
Stadtallendorf was given city rights in 1960; it had been known until then simply as Allendorf. During World War II, Stadtallendorf was a secret munitions centre. The armament firms WASAG and DAG produced munitions and explosives in two separate large facilities located in the woods nearby. At the time, it was one of the largest of all munitions production centres in Europe. The Munition centre continued throughout the war without being detected by the Allies. Labor was provided by both German and foreign forced laborers, including prisoners of war and concentration camp inmates, housed in about a dozen camps in the surrounding area. The 6 square kilometre premises where the wartime arms works were built were said to be one of Germany's biggest contaminated former industrial sites, in parts with high concentrations of chemical contaminants on residential properties. Since 1991, the premises have undergone a far-reaching cleanup; in March 2006, the job was officially declared done. According to information from the HesseEnvironment Ministry, the cleanup cost € 167 million. 154 tonnes of contaminants were dug out of the ground, 697 tonnes were dug out of a dump, and 3 tonnes of TNT – still capable of exploding – were unearthed.
Stadtallendorf's civic coat of arms might be described thus: In azure, dexter a bear rampant sinister Or armed gules and langued Or, sinister a lion rampant striped per fess nine times in gules and argent, langued gules and armed Or, both holding a six-spoked wheel argent. The Hessian lion and the Wheel of Mainz stand for the town's old allegiances. Until secularization, Stadtallendorf belonged to the Archbishopric of Mainz, and thereafter to Hesse. The bear is a reference to an old name for the town, Allendorf im Bärenschießen, once used to distinguish the town from other places called Allendorf, and now needless thanks to the town's newer name. The arms have been kept even as other communities have been amalgamated with the old Allendorf as part of Hesse's municipal reforms.
Town partnerships
Stadtallendorf maintains partnerships with the following towns:
The town is economically successful, as large factories such as Ferrero oHG mbH, Fritz Winter GmbH & Co. KG, Hoppe AG, and others have chosen to build here. The town's transport connections are by road to the Federal Highways B 454 and B 62, and by rail to the railway station on the Main-Weser line. An extension to Bundesautobahn 49 is currently being discussed, but there have been ecological questions about the wisdom of such an undertaking: the Herrenwald is home to the Great Crested Newt, which is on the list of protected species. In an area of 78.3 km² live approx. 21,600 inhabitants, 16,900 of those in the main centre, whose population is about 25% foreign.
Population
1998 – 21,587
1999 – 21,643
2000 – 21,656
2001 – 21,671
2002 – 21,704
2003 – 21,708
2004 – 21,528
2006 – 21,540
2009 – 21,146
Pictures of Stadtallendorf and its outlying centres
People born in Stadtallendorf
Johann Georg Estor, lawyer and genealogist, born in Schweinsberg district