Ruoke Explained

Official Name:Ruoke
Settlement Type:District of Jyväskylä
Pushpin Map:Finland Central Finland
Pushpin Map Caption:Location in Central Finland
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name: Finland
Subdivision Type1:Region
Subdivision Name1:Central Finland
Subdivision Type2:Sub-region
Subdivision Name2:Jyväskylä sub-region
Subdivision Type3:City
Subdivision Name3:Jyväskylä
Subdivision Type4:Ward
Subdivision Name4:Kuohu-Vesanka
Unit Pref:Imperial
Population As Of:2021-12-31
Population Total:204[1]
Timezone:EET
Utc Offset:+2
Timezone Dst:EEST
Utc Offset Dst:+3

Ruoke is a residential area and a district of Jyväskylä, Finland. It is a settlement and a former stop by the Jyväskylä-Haapamäki railway. The distance to central Jyväskylä is approximately 8km (05miles).[2]

Ruoke may be seen as a separate village,[2] though it was not a register village (an official village), instead being on the border of three historical register villages: Jyväskylä, Vesanka and Palokka.[3] Register villages were officially abolished in 2014.[4]

Geography

Boundaries

The official district (kaupunginosa, an area for local development) and statistical area of Ruoke only include the portion within the village of Jyväskylä. The district is bigger than the statistical area, as it also includes the northern part of the Killeri statistical area. The district borders Rippalanmäki in the north, Kortepohja in the east, Kypärämäki in the southeast, Valkeamäki in the south and Vesanka in the west.[5]

Lakes

Ruoke is located on the northern shore of lake Ruokepuolinen (or Ruoketpuolinen).[5] The settlement of Ruoke is named after this lake, though the origin of the ruoke- element is unclear. It may have been derived from ruoko ("reed"), the verb ruokkia ("to feed") or from the dialectal word ("trousers"). The river flowing from the Ruokepuolinen to the Lummelampi was a natural border of the village of Jyväskylä, as well as a border between the town of Jyväskylä and Jyväskylän maalaiskunta from 1965 to 2009.[5] [6] The source of the river has been a border since the 16th century, when it acted as one between hunting grounds.[7] A small stream flows from the Lummelampi and merges with the Koskelanoja river in Rippalanmäki, which flows into the Myllyjärvi. The river Syväoja begins from the Myllyjärvi and discharges into the Tuomiojärvi.[5]

History

Modern Ruoke was originally a border area of Jyväskylä, Vesanka and Palokka. In the 19th century, the lands under the village of Jyväskylä were owned by the Nisula and Haukkala farms, the lands under Vesanka by the Yrjölä, Ristola, Halila and Ylä-Siekkilä farms, while the lands under Palokka were owned by the Niemelä and Kankaanpää farms. The smaller farms in the area, such as Siltala, Rinteelä, Papinkorpi and Majamäki, were separated from the older, larger farms.[6] The first farm in the area was Rantala, which was established as a tenure farm of Haukkala in 1861.[8]

The area was originally simply called Siltalan perä after the Siltala farm. The Möykynmäki tunnel was finished in 1926[9] and the railroad passing through the area was relocated to its current site soon after. The path of the old railroad was repurposed into a highway. The railway stop was named Ruoke after the lake Ruokepuolinen after the name was suggested by Ahti Lahtinen and Aukusti Salo. The name soon spread to the entire settlement.[10] In the 1940s, the railway stop at Ruoke was the second busiest along the railroad, only surpassed by the Keuruu station.[7]

Logging in the area began after the railroad was finished. Wood was transported with horses from the Hanhinotko valley and across the lake Ruokepuolinen to the railway stop. Until the 1950s, resinous wood was felled in Laajavuori and Hanhiperä and transported to the tar factory in Kuohu to the west of Vesanka.[10]

The river between the Ruokepuolinen and Lummelampi became a municipal border in 1965, as the area to its south and east (the modern official Ruoke district) was transferred to the town of Jyväskylä.[7] The parts of Ruoke under Vesanka and Palokka were still part of Jyväskylän maalaiskunta until the municipality was disestablished in 2009.[5] Since the 1970s, there had been plans to build more houses by the roads of Ruoke and Vesanka in order to make the built-up area of Vesanka denser and more akin to Tikkakoski. Ruoke and Vesanka were zoned in the 1990s.[11]

Residential concentrations

The population of Ruoke increased significantly in the late 1940s after electricity and postal services became available. The first detached houses along the Ruokkeentie between Ruoke and Palokka were built in the 1950s. This was followed by the houses along the roads Hiekkaharjuntie and Timolantie in the 1960s. By 2003, there were approximately 40 houses on the town's side of Ruoke.[7] This area is still being expanded today, as the most recent expansion to the urban plan of Ruoke was approved in 2020.[2]

Kylmäoja

Kylmäoja is a small residential area around the road Kylmäojantie, a branch of the Ruokkeentie near the highway 18.[5] The first house in the area was the Kiertokangas farm, established in the 1920s by Juho and Ida Ketonen from Längelmäki. Most houses in the area were built in the 1950s.[12]

Services

Public transport

The bus lines 37 and 39 operated by Jyväskylän liikenne stop in Ruoke.[13]

Commercial

The first shop in Ruoke was established in the 1920s and was operated by the Tyynelä farm.[14] Nowadays there are no stores in Ruoke, the closest ones are in Savela and Keltinmäki.[15]

References

Literature

Notes

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Tilastokeskus - Jyväskylän väestö pienalueittain. Population of Jyväskylä by sub-district. March 9, 2023. app.powerbi.com. fi.
  2. Web site: Ruoke_esite_2020.pdf. July 14, 2023. jyvaskyla.fi. fi.
  3. Web site: Jyväskylän kaupungin yleiskaava - MASSU - Jyväskylän kaupungin maaseutualueiden maankäytön esiselvitys. Report on land usage in the rural areas of Jyväskylä. October 28, 2010. 13. July 14, 2023. www2.jkl.fi. fi.
  4. Web site: Kiinteistötunnusjärjestlemä uudistuu - Maankäyttö. Hanna Lauhkonen. 2013. 2. July 14, 2023. maankaytto.fi. fi.
  5. Web site: Jyväskylän karttapalvelu (see Kaupunginosat (districts), Pienalueet (statistical) and Kuntaliitosalueet (municipal territorial transfers) under the section Aluejaot). July 14, 2023. kartta.jkl.fi. fi.
  6. Vesangan kyläkirja, page 132.
  7. Vesangan kyläkirja, page 134.
  8. Vesangan kyläkirja, page 135.
  9. Web site: Rautatietunnelit Suomessa - Resiina-lehti. Railroad tunnels in Finland. July 14, 2023. resiinalehti.fi. fi.
  10. Vesangan kyläkirja, page 133.
  11. Jyväskylän maalaiskunnan historia, pages 40-41.
  12. Vesangan kyläkirja, page 140.
  13. Jyväskylän karttapalvelu, section "Linja-autoreitit", "Linja-autokartta"
  14. Vesangan kyläkirja, page 136.
  15. Jyväskylän karttapalvelu, section "Vapaa-aika ja liikunta", "Elintarvikekaupat"