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Hustmeyer resided in the building with his wife Ane Dorethea Goubmeyer, their two children (aged five and seven), a bookkeeper, a clerk, an apprentice, two maids, a caretaker, a lodger and a coachman. [3] Ch.Haraldsen, a tea merchant, resided in the basement with his wife Cath Olsen Walloe, their four children (aged one to six) and one maid. [4]
Christian Stavanger, a greengrocer, resided in the building with his wife Ellen Kirstine, their four-year-old daughter, his 76-year-old mother and one maid. [ 7 ] Schoustrup family, 1795–1872
View of Copenhagen from the tower of the Church of Our Saviour. The architecture of Copenhagen in Denmark is characterised by a wide variety of styles, progressing through Christian IV's early 17th century landmarks and the elegant 17th century mansions and palaces of Frederiksstaden, to the late 19th century residential boroughs and cultural institutions to the modernistic contribution of the ...
The building was destroyed in the Copenhagen Fire of 1795, together with most of the other buildings in the area.The present building on the site was constructed in 1797–98 for mailman Jens Hansen West (1743–1808), [6] Ge was a soc-alled "Norwegian mailman" who operated the mail coach between Copenhagen and Kristiania.
Johan Christopher Hoppe and his wife Johanne Magdalene Hoppe (néeFjeldsted) Hoppe's property was home to 52 residents in four households at the time of the 1801 census. The owner resided in one of the apartments with his wife Johanne Magdalene Fielsted, their three sons (aged one to six), his mother-in-law Anne Birgitte Wildenrath, a coachman ...
On 9 December 1785, just four months after the death of his first wife, he was married to Bertha Kirstine Michelsen (1764–1829). [ 3 ] At the time of the 1787 census, Villads and Birte Christine Bugge resided in the building with their one-year-old daughter Catrina Maria Bugge, Bugge's 14-year-old son Anders Bygge (by his first wife), two ...
At the 1850 census, Groth and his wife lived in the building with their now seven children, 12 employees, one male servant and four maids. [11] Groth and his wife would later have four more children. One of their 11 children was the painter Vilhelm Groth. The eldest daughter Cathrine Marie Magdalene Groth (1837- 1983). was married to the ...
The property was home to a single household at the 1801 census. Niels Brock Hansen (1765-1818), a merchant (grosserer), resided in the building with his wife Lene Maria Hansen (née Sommerfeldt, 1779–1847), their six children (aged one to nine), four office clerks, a coachman, a caretaker, a maid, a wet nurse and a female cook.