Assessor Bachmann House

The daughter Susanne married customs officer at Øresund Costum House Jacob Henrich Schou.

[1] The ypunger of the two sons, Poul Frederik Beckman (1751-1800), was still living with his parents after his brother and sisters had all moved.

Beckman resided in the building with his wife Ellen (née Pauly), their son Povel Friderich Beckman, 13-year-old Sopia Amalia Berner, two maids, a brewer (employee), a brewer's assistant, a female cookm a coachman and a caretaker.

[2] Hendrich Nicolay Schnauer resided in the building with his two sisters (Susanna and Elisabeth) and one maid.

[3] Hans Pedersen Krog, a cellarman, resided in the building with his wife Johanna Marie Lars Datter, their four children (aged two to eight) and one maid.

[8][9] Anne Dorthe Beckmand resided in the building with her three children (aged one to eight), a male servant, a wet murse, a maid and a female cook.

[10] Holger Stampe, a kammerjunker, resided in the building with his wife Kirsten Kaas, their two children (aged four and seven), two maids, a nanny, a female cook, two male servants and a coachman.

[13] Conradt Friderichsen and Christopher Thortsen, two brewery workers, resided in another dwelling with the building's caretaker Hans Christian Jensen.

His two twin sisters, Marie and Frederikke, were later married to Holger Aagaard and Peter Oluf Brøndsted.

The medical doctor and later vice mayor of Copenhagen Niels Bang and the naval officer Lorentz Fjelderup Lassen both lived in the building in 1802–03.

[17] Vilhelm Burchard Dahl, a Landsraad samt Hof og Stadsrets lawyer, resided on the second floor with his wife Andrea Cevilie Marie Dahl, their three children (aged eight to 21), one male servant and two maids.

[18] Anders Larsen, a barkeeper, resided in the basement with his wife Ane Magrethe Povelsen, their three children (aged four to 15) and one maid.

a man with means, resided on the first floor of the rear wing with his wife Ane Kirstine Larsen and a maid.

Vilhelm Burchard Dahl, who had now become a widoer, resided on the second floor with a male servant and two maids.

[22] Anders Sandøe Ørsted resided on the first floor with hus son, his daughter, the widow Wilhelmine Marie Rogert, a housekeeper, a male servant and a maid.

[23] Frederik Ludvig Frantz a'Auchamp, a lawyer, resided on the ground floor with his wife Frederikke d'Auchamps, their two children (aged seven and 14), one male servant and two maids.

Andreas Hansen Bjerre (1795-1864), a brewer and captain in the Student Corps, resided on the ground floor with three of his children (aged 15 to 30), a housekeeper and a maid.

[28] Frederik Ludvig Frantz d' Auchamp (1809-1872), a lawyer, resided on the second floor with his wife Frederikke *d'Auchampm their son Francois Louis d'Auchamp, one male servant and two maids.

[31] Marie Christine Høst, a widow, resided on the first floor of the rear wing with three unmarried children (aged 42 to 46).

No. 5 seen on a detail from Gedde's district map of Northern Quarter, 1757.
Georg Frederik Ditlev Koës painted by Jens Juel .
The property seen on a detail from one of Berggreen's black plans of Northern Quarter, 1886-88.
The house in 1892
The building visible on a photograph from 1907
Gammeltorv 16