He had previously been indicted for charging double prices for all deliveries to queen dowager Juliane Marie's household but was acquitted due to lack of evidence.
[1] In 1793, Petersen sold Stensby Mill,Vrangsgårde (two farms) and Vestenbæk village (now known as Stensbygård) to his step son Jacob Malling for 33,000 Danish rigsdaler.
[4] By 1830, Cøln lived with his wife, two of their children, a maid and two lodgers in a firstfloor apartment on Møntergade in Copenhagen.
He had studied law at the University of Copenhagen before travelling to Calcutta, where he was employed by the trading house Cruttenden, Mackillop & Co., of which he later became a partner before returning to Denmark as a wealthy man in 1829.
Wolf was an amateur painter and had also built a collection of local drawings and watercolours in India which he supplemented with Danish works after his return to the country.
It is an 11 bay long, one-storey building with Mansard roof and a two-storey, three-bay avant corps on both sides.
Peter Benedict Hansen created an English style landscape garden to the east of the house.
An old storage building was renovated in 2011 as part of Realdania's Fremtidens Herregårde (Manor houses of the Future) programme.