Haffstrom was first a fishing village and then a quarter of southwestern Königsberg, Germany.
Haffstrom was located along the northeastern shore of the Vistula Lagoon or Frisches Haff, south of the Pregel river mouth.
In a document from 17 November 1349, Grand Master Heinrich von Dusemer of the Teutonic Knights named the chapel of Haffstrom as controlled by the village Lichtenhagen near Kobbelbude, with Lichtenhagen itself under the control of a convent in Königsberg.
1700, its stained glass windows were sponsored by Richard Friedrich zu Dohna-Schlobitten in 1837, and the organ was from 1850.
[6] Its bell from 1701 survived World War II and is in the Protestant church of Groß Lobke near Hildesheim.