He resided in the building with his wife Sophie Tutein, their four children (aged three to 12), a clerk (fuldmægtig), a housekeeper, a coachman, a servant, a caretaker and three maids at the time of the 1801 census.
Andreas Seideling, as of 1818 with title of court book printer,[5] resided on the first floor with his wife aMarie Elisabeth Clausen, their children (aged 11 to 25), an apprentice, a servant and two maids.
After the death of her father, possibly by suicide, follow the fire of his property Dalsborg in Snekkersten, she had been raised by her aunt and uncle in Køng.
He had also produced the so-called Køng Plaster, a very popular remedy for treating wounds (prepared from red lead, olive oil and camphor).
It was the sale of Køng Plaster that enabled Klein to buy Seidelin's business since it was used for paying the installments on the property.
his mother Angelina Lardilli, a pastry baker (employee), an apprentice, a servant, a marqueur and a maid.
Michael Fahrkld?, a master tailor, resided on the first floor with his wife Maria Cathrine (née Hansen), their five children (aged nine to 16), one servant and one maid.
Engelhardt Aagaard, a merchant (urtekræmmer), resided on the first floor with his wife Cathrine, three employees (one of them an apprentice), two servants and a maid.
[10] Lauge Christof Lasson, a textile merchant, resided on the ground floor with his two children (aged three and eight), two apprentices and two maids.
[14] Peder Petersen, an instrument maker, resided on the first floor of the cross wing with his wife Carparine Abigel Galle, their four children (aged one to nine) and one maid.
[15] Peter Jørgensen Hyltoft, the book binder from the 1845 census, was still residing on the ground floor of the cross wing with his family and employees.
[16] The ground floor of the building was adapted for use as a proper retail space with large display windows in 1952.
[17] Casper Frederik Christian Thorsøe, a merchant (grosserer), principal of Copenhagen's Craftsmen's School (Håndværkerskolen) and a royal translator, resided on the first floor of the rear wing with his wife Sine Carharine f. Boeskov, their 21-year-old son, a 17th-year-old apprentice and a maid.
[19] Ole Larsen, a tavern owner, resided in the basement with his wife Kirstine née Rasmussen, their three children (aged one to nine) and six lodgers.
[21] The bookseller, magazine publisher and politician Harald Brix (1841-1881) resided on the ground floor from 1869 until his bankruptcy in January 1871.
[23] The half-timbered buildings to the rear of the front wing are finished with yellow-painted, plastered infills and black-painted timber framing.