[1] Diderich vonBraes, a captain in the King's Regiment, resided in the building with his wife CAroline Bratke, their four children (aged one to 10), 22-year-old Carine Rosow, one male servant, one wet nurse and one maid.
[2] Aron Fürst, a Jewish merchant, resided in the building with his wife Marie, their six children (aged 10 to 20( and the lodger Pillip Wallich.
[5] Teii Taud, a teacher at Our Lady's School, resided in the building with his wife Ulriche Schule, their seven children (aged two to 18) and one maid.
[6] Peter Jacobsen, a beer seller, resided in the building with his wife Marie Heim, jis mother-in-law Kirstine Lys and one lodger.
Finnur Magnússon, who then worked for the King's private archives, was from 1827 and until his death ten years later also among the residents in the building.
[10] The building and firm was, after the founder's death, handed down to his son, Peter Didrik Weinreich Fischer (1813–1884).
The Icelandic scholar Finnur Magnússon, who had just divorced his wife, resided on the same floor with his housekeeper Karen Christensen Embacher and one maid.
Søren Moritz Fedor von Høyer, a fired army captain, resided on the third floor with his wife Marthe Marie født Knutzen, their four children (aged eight to 22) and two lodgers (theologian and medicine student).
Else Cathrine Fischer, a widow, resided on the ground floor with three unmarried daughters (aged 32 to 36) and a maid.
Heinrich Kristian Meyer, a saddler, resided on the third floor of the rear wing with his wife Sophie Amalie født Beker and their one-year-old daughter.
He had by Frederick VII been commissioned to create four glass paintings for Christian IV's Chapel at Roskilde Cathedral.
The facade is dressed in a grey colour on the ground floor and cellar while the rest stands in undressed, red brick.