Notable former residents include the businessman Louis Meyer, for whom the younger of the two buildings was constructed.
13 in Strand Quarter in Copenhagen's first cadastre of 1689 and was at that time owned by the king's tailor Jochum Skomager.
Amsel Jacob Meyer resided in the building with his wife Hizilie, their six children (aged eight to 20), two office clerks and two maids.
[2] Michael Levin Rothschild, another Jewish merchant, resided in the building with his wife Hebela, their two children (aged four and six) and one maid.
[3] Phillip Phillipsen, a church official associated with the Polish congregation (Kirkke Betient ved Polsck Nation), resided in a third dwelling with two of his children (aged 35 and 38).
[6] Peter Nielssen, the proprietor of a tavern in the basement, resided in the associated dwelling with his wife Johanne Marie, their three sons (aged one to six) and a maid.
Herman Richter, a merchant, resided in the building with his wife Betty Dorothea Bernhardt, their two children (aged one and two) and one maid.
[11] Philip Seydler [da], a flutist in the Royal Danish Orchestra and instrumentmaker, resided in the building with his wife Augusta Tiemroth, their three children (aged one to three), a male servant and a maid.
[12] Didrich Didrichsen, secretary of the Royal Danish Agricultural Society, resided in the building with his wife Severine Marie Hallesen, their six children (aged eight to 20), a housekeeper (husjomfru) and a maid.
[13] Sigvart Colbiørnsen German, a clerk, resided in the building with his wife Adel Benedicta Schiøtt and a maid.
[14] Sigvart Colbiørnsen German, a beer seller, resided in the building with his wife Ide Margrethe Bukholt, their one-year-old son and a maid.
[15] Niels Jørgen Smith, the proprietor of a tavern in the basement, resided in the associated dwelling with his wife Mette Marie Ingerslef, their four children (aged four to 14) and one servant.
[16] The northern part of the property (fronting Læderstræde) was some time between 1803 and 1806 acquired by merchant (urtekræmmer) Nicolai Jacob Grave.
The 60-year-old widow Anne Marie Grave was by 1840 the owner of a house with some attached land in Frederiksberg.
The still unmarried 33-year-old Christian Nicolay Grave resided in the basement with two employees in his grocery business and one servant.
[18] Magnus Cornelius Møller, an administrator and general war commissioner, resided on the first floor with his wife Emilie Charlotte Bertelsen, their three children (aged 25 to 30) and a maid.
[23][24] Ditlev Christian Wibe, a manager of Hovedmagasinet under the naval administration, resided on the ground floor with his wife Eva Cathrine Ebbsen, their two children (aged 12 and 14), a lodger, a male servant and a maid.
Christian Nicolay Grave was now residing on the second floor with his wife, mother, sister, a housekeeper, two maids and the school boy Oscar Feddersen.
He had become a senior clerk in the savings bank Bikuben and was also a captain in the Civil Guard (borgerbevæbningen).
[35] Jens Christ.Atterup, a joiner, resided on the third floor with his wife Karoline Christine Atterup, their 10-year-old daughter and one lodger.
[37] P.Petersen, a grocer (spækhøker), resided in the basement with his wife Johanne Petersen, their four children (aged 1 to 14) and one maid.
[40] In September 2019, Læderstræde 11 was purchased for DKK72 million by Copenhagen Capital in partnership with Helmersen Holding.