Niels Hemmingsens Gade 32

Brødrene Cloëtta, one of Denmark's leading chocolate manufacturers of its day, was based in the building from 1865 until 1901.

Notable former residents include the naval officers Poul de Løvenørn and Peter Nicolay Skibsted, the businessman Conrad Hauser and the linguist Rasmus Rask.

122 in Frimand's Quarter in Copenhagen's first cadastre of 1689 and was at that time owned by grocer (urtekræmmer) Herman Raben.

The daughter Anne Lisbeth Klog (1830-1886) would later marry Hans Christian Bech (1721-1781), a merchant and councilman in Copenhagen.

[2] His brother Poul Skibsted, a Supreme Court attorney, resided in another apartment with his wife Christine Magdalene Olivarius, their four children (aged one to nine), two male servants and three maids.

Michel Anoerten, a beer seller (øltapper), resided in the building with his wife Karen Magrethe and four lodgers.

[6] Conrad Hauser, a Swiss-born businessman, resided in another apartment with his wife, their foster daughter, a lodger and two maids.

Johannes Jacobsen, a merchant, resided in another apartment with his wife Sophie Elisabeth Zeuten, their two daughters and a maid.

[9] The last household consisted of the beer vendor (øltapper) Anders Madsen, his wife Inger Mortens and their three lodgers.

[12] Søren Sørensen, a brewer, resided there with his wife Ane Helene, their four children (aged two to 15), two, brewery workers and two maids.

[13] Margrethe Skibsted, now 64 years old and a widow, resided on the first floor with her foster son Frederik Dunlop from the Danish West Indies, lodger Francicius Røchter and two maids.

[14] A third household consisted of clerk Hendrik Thomassen Dalberg, his wife Ingeborg Frederikke née Hansen, accountant Henrich Porth and one maid.

[15] Ester Meyer, a widow, resided in the building with her son (master tailor) and daughter, one lodger (tailor/employee) and one maid.

[16] Lars Rasmussen, an barkeeper, resided in the basement with his son, one lodger (master joiner) and one maid.

[18] Stentzel Thomassen Dalberg, a later county administrator (amtsforvalter), was five years later residing in the first floor apartment with his wife Ingeborg (née Hansen), their four children (aged one to five) and two maids.

At the time of the 1850 census, Sørensen's property in Niels Hemmingsens Gade was home to 37 residents in nine households.

[24] Gabriel Jan Joseph Herbert le Monnin, a portraot painter, resided on the second floor with his wife Ane Kirstine Appelt.

[27] Dorothea Sophie Frederikke Sibbern, an "institute manager" (institutbestyrerinde), was also residing on the first floor of the rear wing.

Christopher Klog's and Anna Jensdatter's names seen on the keystone above the gate.
No. 111 seen on a detail from Christian Gedde's map of Frimand's Quarter, 1757.
Elisabeth Andersdatter Kall, née Wøldike.
Brødrene Cloëtta's chocolate factory in Niels Hemmingsens Gade
The Neptune figure above the gateway