Nyhavn 41

His daughter Anne Kirstine Hansdatter Kleitrup (1721-1788) was married to sailmaker Ole Pedersen Sangaard at No.

Michael Mogensen Black, a merchant, resided in the building with his wife Anna Elisabeth, an employee and a maid.

[5] The fourth household consisted of Anders Christensen and his wife Giertrud Simons Datter.

Georg Rømer, a 40-year-old merchant, resided in the building with his wife Sophie Caroline Lanek, their six children (aged four to 17), two employees, a maid and a lodger.

Stie Thomsen Bang's workshop was located in a rear wing.

[10] Hans Nissen, a ship captain (sjobsfører), resided on the ground floor with his wife Friederickke Petersen, their four children (aged seven to 24), a maid and a lodger (a surgeon).

[11] Bolette Jensen, a 54-year-old widow beer seller (øltapper), resided in the basement with her 15-year-old son, a maid and a lodger.

Andreas Martin Brandt, a merchant, was the new tenant of the first floor apartment.

He lived there with his wife Helene Brandt, their two children (aged 13 and 15), 22-year-old Louise Augusta Kroghmeyer (from Als) and one maid.

Magrethe Kirstine Terkelsen, a laundry woman, resided on the ground floor of the rear wing with her three children (aged 15 to 22) and one lodger (a smith).

The firm was a wholesaler of products from Iceland, Greenland and the Faroe Islands.

[16] The building is three storeys tall, five bays wide and has a three-bay gabled wall dormer.

No. 21 seen in a detail from Christian Gedde's map of St. Ann's East Quarter, 1757
Thomas Rønne (1800-1874)
Anne Kirstine Rønne (1807-1894)
Nyhavn 41, seen from the Nyhavn Bridge on a photograph by Paul Gustav Fischer , c. 1900