Obel House

Ole Køhling, a brewer, resided in the building with his wife Sørine Margrete Holt, two brewery workers and two maids.

[2] Jobst Mathias v.Reick, a retired justitsråd, resided in another dwelling with his six-year-old son, his brother and two sisters and two maids.

[3] Kield Hiorth, a 76-year-old unmarried pensioner, resided in the building with his 32-year-old niece Lovise Biørens Datter, a housekeeper and a maid.

Johan Traugott Otto, a surgeon, resided in the building with his wife Albertine Wilhelmine (née Conradi), their three children (aged one to seven), two brewery workers, a caretaker, a male servant, a female cook and two maids.

[8] Peder Borgaard, a hosier (Hosekræmmer), resided in the building with his two-year-old son, two employees, a housekeeper, a female cook, a maid and a lodger.

[10] Carl Ludvig Møller, a theologian (lecturer), resided on the first floor with his wife Vilhelmine Livetzau, one male servant and two maids.

[11] Ole Carl Bleckingberg, a Supreme Court attorney, resided on the second floor with his wife Vibekke Dorthea Garde , their three children (aged 13 to 15), one male servant and two maids.

She lived there with her daughter Anne Cathrine Adolphsen, a pharmacy student, a carpenter's apprentice, two workmen, a merchant, four male servants and four maids.

Hans Georg Bentsen, a member of the Danish Chancery, resided on the ground floor withhis wife Thor Johs.

[15] Carl Ludvig Müller, inspector of the Royal Coin Cabinet, resided on the first floor with his wife Eleonore Vilhelmine Frederikke Gregersine Müller, their four children (aged one to five), a male servant, three maids, a wet nurse and the lodger Hans Wegge (a surveyor).

[17] Anders Petersen Langaae, the proprietor of a tavern in the basement, resided in the associated dwelling with his wife Ane Kirstine Peders Datter and four servants (two male and two female).

[19] At the time of the 1860 census, Otto Carl Blechingbergwas still residing in one of the apartments with his wife, an unmarried daughter, a male servant and two maids.

No. 8 and No. 9 seen on a detail from Gedde's district map of Northern Quarter, 1757.
The property seen on a detail from one of Berggreen's black plans of Northern Quarter, 1886-88.
The Obel House