Otte Buch, a 66-year-old duer, resided in the building with his wife An.M.Kammermeyer, a 21-year-old apprentice, a caretaker and a maid.
[3] Peder Lund, a beer seller (øltapper), resided in the building with his wife and an 11-year-old orphaned girl.
[5] The building towards the street contained apartments while the tobacco factory was based in a side wing as was normal at the time.
Christian Augustinus resided in one of the apartments with his wife Birgitte Marie (née Benfeldt), their sic children (aged one to 18), three employees in Augustinus' tobacco business (two of them apprentices), a caretaker, a female cook, a maid and athe 47-year-old def man Lars Brøde el Brode.
widow of Johan Eichel Bartholin, a Supreme Court judge and owner of Svanholm and Aastrup, resided in the building with two of her children (aged 15 and 26), the 15-year-old niece Sophie Lassen, a female cook and a maid.
[7] Henrich Dreyer, a lawyer, resided in the building with his wife Dorthe Margrethe Henningsen, their two children (aged two and three), a female cook and a maid.
Jost van Dockum (1753-1834), a naval lieutenant who had been in charge of the Prøvestenen Battery during the Bombardment of Copenhagen in 1807, lived in one of the apartments in 1809–11.
Augustinus left the building when a new tobacco factory on Gammel Kongevej in Frederiksberg was inaugurated in 1870 At the time of the 1840 census, No.
[9] Birgithe Marie Augustinus resided in the first floor apartment with two unmarried daughters (aged 23) and one maid.