The site was in 1689 owned by ropemaker Verner Wesenduncks. His house was located in Dronningensgade on the other side of the block. The lot was in 1718 acquired by timber merchant Niels Flesborg and used as a lumberyard. The lumberyard was in 1720 ceded to timber merchant and captain Hans Brechvoldt who had just married Flesborg 's daughter Martha. Brechvoldt and a brother-in-law died in 1744, probably from drowning, leaving Martha Nielsdatter Flesborg Brechtwoldt as the owner of the lumberyard. In 1749, she sold the proiperty to brewer Peder Nielsen Trye Friis. He sold the two lots on auction in 1755. Part of the lumberyard was acquired by merchant and shipowner John Brown. The rest was sold to dyer Andreas Hegelund. Hegelund's house is in a fire insurance policy from January 1756 described as a two-storey, timber framed building on a brick cellar. A staircase in oak timber connected it to a side wing with kitchen and workshop. A combined wagonhouse and stable with room for three horses was situated at the bottom of the property towards Dronningensgade. Andreas Hegelund's widow Elisabeth Sophie married Gottfried August Neukammer. The property was on 25 June 1765 purchased by anchor smith Hans Caspersen, wgoise property at Overgaden Neden Vandet 39 had recently been destroyed by fire. He demolished the old buildings and constructed a new four-storey apartment building on the land in the 1760s.1765-69. Hans Caspersen sold Overgaden Oven Vandet 50 to Oluf Munch but seems to have kept an apartment in the building. He lived there until 1782 when he returned to his other property at Overgaden Neden Vandet 39. Overgaden Oven Vandet 50 was in 1778 sold to a Scottish ship captain, Arthur Bishop. It was in 1811 acquired by Lauritz Nicolai Hvidt. He kept it until 1852. The jurist and author Hans Egede Schack, C. G. Andræ andC. C. Hall. He published the novelFantasterne in December 1857.
Architecture
The building consists of four storeys over a raised cellar and is topped by a Mansard roof. It is seven bays wide and his a three-bay central projection. The gateway in the left-hand side of the building is topped by a fanlight and the Keystone features a relief of an ancher and an inscription.
Cultural references
The building is used as a location in the 1953 feature filmKriminalsagen Tove Andersen.