Andreas Bjørn (28 October 1703 – 27 January 1750) was a Danish merchant, shipbuilder and ship owner.
Early life
Andreas Bjørn was born (as Anders Bkørn, name later changed to Andreas Bjørn) in Skælskør to Mads Andersen Bjørn and Karen Pedersdatter. His father was a peasant. He came to Copenhagen in an early age. In 1730, he took citizenship as a wholesaler. He initially worked in the lucretive timber trade. His lumberyard was located at the customs house (north of present-day Larsens Plads. From 1731 he supplied the Royal Danish Navy with provisions, cannons and large quantities of timber. Drom 1739, he also supplied the Royal Danish Army with cannons.[1]
Ship building
In 1732, Bkørn bought Grønnegård Harbour at the southern tip of Christianshavn. He mainly used the area as a lumberyard. In the same year, he also bought Niels Alsing's lumberyard in at the other end of Strandgade. The property reached all the way from Strandgade to Christianshavn Canal and was partly lined with a row of wooden warehouses along the street. The property was in 1732 acquired by Andreas Bjørn. He demolished most of the buildings and constructed a house for his own use (now known as the Andreas Bjørn House) at the corner of Strandgade and Bådsmandsstræde in 1834. He also constructed a number of warehouses and workshops on the land. In 1733, he was permission to establish a dockyard on reclaimed land to the north of his new property. Separated from the rest of Christianshavn by a branch of Christianshavn Canal (now Wilders Kanal), his dockyard became known as Bjørnsholm (Bjørn's Isle).[2] Approximately 50 ships were built at the dockyard. Some of them were used by himself in oversea trade, while others were commissions from other trading houses or the governemtn. One of them was the naval ship Kjøbenhavns Slot.[1]
Ships built at Andreas Bkørn's Dockyard
The following ships were built by Andreas Bjørn. Most of them were built at Bjørnsholm but some of them were built in other locations.The place of construction of the individual ships is not known.[3]
Used in the Triangle Trade. In April 1769, it was sold in auction to Andreas Bodenhoff.
1745
Rigernes Ønske
Frigate
Sold to the General Trading Company in 1748.
1745
Postillonen
Frigate
1745
Jægerspris
Frigate
Andreas Bjørn.
1747
Jægersborg
Frigate
Andreas Thuresen
Danish West India Company.
1747
Prinsesse Sophia Magdelena
Frigate
Poul Brock
Danish West India Company.
1747
Emanuel
Galliot
Jakob Rasmussen Lund
Jens Larsen and Partners
1747
Svanholm
Hækbåden
Jens Sørensen
Andreas Bjørn and Partners
1747
Sorgenfri
Frigate
Vest.-Guin. Komp.
1747
Frederiksborg Slot
Brigantine
Poul Brock
1748
Fredensborg
1748
Fredensborg
Frigate
Poul Brock
Andreas Bjørn and Partners
1748
Landets Ønske
Frigate
The General Trading Company.
1748
Frydenlund
Hæk
1749
Prinsesse Wilhelmine Caroline
1749
Mercurius
Hukkert
1749
Hertuginden af Helburghausen
1749
Frederikshaab
The General Trading Company.
1749
Frederiksberg
Hukkert
1749
Jubelfesten
Hukkert
Oversea trade
Bjørn participated widely in overseas trade, especially with the Danish West Indies. In 1747, together with Ulrik Frederik Suhm (1686-1758) and Frederik Holmsted (1683–1758), he founded the General Trading Company which mainly traded with Iceland, Finnmark and later Greenland. The company took over the northernmost part of Bjørnsholm.[1][4][5]
Other pursuits
In 1747 the Royal Copenhagen Shooting Society moved their activities to a corner of Bjørnsholm. When Frederick V became a member later that same year, Bjørn arranged a large celebration at his own expense. The king, in return, appointed him as Royal Agent. In 1748, Bjørn was appointed as one of the directors of the new Royal Danish Theatre.
Legacy
Andreas Bjørn's site at Christianshavn is now known as Wilders Plads, Krøyers Plads and Grønlandske Handels Plads after later owners. The old main building and a half-timbered workshop of his shipyard is still found at Wilders Plads. The Andreas Bjørn House at Strandgade 46 is also a heritage listed building. Andreas Bjørns Gade, also in Christianshavn, is named after him.