Niels Lunde Reiersen


Niels Lunde Reiersen was a Danish government official, merchant, silk manufacturer, landowner and philanthropist. He was the owner of the Royal Danish Silk Manufactury in Copenhagen as well as a founding partner of the leading trading firm De Coninck & Reiersen. He owned Nysø Manor, Oremandsgaard Manor and Lilliendal Manor as well as the estates at Jungshoved and Høfdinggård on Southern Zealand.

Early life

Reiersen was born in Copenhagen, the son of bookkeeper Peter Reiersen and Anna Elisabeth Lunde. He went to sea as a cabin boy before returning to Copenhagen where he was apprenticed to his father in 1760.

Government official

In 1763, he accompanied a selection of goods to Toruń in Poland. Reiersen was in 1768 appointed as bookkeeper and cashier in connection with a reorganization of Varemagasinet. In 17769, he became a member of a commission which was to oversee the country's factories. In 1874, he was appointed as factory commissioner with special responsibility for Copenhagen. In 777, he was appointed as one of the directors of Varemagasinet. When it closed the following year, he was granted the title etatsråd and appointed a member of the factory commission.

Merchant and industrialist

In early 1775, Reiersen acquired the Royal Danish Silk Manufactury of which his father had become a co-owner in 1760. In 1786, Hans Brandorph joined him as partner.
In 1775–90, he joined Dutch merchant Frédéric de Coninck as a partner in the trading firm De Coninck & Reiersen. The company took over the remains of the Baltic-Guinea Company (Det det Østersøisk-Guineiske Kompagni in 1787.

Property

Reiersen acquired the estates Nysø Manor, Jungshoved and Oremandsgaard in 1783. In 1785, he also purchased Lilliendal, Høfdinggård and Skuderupgård.

Legacy

Reiersen remained unmarried. He died on 20 July 1795 and was buried at Assistens Cemetery in Copenhagen.
By testament of 30 March 1793, Reiersen left behind his wealth and possessions to Den Reiersenske Fond, a fund to "support the development and progress of industry, both through theoretical and practical measures, in Copenhagen and market towns on Zealand". He left approximately 499,000 Danish rigsdaler.