in c. 1850 Aldershvile was built by
Johan Theodor Holmskjold, who was director-in-chief both of the
Royal Danish Postal Services and the
Royal Porcelain Factory. In 1782, one year after his ennoblement, he commissioned the architect J.B. Guione to build him a new and larger country house as a replacement for his old country hose,
Sophienholm, which he found had become too small. The house was not completed until 1790. It was a white building with a hipped roof clad in blue-glazed tiles. It was surrounded by a 12-hectare English-style landscaped garden with a canal system. Johan Theodor Holmskjold died on 15 September 1793, not long after the completion of his new home. It turned out that he was heavily indebted and that he was guilty of embezzlement against both the Queen, the Postal Services and the Royal Porcelain Factory. The Aldershvile estate was subsequently sold to
Adolph Ribbing, a Swedish count who had been exiled for his involvement in the murder of King
Gustav III of Sweden. married another man and moved to
South Africa, then divorced and married
Adolf Goerz, the owner of a diamond mine, who died from tuberculosis in 1900. about 1804, Aldershvile was sold to
Peter Nicolaj Arbo, a wealthy timber merchant and landowner, who died on the property in 1827. Back in Denmark, she bought Aldershvile and married the father of her child, Carl Sponneck but the marriage only lasted for two years. The house burned down in 1909 and was never rebuilt. She sold the site in 1911. Gladsaxe Municipality purchased the site in 1927. == Description ==