David Gottlieb Kuwert was born around 1748 to
Curonian nobility. Kuwert attended the
University of Königsberg. He was the only son of Friedrich Casimir Kuwert, who owned a tavern and a post office that was situated at an important point along the postal network of the
Curonian Spit coast. After Friedrich Casimir's death, Kuwert inherited his father's property. From the purchased remains of the abandoned Kunzen (
Kuncai) church, Kuwert constructed a new building that featured an inn, an apartment, a post office, and guest accommodation. Due to the approach of nearby dunes in the first half of the 19th century, Kuwert wished to save his and other people's property. Kuwert, as well as his son Georg David Kuwert began planting wind and drought-resistant plant species, pine seedlings, as well as installing windbreaks along the western side of the postal network road. Noticing that
Baltic pines were quickly covered with sand, Kuwert was the first to start planting mountain pines. Kuwert died on 21 July 1827 in
Nida, The successful reinforcement of the sandbanks at the foot of the Urbas dune encouraged the
Prussian government to organize landscaping of the Curonian Spit, which was carried out in the late 19th and early 20th centuries by ,
Gotthilf Hagen, Paul Gerhart, and others. ==Remembrance==