Manor House in Lublewko
The first mentions of Lublewko date back to the year 1350 when it was separated from Lublewo. From 1437 to 1628, Lublewko was a Kashubian peasant settlement. The first known family to manage it was the Dargusch family, which ruled over these lands until 1800. In 1836, the village was purchased by the Scot Hugo MacLean, and a new, beautiful manor with wings and outbuildings was built at that time. A park was established around it, planted with beeches, maples, birches, hornbeams, and oaks, which eventually made the estate one of the largest in the area. Since Hugo MacLean and Mathilde did not have children, the estate passed into the hands of the Flieβbach family heirs. In 1899, it was acquired by Leopold Butzke, and from 1906 to 1945, Lublewko was owned by Count Ernst von Zitzewitz, who served as the governor of Pomerania in Szczecin until 1934. After 1945, the farm was transformed into a state agricultural farm (PGR), and apartments for workers were allocated in the manor. The remnants of the farm include a very long wing with a characteristic row of 12 dormer windows on the roof and farm buildings, and the remnants of the park are the old trees.
