Manor House in Parszkowo
The first mentions of the village date back to around 1400. It was the original seat of the Parszkowski family, and from 1755 it became the property of the Donimirski family, and later the Łyśniewski family (from 1776). Since 1846, it has been owned by the Koziczkowski family from Mirachowo. In 1923, the estate was acquired by Major Zygmunt Tebinka, a dirigible pilot, and a member of the Polish Parliament from the Pomeranian Region in the years 1930-35, during the war, a consul in America, who died in 1944 in New York. The Tebinka family was displaced to the General Government in September 1939 and could not return to their estate after the war. The widow Helena died in 1977. In 2004, the children finally regained possession of the estate. After the war, the building housed a Plant Breeding Station. The single-story manor from 1880 has modest neoclassical features, is rectangular in shape, built of brick, plastered, situated on stone foundations, with cellars and a gable roof. The estate includes a century-old distillery, farm buildings, and a small park.
