Attraction · Museum

Flensburg Rum Museum: Three Centuries of Sugar and Sea

braasch rumhaus
Recommended Time
90 mins
Address
Rote Straße 26, 24937 Flensburg, Germany

For nearly 200 years, Flensburg was the rum capital of Northern Europe. The Rum Museum on Rote Straße tells that story across three floors of original artefacts, tasting rooms, and a working bottling line that still produces small-batch rums using 19th-century methods.

The History in Brief

In 1755, the Danish King Frederik V granted Flensburg merchants the right to import sugar cane directly from the Danish West Indies (now the U.S. Virgin Islands). Within a decade, more than 200 ships were sailing the route. The captains brought back not just sugar but molasses, casks, and the knowledge to distil — and Flensburg’s rum industry was born. At its peak in the 1860s, the city had over 200 active rum houses.

What You’ll See

Ground floor — The trade route. Original cargo manifests, ship’s instruments, and a recreation of a 1820s merchant’s office. The interactive map shows every documented voyage between 1755 and 1864.

First floor — The production. Real wooden fermenting vats, copper stills, and a working bottling line. Live demonstrations on weekends.

Top floor — The tasting room. A guided flight of four rums, each from a different Flensburg house, paired with an explanation of what makes each distinct. The Hansen 1864 reserve is particularly worth the upgrade.

Tasting Tour vs. Standard Entry

Standard entry (€8) gives you the museum without tastings. The Tasting Tour (€18) includes four guided pours and is genuinely the better deal — you learn far more by tasting than by reading.

Practical Tips

After the museum, walk five minutes to the Captain’s Quarter to see the merchant houses these traders actually built and lived in.

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