Palace and park complex from the 19th century.
The first mention of the village dates back to 1423. It was then listed as a knight's estate in the Biergłowice prosecutor's office. Over the years, the estate was owned by, among others, Załuskowski, Kolbe, Łaszewski. Since the 19th century, Brąchnówko belonged to the Schedlin-Czarliński family. Emil Czarliński (1833-1913) built the current palace here. The last owner of the estate before the outbreak of World War II was Leon Schedlin-Czarliński. After the war, the State Treasury became the owner of the estate. The palace and park were devastated and neglected.
The palace was restored in 1994. It is an eclectic building with classicist features, two-story, on a square plan, with a basement, and a hipped roof. The elevations are decorated with modest architectural details: rustication, ground floor windows framed by pilasters and closed with decorative cornices, mezzanine windows divided by panels. In front of the entrance located in the facade, there is a driveway, above which there is a balcony supported by four pillars. On the south side, there is a second entrance with a small veranda, topped with a triangular gable. Side single-flight stairs lead to it. The park layout was quite large and surrounded the entire palace. Originally, it was an English park and had an area of about 2.5 hectares. Currently, it is much smaller. Fortunately, some of the park trees survived the period of neglect. These are plane trees, pines, chestnut trees, black locust and common hornbeam. Some of the trees have the status of a Natural Monument and are appropriately marked. The entire complex is currently owned by the Chełmża Commune.
(according to "Polish Monuments")