According to the inscription, the building was built in 1626 as a farmhouse in the half-timbered style. The Low German gable saying is “DE MI NICH GVET IS VN IÄGERT MI DVER FALSKHEIT - DE BRECKT SIK SÖLMS DE NECK” (nhd.: He who is not good to me and annoys me with falsehood breaks his own neck). A Utlucht was added to the right side of the building in 1669. From this year onwards it was inhabited by the Nagel family of court officials from Rietberg. It was initially owned by the governor Johann Christoph Nagel, before it passed to his son of the same name, the rent master Johann Christoph Nagel, who became the governing mayor of Rietberg in 1729. On March 12, 1699, his son Franz Christoph Nagel (1699–1764) was born here, who later became court architect to the Prince-Bishop of Paderborn. The house was later used as a court official's house and was owned by, among others, the widow of Drosten Clamor Hermann von Meinders, the forester and governor Anton Philipp Joseph de Prato, the chamber councilor Adam Joseph Franz Meinders and Dr. med. Christoph Heising, who was appointed the first rural physicist in the county of Rietberg in 1781, lived there. In the 19th century the building served as a bakery, brewery and inn and at times also as a post office. Around 1900 it belonged to the Grondorf family, who sold it to the Protestant parish, who had it converted into a church with around 60 seats by the Bethel construction company.