The building houses the village community center and the Housewives' Circle.
The first historical mention of the town comes from 1494, when it belonged to Johann von Billerbeck.
In the years 1520-1699, the Runge family owned the village. In 1520, the owner of the estate was Barthomoleus Runge. In 1699, the village belonged to Baltazar Dietrich Runge.
In the 18th century, the village was owned by the von Kuss family. In 1741, the estate belonging to the widow of Wilhelm Sigmund von Kussow was purchased by the von Trampe family for the price of 36,000 thalers. Then, in 1749, the estate, for the price of 16,500 thalers, became the property of the widow Dorothea Adelaida von Schönning, later wife of Major Christoph F. von Bormann.
In 1755, allodification of the estate was carried out. In 1775, for the price of 33,000 thalers, the village came into the possession of Karl von Knebelsdorff. In 1780, thanks to a subsidy from Frederick II, land improvement was carried out and two new peasant farms were created, covering 241 acres of land.
In the years 1822-1824, manorial and peasant lands were regulated on the estate belonging to Major Friedrich Ludwig von Knebelsdorff. As a result of the regulations, half of the land together with the new farms belonged to the von Klebensdorffs, and from the rest of the land they collected a rent of 151 thalers. In 1835, for the price of 70,000 thalers, the new owner of the estate became the national councilor and later landrat of the Pyrzyce district, Julius R. von Osten. In 1868, the owner of the estate amounting to 4,990 acres of land was Wilhelm von der Osten. At that time, in the village with a total area of 1,173 acres of land, there were 11 peasant farms, 4 half-farms, 2 farms belonging to a miller and a blacksmith, and an inn. In 1892, the owner of the farm in Jesionów, which included a distillery, 1,174 ha of land and breeding 70 horses, 317 cattle, 1,293 sheep and 194 pigs, was L. Geitner from Berlin.
In 1928, the owner of the estate was Günter Engelbrecht. In 1929, due to the owner's departure to Africa, the estate was sold and then divided between colonists from Friesland and local farmers.