Løkken, Denmark


Løkken is a town in Vendsyssel, Denmark with a population of 1,624. The town has historically been referred to as Løchen or Lykken. Originally, the town began as a fishing village with a successful shipping trade; today it is a popular tourist and vacationing destination.
The town is located in Hjørring Municipality within the North Jutland Region. Prior to the municipal reforms of 2007, Løkken had been part of Løkken-Vrå Municipality.

History

Merchant town

The town was founded in 1698 when the first house was erected. It functioned as an inn, and was built and opperated by Simon Sørensen and his wife Else Christensdatter. For many years, the area was called Furreby Løkke, meaning fenced field beside Furreby. It wasn't until the 19th century that the spelling Løkken was widely adopted; the town had previously been referred to various spellings, including: Löchen, Lÿchen, Lÿcken, and Lÿkken.
By 1715, there were fifteen houses in the village and had begun to be settled by sailors who traded with Norwegian merchants. The village continued to grow and established itself as an important trading location between northern Denmark and southern Norway, where grain, butter, and meat were exchanged for northern iron and wood. The towns population in 1801 was 217, and by 1901 had grown to 1,067. In 1875, the town was recorded as having 87 houses, mainly built out of brick along with some thatched houses, though there were no established streets. It was characterized as a merchant town and noted for its shipping industry and trade between England and Norway.
A large number of ships from this era were stranded or wreaked in the waters around Løkken. When the Danish rescue service was established in 1851, the town was one of the first places to be outfitted with a rescue station to save sailors from sinking or stranded ships. The station had a crew of twelve men who would row a small boat out to sea while their captain opperated its rudder. The crew were on call at all hours, and were contractually obligated to find a man to replace them if they planned to leave for more than 24 hours.
The town was, at one point, one of the largest fishing villages on Denmark's western coast. In 1898, there were approximately 180 fishermen employed in Løkken, mainly fishing for cod and haddock. The population of fish in the area had already dropped significantly by this time, however, and the fishing industry had begun to fall into decline. There are only a few professional fishermen left in Løkken as well as small recreational fishing community. The town's history as a fishing village is preserved at the Coastal Fisheries Museum and the Løkken Museum.

Railway town

Løkken was the largest intermediate station on the former Hjørring-Løkken-Aabybro Railway, also called the Løkken Track. The railway was opperational from 1913 until 1963 and initially transported fish caught in Løkken to inland regions. The station had two platforms, four tracks, and a railway turntable. The station building, which was designed by Sylvius Knutzen and expanded in 1944, has been preserved on south-eastern end of the town since the railway's closure.
During the occupation of Denmark in the Second World War, the railway was used extensively to transport materials for the fortification of Jutland's west coast. Just north of Løkken, German forces erected Furreby Naval Battery and a narrow gauge track was laid out between the station and the beach. A large number of concrete bunkers built during the occupation remain along the beach in severe disrepair.
Because the railway made it possible for vacationers from larger cities, such as Aalborg, to visit beach at Løkken on day trips, it greatly benefited the town's tourism industry. Specific trains with twenty to thirty carriages ran during the summer to transport vacationers. Some additional freight cars were fitted with benches in order to offer additional 3rd class passenger wagons to the large number of travelers.

Tourism

Though there were occasional "bathers" that visited the beach in Løkken, it was not until the Løkken Badehotel opened in 1895 that tourists were drawn to the town in significant numbers. At the time, it was quite popular among the upper class to spend several weeks at rural beach hotels, and the guests which stayed at the Badehotel were generally quite wealthy, as few people could afford the hotel rates for such an extended period of time. The Badehotel brought money and business to Løkken tourism began to faze out the fishing and shipping industries that originally established the town.Several other hotels were built, and the town began to be regularly crowded with bathers during the summer. A newspaper in 1920 reported that almost every residential home in Løkken had at least one room rented out to vacationers.
Today, Løkken has a total of three camping locations, three bed and breakfasts, as well as many vacation homes and apartments which are rented out. The original beach hotel has since been acquired by corporation which restored, modernized, and divided the hotel into vacation apartments. It now stands near the town center and has a restaurant.

Geography

Løkken is located on the southern end of the Lønstrup Klint, a series of cliffs on the western peninsula of Jutland. The highest point of the cliffs, Rubjerg Knude, has been covered by shifting sands that have threatened Rubjerg Knude Lighthouse. Børglum Kloster, which now functions as a museum, is five kilometers east of Løkken.
To the south, the Løkken beach stretches for 19 km to Rødhus, past the villages of Blokhus, Grønhøj, and Saltum. The beach is highly compacted and can be driven on by cars year round. Several of the dune and meadow areas inland from the beach between Løkken and Rødhus have been protected since 1962 in order to prevent vacation houses from being built. There are seven separate protected locations, which cover a total of 415 hectares.

Religion

No fewer than 18 christian denominations have had congregations in Løkken. The first church built in Løkken was a Methodist church, in 1882. The methodist congregation was dissolved in 2012, when only four members remained.
Like most of Denmark, the Church of Denmark is the town largest denomination. In 1898, Løkken Church was built in the center of the town and is part of the Church of Denmark's parish Løkken-Furreby Sogn. The only other church in the parish, Furreby Kirke, is a small romanesque church without a tower located on the northern side of Løkken in the former village of Furreby.
Løkken Frikirke was built in 2004 by Det Danske Missionsforbund, and lutheran church independent from the Church of Denmark.

Notable people