Six centuries of tradition – from the Grelle family to the modern splendor of the Palace
Łebunia (German name Gut Labuhn) the first records of this place date from the early 15th century, the estate then belonged to the Grelle family:
- 1412 Walter Grelle,
- 1449 Guenter Grelle,
- 1658 Jakub Grelle.
1784 Major Geirg Heinrich von Wobester.
In the years 1839-1875 the estate passed into the ownership of the Birkholz family. Probably during this period the manor-farm complex was established.
After 1875 the owners were the Poll family, in 1883 the siblings Nehrung, and from 1885 Udo Roth.
The heyday of the manor-farm complex fell on the turn of the 18th and 19th centuries.
1905 the estate was owned by Karl Fr.Frank from Słupsk together with estates in Cewice and Maszewo.
The last owner before World War II was commercial counsellor Sinner.

In the years 1945-1947 Soviet troops were stationed in the palace.
The ruined estate was taken over in 1947 by the Państwowe Nieruchomości Ziemskie, and later by PGR Łebunia. During the period when the Palace was used by the PGR, the Blue Hall housed the chief accountant's office; where the office is now was the PGR manager's office; upstairs (now, among others, rooms 204 and 209) were the employees' apartments. Where the conference room is now located there used to be the kitchen. Opposite the palace on the left there was a distillery. The PGR had over 3 ha of vegetable gardens. To cool food for longer storage ice was brought in from a nearby lake.
Ivy covering the brick wall by the entrance gate is over one hundred years old. A stream called „Sopot” once flowed through the grounds belonging to the palace.
The entire palace building and the park are listed in the register of monuments.
The renovation of the palace lasted 7 years, thanks to which we can admire it in its present form.