Reidar Stavseth | |
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Born | May 21, 1907 |
Died | April 12, 1991 | (aged 83)
Occupation | Newspaper editor, politician |
Reidar Stavseth (May 21, 1907 – April 12, 1991) was a Norwegian newspaper editor and a politician for the Conservative Party. He served as editor for many different newspapers and is best known for having been the editor-in-chief of Adresseavisen in Trondheim from 1969 to 1975. He belonged to a group of journalists with "a clearly conservative attitude and an academic education."
Stavseth was born and grew up in Trondheim, the son of the school principal Julius August Stavseth and his wife Rikke Thorland, both originally from Nærøy along the Trøndelag coast. He received his examen artium at Trondheim Cathedral School in 1927, a degree in economics at Royal Frederick University in 1929, and also attended a semester at the Norwegian Institute of Technology. In 1939 he married Ragnhild Julie Eik, a farmer's daughter from Borre. The couple's son Gunnar Stavseth is also a journalist and politician for the Conservative Party.
Stavseth served as secretary of the Trondheim Riksmål Society before he became the editor of the newspaper Finnmarksposten in Hammerfest in 1930. One year later he became the editor of Namdalens Folkeblad in Namsos and was the head of the Norwegian Young Conservatives in Namsos from 1932 to 1934. He also published the short-lived paper Innherreds Avis in Steinkjer from 1933 to 1934. After that, he served as the editor of Møre Dagblad in Kristiansund from 1934 to 1935. In 1936 he became the travel secretary for the Young Conservatives in Vestfold, a position that he held for three years. At the outbreak of the Second World War, he was again in Møre as chairman of the Ålesund Young Conservatives and as the editor of Aalesunds Avis, which was "published as one of the last free newspapers in Norway".