Anne-Kathrine Parow Explained

Anne-Kathrine Parow
Birth Date:10 November 1939
Resting Place:Havstein Cemetery
Nationality:Norwegian
Spouse:Peter Parow (first marriage), Axel Buch (second marriage)
Office:Mayor of Trondheim
Term Start:January 1, 1982
Term End:December 31, 1984
Office1:Deputy Mayor of Trondheim
Term Start1:1980
Term End1:1981
Office2:Cultural Director, Trondheim Municipality
Term Start2:1982
Term End2:1992
Office3:Cultural Director, Steinkjer Municipality
Term Start3:1993
Term End3:1997
Occupation:Politician

Anne-Kathrine Parow (November 10, 1938 – January 14, 2001)[1] was a Norwegian teacher, cultural director, and politician for the Labour Party (Ap). She served as the mayor of Trondheim from 1982 to 1984.[2]

Life and work

Background

Anne-Kathrine Larsen was born in Orkanger as the daughter of the municipal secretary Kolbjørn Jacob Larsen and his wife Esther Togstad.[3] She was the sister of the later mayor of Orkdal, Rudolf Larsen, and the cousin of the county education director and politician Johan Solheim.[4] She passed the teaching exam at Sagene Teachers' College in 1961 and completed the second part of special education at Trondheim Teachers' College in 1976.

Career

Anne-Kathrine Larsen was a teacher for five years and worked as a consultant for the school superintendent in Trondheim municipality for one year. She married the later dentist Peter Parow (brother of Anneliese Dørum).[5]

Parow was first elected to the Trondheim city council during the so-called "women's coup" in 1971.[6]

Parow served as the deputy mayor of Trondheim from 1980 to 1981.[7] From January 1, 1982, to December 31, 1984, she was the mayor, becoming the first woman in that position. Afterward, she was employed as the cultural director in Trondheim municipality from 1982 to 1992 and as the cultural director in Steinkjer municipality from 1993 to 1997.[8]

Parow remarried in 1987 to the then-municipal chief executive Axel Buch, a conservative who had previously been her deputy mayor. They lived at Hammer farm in Inderøy for a few years until his death in 1998.[9]

Death and legacy

Anne-Kathrine Parow passed away in 2001 after a brief illness. She was buried at Havstein Cemetery. Parow was the first female mayor to have a road named after her, in 2019 in Tiller.[10]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Anne-Kathrine Parow - Dødsfall i Norge (1947) 1995-april 2001 - Digitalarkivet . 2023-11-23 . www.digitalarkivet.no . no.
  2. Web site: Anne-Kathrine Parow f. 10 Nov 1938 d. 14 Jan 2001: Ringebuslekter . 2023-11-23 . onshus.no.
  3. News: Arbeiderbladet. August 19, 1963. 13. Lysinger.
  4. News: Ap lar det bli innen «dynastiet». Adresseavisen. July 14, 1983. 1.
  5. Web site: Anne-Kathrine Parrow f Larsen b. Nov 10, 1938 ST, Orkdal, OSS d. Jan 14, 2001 ST, Trondheim: Hemneslekt . 2023-11-23 . hemneslekt.net.
  6. News: Rogalands Avis . November 3, 1971 . 4 . Husmannsånd - og menneskeverd. Anne Kathrine Parow.
  7. Web site: 2015-12-22 . Trikken - elsket og hatet -adressa.no . 2023-11-23 . https://web.archive.org/web/20151222075529/http://www.adressa.no/meninger/article595827.ece . 2015-12-22 .
  8. Web site: NRK . 2001-01-15 . Anne Katrine Parow er død . 2023-11-23 . NRK . nb-NO.
  9. Web site: Anne-Kathrine Parow . 2023-11-23 . Slekt og Data . no.
  10. Web site: Bråten . Roy Tommy . 2019-05-13 . Nå får hun egen vei oppkalt etter seg i Trondheim . 2023-11-23 . adressa.no . no.