Fredrik August Wessel-Berg Explained

Fredrik August Wessel-Berg
Birth Date:1809 6, df=y
Birth Place:Sem, Norway
Death Place:Kongsvinger, Norway
Citizenship:Norway
Nationality:Norwegian
Education:Cand.jur.
Profession:Politician
Office:Governor of Nordre Trondhjem
Term Start:1857
Term End:1866
Predecessor:Adam J.F. Poulsen Trampe
Successor:Carsten Smith

Fredrik August Wessel-Berg (1809–1895) was a Norwegian civil servant and government official. He served as the County Governor of Nordre Trondhjems county from 1857 until 1866.[1]

He graduated with a cand.jur. degree in 1835. He then worked for the Ministry of Finance from 1835 to 1849. He then served as a bailiff in the Ørke- og Guledals fogderi in Søndre Trondhjem county from 1850 to 1857. He was then appointed as the County Governor of Nordre Trondhjems county from 1857 until 1866. After leaving that post, he became a judge in the Vinger and Odal District Court from 1866 until his retirement in 1880.

His father, Jens Christian Berg, was the magistrate of Søndre Jarlsberg in 1803–1814, and his mother, Hedevig Marie Elisabeth Wessel, was the daughter of a nephew of Peter Tordenskjold, Major Joachim Wessel. Wessel-Berg was married twice. First with Pauline Augusta Claussen, who died in 1872, and from 1879 with Elisabeth Margaretha Nilsen.

He became Knight of the Order of St. Olav in 1866, at the end of his time as a county governor.[2]

Notes and References

  1. Encyclopedia: Fylkesmenn og amtmenn (stiftamtmenn) siden 1671. Ole T.. Berg. 8 December 2018. 13 June 2016. Store norske leksikon. . Norwegian.
  2. Web site: Wessel-Berg, Fredrik August. Norwegian. 2 March 2019. SteinkjerLeksikonet.