Jørgen Johannes Havig
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Jørgen Johannes Havig (July 31, 1808 – January 19, 1883) was a Norwegian bailiff (''
lensmann in modern Norwegian or in Danish and older Norwegian spelling (; ) is a term with several distinct meanings in Nordic history. The Icelandic equivalent was a . Fief-holder The term traditionally referred to a holder of a royal fief in Denmark ...
''), farm owner, and politician. He is regarded as a driving force behind the founding of Namsos, which was established as a " small seaport" ( no, ladested or ) in 1845. Havig also served several terms as a
Storting The Storting ( no, Stortinget ) (lit. the Great Thing) is the supreme legislature of Norway, established in 1814 by the Constitution of Norway. It is located in Oslo. The unicameral parliament has 169 members and is elected every four years bas ...
representative. Havig was born in
Vemundvik Vemundvik is a village in Namsos municipality in Trøndelag county, Norway. The village is located along the shore, about north of the Namsos (town), town of Namsos and about east of the village of Ramsvika, Trøndelag, Ramsvika. Vemundvik Ch ...
, the son of the bailiff Johan Havig, and he performed his father's duties while he was ill. Already at the age of 12, he was employed at the stipendiary magistrate (''sorenskriver'') Elias Frederik Hetting's office, and he became a formal assistant at his father's bailiff's office at the age of 16. He never received formal schooling, but was taught by his father (who was trained as a teacher), the attorney Søren Reiersen Thornæs, and the dean Peter Christian Boye, and he is said to have been particularly talented in mathematics, astronomy, and French. Havig took over the bailiff's office from his father at the age of 18 in 1826, and he was in charge of the Namsos and
Fosnes Fosnes is a former municipality in Trøndelag county, Norway. The municipality existed from 1838 until its dissolution in 2020 when it was merged into Namsos Municipality. It was part of the Namdalen region. The administrative centre of the muni ...
bailiff districts until he retired in 1878, after 52 years of service. Havig also operated Havika, his family farm in Vemundvik outside of Namsos. He married his cousin Anne Margrethe Guldvig, to whom their son Johannes Bernhard Havig (1838–1893) was born. After passage of the laws introducing local government (''formannskapslovene'') in 1837, Havig quickly gained trust as a member of the Vemundvik rural district council (1838–1873), but his position as a bailiff forbade him from becoming the mayor or a member of the municipal executive board. He was elected to the Storting to represent Nordre Trondhjem county from 1839 to 1841 (at the age of 31), and again from 1845 to 1847. He was a member of the Storting's protocol committee, but he exercised the most influence through the contacts he created with the capital. In order to simplify timber exports, he worked to construct a small seaport with a customs office in Namdalen. In 1845, Namsos was founded at the mouth of the Namsen River, and Havig even contributed to surveying and distributing the plots of land. Havig also served as settlement commissioner (''forlikskommissær'') in Overhalla from 1856 to 1862 and in Namsos from 1862 to 1875, as director and treasurer for the Namsos Savings Bank (''Namsos Sparebank'') from 1842 to 1875, and as the managing director of the public library. Havig was awarded the Medal for Outstanding Civic Service in 1876. ''Lensmann Havigs gate'' (Bailiff Havig Street) in Namsos is named after him.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Havig, Jorgen Johannes 1808 births 1883 deaths Members of the Storting Norwegian farmers People from Namsos