Lars Oftedal (born 1838)
Lars Svendsen Oftedal was a Norwegian priest, social reformer, politician, and newspaper editor.
He was the founding editor of Stavanger Aftenblad and served as a member of the Storting.
Background
He was born in Stavanger as the son of teacher Svend Oftedahl and Gunhild Ommundsdatter Stokke. His father was a teacher at Stavanger Cathedral School. His younger brother Sven Oftedal was a Norwegian American Lutheran minister who served as the 3rd president of Augsburg University and helped found the Lutheran Free Church. Oftedal passed his examen artium in 1859 and entered Royal Frederick University in Christiania where he studied theology under Gisle Johnson.Oftedal graduated cand.theol. in 1864 and took theological exam in 1865.
Career
His first working position was as a traveling revivalist for Bergens Indremisjon. He was a seamen's priest in Cardiff from 1866 to 1868. From 1869 he worked for the home mission of the Arendal district. His collection of psalms, Basunrøst og Harpetoner from 1870 was met with great popularity and was printed in 200,000 copies over the years. In 1870 he was appointed priest in Kristiansands stift. From 1874 he was a priest in Hetland outside Stavanger. His own chapel Bethania in Stavanger opened in January 1875. He was a vicar in Stavanger from 1885 to 1891.Oftedal founded several social institutions in Stavanger, including an orphanage for boys in 1877, and a home for women. He bought the Storhaug farm Berge, renamed Emmaus, which was included in the group of institutions. He acquired the island Lindøy, where he established an institution for the most difficult boys. The fundings for his charity work came from volunteer work, including large lotteries in Bethania. The first Waisenhus bazaar was arranged in 1876, and became a tradition which lasted more than hundred years, until the 1980s.
Oftedal edited the newspaper Vestlandsposten from 1878 to 1891. In 1893 he founded and edited the newspaper Stavanger Aftenblad. After Oftedal's death in 1900, his son Lars Oftedal took over as editor until his own death in 1932. He was followed by his son Christian Stephansen Oftedal who operated the newspaper until he died in 1955.