Conrad Friberg (1896–1989) was an American filmmaker, labor organizer and wallpaper hanger in Chicago, Illinois.
His best known work is Halsted Street, which he produced when a member and lead organizer in the Chicago Workers' Film & Photo League.
During World War I, Friberg began using his mother’s maiden name and moved from Chicago to New Orleans to avoid the draft.
After operating a street car in New Orleans, he worked his way west to California, where he worked at a logging camp in Feather River Canyon, visited Mount Lassen, and traveled on a mail stage coach, photographing with a “post card” camera along the way.
In these hearings, it was also mentioned that Conrad Friberg had run the Young Socialist camp Yipsel at Fox Lake the previous year.