Hassa Horn Jr.

Hans Thomas "Hassa" Horn (2 October 1873 – 21 April 1968) was a Norwegian road engineer, industrialist, sports official and politician for the Conservative Party.

He was born in Christiania as a son of civil servant Hassa Horn Sr. (1837–1921) and Alette Gram (1844–1933).

[2] Through his older sister Dorothea, Hassa Horn was an uncle of national housewives' leader Alette Nicolaysen.

He chaired it from 1914 to 1924, but just ahead of the 1924 Winter Olympics, where he would have led the Norwegian squad and also been present at the foundation of the International Ski Federation, he withdrew.

The running mate of Nils Yngvar Ustvedt in the constituency Uranienborg, they carried 8,543 votes and won in a landslide as the closest challenger only had 1,544.

[6] In 1915 Horn was the running mate of Jens Bratlie, winning with an even larger margin; 12,960 votes against 1,888 for the closest challenger.

Among others, Horn had declared his allegiance to Nazi Minister of the Interior Albert Viljam Hagelin on 24 October 1940, and the Federation declined to sign the protest of the 43 letter in May 1941; the signatories were later subject to a crackdown.

Hans Thomas Portrait