In 1826 Erik Gustaf Geijer, then inspector, initiated the construction of a private nation house for the students from Värmland by starting a fund for this purpose.
His idea was that the building would house the nation's book collections and make room for gatherings, "literary, musical and gymnastic exercises."
The opportunity was given when the faithful Värmland's member Jonas Bjurzon in 1883 donated the considerable sum of 30,000 crowns to the "building of a Nation-house of stone".
He asked his brother Elis Kjellin, who was an architect in Stockholm, if he could make a proposal to the nation on a building, to which he replied yes.
This took place in autumn 1912, and was asked by the nation's Första and Andra kurator, Arne West Branch, and Hugo Stenbeck.
But then came the war, and prices rose sharply, which resulted in a decision taken by the nation in November to delay the start of construction.
This did not come as a surprise to Östberg, who himself had been rethinking these plans for the new nation house after the Stockholm City Hall was completed in 1923.
Östberg who did not have any other project at the time, had in 1924 found his old drawings of the nation and thought it was unfair that those had been forgotten because of the war years.
Östberg could around 1925, together with the newly elected countryman Paul Mohn, ignite the nation's interest to implement a new building.
The entrance had a long, narrow cloakroom and where we can see a broad staircase, which showed that Östberg not lost his love for the procession-like roads into a building.
It was only at the end of the construction, when Ragnar Östberg realized what deed they did this neighborhood that previously consisted of ramschackled housing, the architect himself wrote "the great responsibility that the architect of this nation building has at the foot of the Swedish realm Cathedral and Holy Trinity Church."
First, October 11, 1930 the King Gustav V, chosen as Principal Honorary 1877, inaugurated the new nations house at Riddartorget.
Östberg wanted the new house to interact with the environment around Riddartorget and therefore chose brick to mimic the cathedral facade.
Selma Lagerlöf, for example, sent a telegram which read as follows: Good luck with the new house never anything wrong with the light never empty boiler may its flame genius low so the toil that mirth cardiac heat hold together The shrine of the Värmlands children.
The building was named Fyllebo (today Phyllebo), meaning (Drunken House), and it has even been called Ekeby, and the Cavaliers' wing, never on paper though.
The first issue was called simply the "Nationsbladet", but the editorial starr quickly thought it was somewhat unoriginal and the name was later changed to "Pst!"
On the first page of the first issue, one could read: "The purpose of the same is to try to achieve a facilitator, where counselors and other officials in a perhaps more convenient and nicer way than before can communicate with the country men.
has been sent by mail or announced on the bulletin boards of the nation, but this has proven both costly and impractical, which is why this leaflet may be regarded as a rationalization effort."