Konrad Hallgren

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Konrad Hallgren in the 1920s. The propaganda poster on the wall reads "death to communism" in Swedish.

Konrad Otto Kristian Hallgren (9 April 1891, in Landskrona – 8 August 1962, in Stockholm) was a Swedish party chairman in Sweden's first fascist organization, Sveriges Fascistiska Kamporganisation (SFKO, "Sweden's Fascist Combat-Organization").[1][2]

He had previously worked as an NCO in the German army, and at first the SFKO was a fascist organization but more and more turned ideologically to national socialism[3] and changed its name into Fascist People's Party of Sweden and then Sveriges Nationalsocialistiska Folkparti (SNFP, "Sweden's National Socialist People's Party"). Other members of SFKO/SNFP was the Swedish army officer and the infamous Swedish national socialist-leader and army corporal Sven-Olov Lindholm (who would later lead his own national socialist party which would become the biggest of the national socialist groups in Sweden during the 1930s–1940s).[4]

Hallgren told in 1931 about the Munckska kårens existence for the police and also about the weapons that the organization had gathered. Munckska Kåren was a group of anti-communist right wing extremists who feared a "bolshevist takeover" in Sweden and which had members from, among others, SFKO, and some officers from the Swedish army, and had secretly been stashing weapons illegally.[5] [6] He later became an archivist working in Stockholm,

References[]

  1. ^ Sveriges dödbok 1901–2013 (DVD-rom) Sveriges släktforskarförbund ISBN 91-87676-64-8
  2. ^ "Polisrapport om Munckska frikåren 1932".
  3. ^ Nazismens och fascismens idéer, Herbert Tingsten, 1965
  4. ^ Nazismens och fascismens idéer, Herbert Tingsten, 1965
  5. ^ Nazismens och fascismens idéer, Herbert Tingsten, 1965
  6. ^ "Bror O C Munck - Svenskt Biografiskt Lexikon". Retrieved 22 January 2016.
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