Peter Andreas Severinsson Brandal (21 December 1870 – 23 March 1933) was a Norwegian sealer and businessman. He was one of the founders of the community of Ny-Ålesund on the island of Spitsbergen in the Norwegian archipelago of Svalbard, in the Arctic Ocean.[1][2]
Biography
Brandal was born at the village of Brandal on the island of Hareidlandet in Møre og Romsdal, Norway. He was the son of Sevrin Olavius Martinus Larsen (1847–1934) and Davida Petersdatter (1842–1903). He started working as a fisher after confirmation and bought his first vessel in 1891. Eight years later it participated in its first Arctic Ocean sealing expedition. Brandal participated in a fur hunting expedition to Greenland in 1901. His fleet gradually increased, with focus on Arctic Ocean sealing. He stopped active seamanship in 1911 and became a manager for the fleet. Besides the hunting of seals, it now also hunted walrus. Brandal was also engaged in the processing of products from fishing activities through the establishment of a herring factory.[3]
During World War I, Norwegian access to a coal supply was limited. Brandal bought the coal mining claims at Kongsfjorden on Svalbard in 1916 for 250,000 Norwegian krone.[4] He established Kings Bay Kull Comp. A/S (KBKC) that year and started mining that summer.[5]
See also
- Kings Bay Affair
Bibliography
External links
References
- Guro Djupvik. Peter Andreas Severinsen Brandal Store norske leksikon, retrieved July 15, 2016^
- Susan Barr. Ny-Ålesund Store norske leksikon, retrieved July 1, 2017^
- Hanoa, p. 11.^