Background
He was born in Os, Hordaland, to a father from Volda and a mother from Fana.
He was born in Os, Hordaland, to a father from Volda and a mother from Fana.
They had two children. He had a modest technical education. In 1923 he joined the Communist Party.
He edited the newspaper Hardanger Arbeiderblad, and chaired the Communist Party in Odda from 1926.
He continued his work for the Communist Party during the occupation of Norway by Nazi Germany, when the party was illegal. He was arrested by the Nazis on 26 May 1942, and imprisoned in Møllergata 19 and Grini detention camp.
He was sentenced to death in a trial on 27 February 1943, and then placed in the death cell "Fallskjermen" at Grini. On 1 March 1943 he was executed at Trandum.
A press release from 1 March, signed Der Höhere SSund Polizeiführer Nord, Steamship-Obergruppenführer und General der Polizei Rediess and titled "Dødsdom over 17 nordmenn" appeared in the newspapers.
Seventeen persons had been sentenced to death and executed, and Slåttelid"s name was included on the list. In 1945 a total of 194 bodies were found in mass graves in the woods of Trandum, 173 Norwegians, six British and fifteen Soviet citizens. He was arrested by the Nazis in the same year, and committed suicide in prison.
Norwegian Labour Party, Communist Party of Norway.
He was a member of the Norwegian Labour Party from 1909, and was organized in a union from 1911. He chaired the local trade union from 1922, and was a board member of the Norwegian Union of Electricians from 1922 to 1923. From 1923 to 1930 he was a member of the supervisory council of the Norwegian Confederation of Trade Unions.
He was a member of the executive committee of Odda municipal council for many years.