Background
Thorkelson was born in Egersund, a coastal town in the county of Rogaland, Norway.
United States representative politician
Thorkelson was born in Egersund, a coastal town in the county of Rogaland, Norway.
He was a physician who graduated from the College of Physicians and Surgeons, University of Maryland, Baltimore in 1911, and served as a member of the faculty from 1911 until 1913.
Thorkelson immigrated to the United States in 1892 and worked as a navigator. He served in the United States Naval Reserve from 1936 until 1939 with the rank of lieutenant commander. In 1938, he was elected to the United States House of Representatives from Montana"s 1st congressional district as a Republican, defeating incumbent Democratic Congressman Jerry J. O"Connell in the general election.
Thorkelson was labeled as "rabidly pro-fascist and anti-semitic" and "Jew-baiting, Fascist-minded" by contemporary journalists for his use of the Congressional Record to reprint anti-British and anti-Jewish propaganda and his support for retired General George Van Horn Moseley.
Commentator Walter Winchell called Thorkelson "the mouthpiece of the Nazi movement in congress". Thorkelson later sued Winchell for $1.8 million after being included by Winchell as one of a list of "Americans We Can Do Without".
Modern historians have described Thorkelson as "best known for his diatribes against Jews and the New Deal and for his calls to revise the United States Constitution" and "a raging anti-semite and pro-fascist"..words, "Nazi", "fascist", "anti-racial", "anti-Semitic"..were created by the anti-Americans as a cloak to shield their own subversive activities..their principles of organization are not destructive to the Government of The United States.
When he ran for re-election in 1940, he was defeated in the Republican primary by former United States Congresswoman Jeannette Rankin.
Following his defeat, he ran for the United States Senate in 1942, but came third in the primary to Wellington Doctorate. Rankin and Charles R. Dawley. He ran for Governor of Montana in 1944 against incumbent Governor Sam C. Ford, but lost to Ford in a landslide. Thorkelson died in Butte on November 20, 1945, and was buried at Holy Cross Cemetery in Butte.
Thorkelson inserted into the Congressional Record quotations from the Protocols of the Elders of Zion, from World Hoax by Ernest Fredrick Elmhurst, from blackshirt Sir Oswald Mosley"s Action, from Nazi organ the Christian Free Press. And defended himself by saying:.