Mining, building boats (
Nordlands boats), and hunting/fishing used to be the main ways of life in Rana. Starting in the summer of 1730, there was a
Sámi market in Mo. The market was held on the main church grounds until 1810. In 1860, wholesale merchant L.A. Meyer started a trade center, licensed by royal authority. Meyer traded flour, herring and tobacco,
reindeer meat, skins and venison with the Swedes. The trade with Sweden increased especially during Sweden's difficult economic years from 1892 to the start of the
First World War. Many paths now used as hiking trails were originally trade paths for mountain dwellers from Sweden to Mo i Rana. One example is a path that starts in the
Vindelfjällens Nature Reserve at Ammarnäs and follows the Vindel River valley, then joins Vindelkroken and eventually crosses the Norwegian border to Mo i Rana. The municipality is rich on iron ores and water to produce power. This was very important for industrial development. The Dunderland Iron Ore Company (1902–1947), owned by
Thomas Edison, established the first mines in
Storforshei ( north of Mo i Rana). The mining company
Rana Gruber was also established in 1937, and in 1946, the
Norwegian Parliament approved plans for the construction of an
Iron mill in Norway.
A/S Norwegian Iron Work Company was established. In 1955, the first steel was produced for Norway and other countries. The construction of the iron works took nine years. During this period the village of Mo i Rana became an industrial city. People from all over Norway moved to Mo i Rana for work. The community needed homes for thousands of new residents and, the construction of houses and residential blocks started immediately. Infrastructure such as electricity and water were established for the city. In 1930, the population was only 1300 people, but had increased to 7,000 by 1955. In 1978 The Iron Mill employed approximately 4,500 of the municipality's 25,000 inhabitants. The Norwegian Parliament resolved in June 1988 to phase out state ownership of the company. Today there are 119 industrial companies located at the
industrial estate (
Mo Industrial Park). The companies mainly support the iron and steel industry, the engineering industry, the research and development service industry and the
information technology industry. In total, the companies employ approximately 1900 people. From the end of the
Second World War until the early 1990s, Mo i Rana, with the town's steel mill as its cornerstone, was dependent upon heavy industry. Following the decline of heavy industry, new service industries have now grown in the town.
"Graveyard War" in 1951 During the autumn of 1951, around "700 or 800" protesters showed up at the local graveyard as a result of a "night-time mobilisation" to oppose the government's attempt to remove Soviet corpses from graves. Some 93,000 Soviet prisoners-of-war had been brought to Norway between 1941 and 1945 by the Germans to work on improvements to infrastructure in Norway. A 2013 article in
Dagbladet noted that "the protests were so powerful that [then minister of defence]
Jens Chr. Hauge personally stopped the [government's] action". In 1844,
Nord-Ranen Municipality was renamed
Mo Municipality (). On 1 January 1923, the village of Mo was designated as a
ladested and so it was separated from the rest of the municipality to become a town-municipality of its own. The new town of Mo (population: 1,305) kept the name
Mo and the rest of the old municipality became known as Nord-Rana Municipality (bringing back the old name for the area). During the 1960s, there were many municipal mergers across Norway due to the work of the
Schei Committee. On 1 January 1964,
Nord-Rana Municipality (population: 11,636) was merged with the town of
Mo i Rana (population: 9,616), the part of
Sør-Rana Municipality located north of the
Ranfjorden (population: 697), and the Sjona area of
Nesna Municipality (population: 543) to create the large, new
Rana Municipality. Mo was a self-governing municipality from 1923 until 1964. During that time, this municipality was responsible for
primary education (through 10th grade), outpatient
health services,
senior citizen services,
welfare and other
social services,
zoning,
economic development, and municipal
roads and utilities. The municipality was governed by a
municipal council of
directly elected representatives. The
mayor was
indirectly elected by a vote of the municipal council.
Municipal council The
municipal council of Mo Municipality was made up of 29 representatives that were elected to four year terms. The tables below show the current and historical composition of the council by political
party. {{Kommunestyre table {{Kommunestyre table {{Kommunestyre table {{Kommunestyre table {{Kommunestyre table {{Kommunestyre table {{Kommunestyre table
Mayors The
mayor () of Mo Municipality was the political leader of the municipality and the chairperson of the municipal council. Here is a list of people who held this position: • 1923–1923: Einar Nilsen • 1924–1924: C. N. Jacobsen • 1925–1925: Einar Nilsen • 1926–1929: Kristian P. Evjen • 1930–1931: Alf Ljones • 1931–1932: Carsten Venes • 1932–1935: Per Kristian Rygh • 1936–1937: Anton Getz • 1937–1940: Alf Ljones • 1945–1947: Sigurd Marsten • 1947–1948: Alf Ljones • 1948–1955: Erling Lange • 1956–1963: Eilif Granhaug (
Ap) ==Industry==