Lögberg-Heimskringla - 01.06.1967, Blaðsíða 4

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 01.06.1967, Blaðsíða 4
4 LÖGBERG-HEIMSKRINGLA, FIMMTUDAGINN 1. JÚNÍ 1967 Cathedral. It has even been suggested recently in the Pro- vincial Legislature of Mani- toba that his old residence be purChased by the Province and made into a memorial shrine! The other and more impor- tant event, which helped to advertise and unify the vast territory of Canada, was the completion in 1885 of the Canadian Pacific Railway. This helped to bring land hungry multitudes from all parts of the world into the western part of Canada. The two World Wars contri- buted greatly to the cement- ing of the Canadian nation- hood. Canada emerged from both of them with a new sta- tus in the eyes of the world. Following the first World War, to which Canada sent at least a half a million men, from September 14th, 1914, and on toward the close of the struggle, Canada’s status with- in the British Commonwealth was shown by appointing a Canadian minister to Wash- ington in 1926. On September lOth, 1939, a week later than Great Britain, Canada declar- ed war on Germany, and later on Italy and Japan. Canadian troops figured prominently in allied victories in Sicily, and on the mainland of Italy. Canadian blood flow- ed freely in the ill fated Diep- pe raid. The first all Cana- dian army, under General Crerar, opened the battle for the Ruhr in February, 1945. The Canadian Navy contri- buted to the success at sea by assuming dangerous convoy work on many seas. The late Gen. George V. Vanier, Governor General of Canada, on his last visit to Winnipeg, exchanged a few words with the writer of this article. Speaking of Canada, and the many ethnic groups, which constitute its citizens, he remarked: “Canada is a very young country.” This is, of course, obvious to all except perhaps the very young. We realize that the vastly greater part of the country as regards civilized settlement and occu- pation is but a thing of yester- day. There are great cities that within Iiving memory were nothing but a few shacks on a bald prairie. Our grand- fathers walked on wooden sidewalks where Portage Ave- nue is now in Winnipeg, and some of them perhaps parti- cipated in the capture of Louis Riel, who claimed by the grace of God to be the real founder and father of the Province of Manitoba. Some of the cabins of our first settlers are still displayed on wheels on fes- tive occasions, and the inscrip- tion on the tomb stones of some of the first white men who were laid to rest in Cana- dian soil, can still be easily deciphered. European aristocrats and in- tellectuals often look upon Canada as the last frontier, and upon Canadians as ruf- fians, devoid of culture. But Canadians apologize to no man for their youth. They challenge any of the old coun- tries of Europe, or Asia, to show a comparable record, in any field of endeavor, in any one hundred year period in their history. Canada has experienced great material prosperity and progress in the one century of her national existence. We need only mention such enter- prises as our railways, high- ways, airways, seaways, our industrial capacity, and our annual production and ex- ports As the nation has enjoyed material prosperity, essential to the freedom of man’s spirit, intellectual activity has flour- ished, manifesting itself in in- digenous literature. Generally speaking Canadian writers may be divided into four clas- ses, on the basis of their re- lationship and attitude to the country: (1) Those whose re- sidence in Canada was only incidental and temporary; (2) Those who came to Canada in maturity, and retained an old world point of view; (3) Those, who though they came to Canada in maturity, became thoroughly Canadian in senti- ment, and (4) Those who, though foreign born, came to Canada in their childhood and grew up under Canadian in- fluences. This applies to the two “founding nations” — the English and the French, as well as to the many other ethnic groups on the Cana- dian scene. The authors in the different categories, among the various national groups, are too numerous to mention. It must suffice here to say that Canadian literature com- prises much miscellaneous prose, fiction, and poetry of high quality. Canada has also made a very substantial con- tribution, during the one cen- tury of her existence, to the arts and sciences. But above all else, Canada has given the world a worthy example of international and inter-racial co-operation, a lesson which the “old world” has not yet mastered. The story of Cana- dian nationhood reveals many differences, indeed, occasioned by the immensity of the Iand, and the wide ethnic and cul- tural diversity of the people. But the story reveals also unity in diversity, idealism, courage and faith, all of which are necessary ingredients in the future life of a great na- tion. DR. THORVALDUR JOHNSON: Wheat In Canada -1867 -1967 In the drama of the devel- opment of Canada in the cen- tury since Confederation no chapter is more spectacular than the opening of the West and the conversion of the country between the Red River and the Rocky Moun- tains into the granary of the world. The hoe-cultivation of a few acres on the banks of the Red River by the Selkirk settlers in 1815, with a yield of 400 bushels of wheat, was the beginning of this chapter; the 844 million bushels of com- Dr. Thorvaldur Johnson. bine harvested wheat in 1966 is not yet the end. Between the two lies a vast human drama, the epic story of the immigrant men and women who made this development possible — a story in which Icelandic immigrants played their part. But heroic as this human effort was, the final achieve- ment was possible only be- cause of many favorable cir- cumstances: a rapidly increas- ing transatlantic demand for wheat which resulted from the increase of population in nineteenth century Europe; the fertility of the soil of the open plains and parkland; the development of transport fa- cilities such as the Canadian Paeific railway and steam- ship navigation on the Great Lakes; the immense improve- ment of agricultural machin- ery; and the production of wheat varieties suitable to the short summers of the Cana- dian West — these were some of the factors essential to the conversion of the virgin lands of the West into the grain- basket of the world. The relative failure of the grain-growing efforts of the original Red River settlers resulted not so much from the heart-breaking disasters of grasshopper plagues, floods, and the hostility öf the fur traders as from their isolation from markets and the conse- quent lack of demand for the grain they produced. Their grain fields were narrow strips extending a mile or two inland from the Red and As- siniboine rivers. The first grain fields in the open plains were those planted, about 1875, by the Mennonite set- tlers; and hard on this, in 1876, took place a significant event: the first shipment of wheat out of Western Canada — 875 bushels of Red Fife wheat shipped to Ontario. At that time the Canadian Paci- fic railway was little more than a promise — though a promise that had started the first trickle of immigrants into the West. The grain had to be shipped by steamboat up the Red River to Fisher’s Landing where it was transferred to a railway car for shipment east via Duluth. The full flood of immigrant farmers, which made large-scale wheat grow- ing possible, had to await the coming of the railways — the St. Paul railway which en- tered Manitoba from the south in 1878, and the Canadian Pacific which a few years later gave regular communica- tion with the East. The Selkirk settlers and the Mennonite farmers had shown that the western plains were suited to wheat production. But wheat production could be a success only if the wheat produced satisfied the require- ments of the European market which for long had considered that the softer, white fall wheat of Europe was superior to hard red spring wheat for bread making purposes. For- tunately for Canada, milling improvements in France and England in the 1870’s, espe- cially the invention of the ‘purifier’, had demonstrated for the first time the superior baking quality of hard red spring wheat. And fortu- nately, again, the variety Red Fife, which made up the wheat shipment of 1876, prov- ed to be superb in its baking quality. As this variety was to play such a big role in future developments, it deserves some attention. About 1842, David Fife, a Scots immigrant farmer near Peterborough, Ontario, pro- cured through a friend in Glasgow, Scotland, a small quantity of wheat which had been obtained from a cargo direct from Danzig, Germany. The wheat proved to be fall wheat, for, sown next spring it failed to come into head ex- cept for a single plant which produced three heads. From these he increased a stock of seed and distributed it to neighboring farmers who found it to be superior in yield and quality to the varieties they had been growing. Grad- ually the variety, now called Red Fife, gained popularity in Ontario and, by the 1860’s, had spread into the United States as far west as Wisconsin. In the early seventies it had evi- dently been introduced to Manitoba. It is a point of in- terest that many years later, after the turn of the century, Dr. Charles E. Saunders, then Dominion Cerealist, obtained from a seedsman in Germany a variety identical with Red Fife in all respects. This varie- ty had come to him under the name ‘Galician’, so named be- cause it had originally come from the Austrian province of Galicia from which our first Ukrainian settlers came. The open plains of the West, lacking timber for house building and wood for heating and often even water for live- stock, were unsuitable for settling unless some product could be grown in quantity to pay for the necessities of life. But experience had shown that they were ideal for the growing of wheat; and, since the land presented no obstacle to the plow a large acreage could be built up rapidly. Two factors made large-scale wheat growing possible; the coming of the railways which brought a flood of settlers, and the rapid improvements in agricultural machinery which coincided with the peopling of the plains. Some of these im- Massey Toronto Light Binder 1882,

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