Lögberg-Heimskringla - 07.05.1982, Blaðsíða 5

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 07.05.1982, Blaðsíða 5
YVINNIPEG, FOSTUDAGUR 7. MAI 1982-5 Lord Dufferin's visit to New Iceland The visit of Lord Dufferin, Governor-General of Canada, to Gimli, on September 14, 1877, is an outstanding event in the annals of the colony. The memory of the congeniality and charm displayed by him on the occasion of his visit to Iceland, in 1856, and of his friendly intervention on behalf of the colonists in 1875, had earned for him their enduring regard, and they prepared to welcome him accordingly. Gimli and Lundi were en féte. The preparations made at both places were similar. At Gimli, a portion of the "market place" was cleared of stumps and brushþwood, the grass was trimmed, and a row of sixteen-foot spruce trees was erected along the south, east, and north sides of the square. A half-moon platform, eighteen feet wide, was built on the west side, with the straight side facing in, and flagpoles were placed on either side of the four platform steps. A curve of firs backed the platform, closing that side of the square; on the platforms was a display of grain and vegetables. Flanking the gateway, which faced the lake, were two thirty-foot firs, with thé lower branches removed. Six feet below the remaining branches was an arch, topped by a flagpole, and on the arch was the word VELKOMINN (Welcome), formed of green bran- ches on a white background. On the reverse side, in large black letters on a white background, stood GOD SAVE THE QUEEN. Arch and gateway were decorated with fir branches, and Fridjon Fridriksson's house, which adjoined the square, was decorated with fir trees and branches, and firs lin- ed the pathway to John Taylor's residence. The steamer "Colville", arriving from a cruise to the north with the Governor-General and his party, stood off the harbor at Sandy Bar, on the thirteenth of September. A strong wind blew from the south-east, and the skipper thought it unsafe to enter, so the "Colville" proceeded to the Stone Fort. Thus the River Settlement was deprived of the. opportunity to welcome the guést of honor. Framfari, voicing the keen disappointment of the people, suggested that the skipper was suffering from a heart condition as the result of a recent grounding of his ship near the Crossing. At five o'clock on the morning of the fourteenth, the "Colville" left the Stone Fort, arriving at Gimli at nine. The day was beautiful, and the lake was as smooth as a mirror. Flags were hoisted in the village, and messengers were despatched to the nearby farms, to advise the people of the Governor-General's arrival. Lord Dufferin immediately set out on a tour of inspection, accompanied by his retinue and by Taylor and Fridriksson, the last named acting as inter- preter. The party visited many homes in the village, as well as three farms two miles to the west, along the road which the colonists had built in the spring. Wherever he went, Lord Dufferin asked detailed questions. Were the people satisfied? What hopes did they have for the future? Gimli is situated on the west coast Excellency, in which Mr. of Lake Winnipeg. Some two or Frederickson contrived to say a three years ago the Canadian good deal about the esteem in which Government set apart a large Lord Dufferin was still held in reserve in the district of Keewatin Iceland, and whom he greeted as an for the Icelanders who had 0ld friend of the country. emigrated to Canada in 1875 and, Lord Dufferin's reply was very settling in Victoria County, Ontario, happy. He spoke in the English had become dissatisfied with the tongue and the interpreter conveyed character of the soil. The whole his language to the Icelanders body, upwards of two hundred and sentence by sentence. He said: — fifty souls, were transported at the "Men and Women of Iceland, now country's expense to the North citizens of Canada, and subjects of Her West, and considerable effort was Majesty the Queen,— put forward in Iceland to induce im- "When it was my good fortune migration to Canada. As a result twenty years ago to visit your is- nearly twelve hundred persons land, I never thought that the day responded to the call. The reserve would come when I should be called covers an area of 427 square miles. upon, as the representative of the Gimli is the chief village of the set- British Crown, to receive you in this tlement. country; but the opportunities I The "Colville" anchored within have thus had of becoming ac- half a mile of the beach, when a quainted with your dramatic his- boat put out from the settlement tory, with your picturesque litera- and presently Mr. Taylor, the agent, ture, and the kindness I have ex- addressed some words to His Excel- perienced at the hands of your coun- lency, when the whole party took to • trymen, now enable me with the the several boats and rowed up to greater cordiality to bid you the shore where they disembarked. welcome. I have learned with ex- Mr. Frede'rickson received the visi- treme sorrow of the terrible trials to tors, and a tour of the village was which you have been exposed so made and the houses inspected. soon after your arrival by the unex- Luncheon was then disposed of, pected ravages of a destructive epi- when an address was read to His demic. Such a visitation was well calculated to damp your spirits and to benumb your energies, aggrava- ting as it did those inevitable hard- ships which attend the first efforts of all colonists to establish themselves in a new land. The pre- cautions which the Local Govern- ment was reluctantly compelled to take to prevent the spreading of the contagion through the Province must also have been both galling and disadvantageous, but I trust that the discouragements which attend- ed your advent amongst us have now forever passed away, and that you are fairly embarked on a career of happiness and prosperity. In- deed, I understand that there is not one amongst you who is not perfect- ly content with his new lot, and ful- ly satisfied that the change which has taken place in his destiny is for the better. During a hasty visit like the present, I cannot pretend to ac- quire more than a superficial insight into your condition, but so far as I have observed, things appear to be going sufficiently well with you. The homesteads I have visited seem well-built and commodious, and are certainly far superior to any of the farmhouses I remember in Iceland, while the gardens and little clear- ings which have begun to surround them, show that you have already tapped an inexhaustible store of wealth in the rich alluvial soil on which we stand. The three arts most necessary to a Canadian colonist are the felling of timber, the ploughing of land, and the construction of highways, but as in your own coun- try none of you had ever seen a tree, a cornfield, or a road, it is not to be expected that you should im- mediately exhibit any expertness in these accomplishments; but practice and experience will soon make you the masters of all three, for you possess in a far greater degree than is probably imagined, that which is the essence and foundation of all superiority — intelligence, educa- tion, and intellectual activity. In fact, I have not entered a single hut or cottage in the settlement, which did not contain, no matter how bare its walls, or scanty its furniture, a library of twenty or thirty volumes; and I am informed that there is scarcely a child amongst you who cannot read and write. Secluded as you have been for hundreds of years from all contact with the civilization of Europe, you may in many respects be a little rusty and behind the rest of the world; nor perhaps have the conditions under which you used to live at home — where months have to be spent in the en- forced idleness of a sunless winter — accustomed you to those habits of continued and unflagging industry which you will find necessary to your new existence; but in our brighter, drier, and more ex- hilarating climate you will become animated with fresh vitality, and your continually expanding pros- perity will encourage you year by year to still greater exertions. Beneath the genial influences of the fresh young world to which you have come, the dormant capacities of your race, which adverse climatic and geographical conditions may have somewhat stunted and benumbed, will bud and burgeon forth in all their pristine ex- uberance, as the germs which have been for centuries buried beneath the. pyramids and catacombs of Egypt are said to excel in the ex- uberance and succulence of their growth the corn-seeds of last year's harvest. But, as sun, and air, and light are necessary to produce this miracle, so it will be necessary for you to profit as much as posible by the example and by the intercourse of your more knowledgeable neighbours. I have learned with great satisfaction that riumbers ot your young women have entered the households of various Canadian families, where they will not only acquire the English language, which it is most desirable you should all know, and which they will be able to teach their brothers and sisters, and — I trust I may add, in course of time, their children — but will also learn those lessons of domestic economy and house-wifely neat- handedness which are so necessary to the well-being, health, and cheer- fulness of our homes. I am also hap- py to be able to add that I have received the best accounts from a great number of people of the good conduct, handiness, and docility of these young Ingeborgs, Raghnhildas, Thoras, and Gudruns, Continued on page 6 Festirama '82 comes back by Dorothy Torfason Festirama is coming back to Gimli. Festirama was an event held in Gimli last June to help celebrate Gimli's centennial year, and proved to be so popular that it will now become an annual event. Festirama is a family night, and there will be six pavilions to visit this year, Scandinavia, Irish, Scot- tish, Dutch, Italian and Caribbean. This pavilion will be run by Gimli groups and feature authentic food. Marge Arnason, who chaired the huge event last year, will be chair- man again this year, and the Icelan- dic National League (Gimli Chapter) will sponsor the event to be held at the Rec. Centre on May 22.

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