Lögberg-Heimskringla


Lögberg-Heimskringla - 30.10.1992, Qupperneq 9

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 30.10.1992, Qupperneq 9
Lögberg-Heimskringla • Föstudagur 30. október 1992 • 9 Shríne at Markerville flourishes by Evelyn Johannson 1991 was another successful and very busy year for the Stephan G. Stephansson Society of Markerville. Regular meetinqs were held each nionth plus the Annual General Meeting in February. In the early spring we were occu- pied in the renovation of the löwer level of the Creamery Museum. The area was divided into three main rooms: ♦ A meeting-sitting room, carpeted and wall papered above the wainscot- ting and furnished with tables, chairs and a sizeable showcase. ♦ A very efficient kitchen complete- ly furnished with pantry, cabinets, cooler, dishwasher, stove, dishes and utensils. •f An office with copier, filing cabi- nets, desk and typewriter. On May 18th, International Museum Day, we held an Open House in this facility and named it Creamery Parlour. It has been used on several occasions, one of which was the lun- cheon served to fifty visitors from Iceland. The ladies Aid, “Vonnin”, were happy to use it to host a Coffee Fellowship after the lOOth Anniversary church service. An Icelandic Dinner was prepared and served to 17 partici- pants of the Interpretation Canada To Join the Stephan G. Stephansson Call or writeto: Evelynn johannson Box 13, Spruce View, AB TOM 1V0 (403) 728-3400 or Sandee Birse 80x813 , Markerville, AB TOM (403) 728-3450 1M0 Conference being held in Red Deer. The Creamery Staff served noon lun- cheons to several bus loads of people who were visiting the museum. So it has been a very useful addition since its opening. I was very pleased to have 5 mem- bers of our Society attend the INL convention in New Westminster in April of last year, even though we had only 2 voting delegates. We were encouraged by the new plans set forth and the growing interest amongst Icelandic groups and clubs across North America. The special concert by visiting musicians from Iceland, the banquet and entertainment at Burnaby Lake Pavilion, the visit to Iceland House and the tour of Vancouver were very much enjoyed. In June the Annual Calgary, Edmonton, Markerville Picnic, now called the “Icelandingamot” was hiqh- lighted by the visit from Icelandic National League President Evelyn Thorvaldson and her husband Gordon. There was keen club compe- tition in the races and games. The enjoyable program in the afternoon was well attended and our club was proud and happy to present the new Fjallkona, Fretha “Dolly” Stephanson. The picnic supper at the grounds, the dance at the hall, and the pancake breakfast at the grounds on Sunday moming all provided great opportuni- ties for socializing. We were very happy to be a part of “Vonnin’s” lOOth Anniversary church service on Sunday forenoon and the Independence Day activities at the Stephansson House in the afternoon. We were very much honoured to have Evelyn in our midst for those two full days of activities. INL became more meaningful to our members and visitors because of her presence. In June our Society awarded two prizes for the Stephan G. Stephansson Poetry Competition which was spon- sored by Alberta Culture. In July, the museum staff organized an Old Time Lawn Party with tea and strawberry short- cake, old time music and museum dis- plays from surround- ing areas. In August they arranged an Earth Folk Festival, a festi- val of music and “green art”. Later in August, we had an annual Cream Day, a tribute to dairying, past and present. Visitors were treated to the finished prod- ucts of demonstra- tions of home-made ice-cream and home- The Children of Stephan G. Stephansson in Markerville. From: the 1993 lcelandic Heritage Calendar. made butter on home-made bread. On September 2, our Society host- ed a Volunteer Appreciation Breakfast at the Creamery Parlour. It was an opportunity to acknowledge with thanks the many hours of volunteer work and time given by so many dur- ing a very busy season. Also to give thanks and appreciation to our sum- mer staff of 3 full-time and 3 part-time plus volunteers, who did a commend- able job of interpreting and serving the extra volume of visitors. During the 3 and a half months the museum was open, there were 11,000 visitors, 1500 of those were school children attending through school group tours. These school tours are becoming quite popular as they coin- cide with the Hola School and Stephansson House tours. We hired an extra staff member to organize spe- cial programs and material relevant to the grade level of the children. Besides the Cr.eamery Museum activities, our Society provided a booth with Tombóla Prizes, the food concession and ice-cream booth at Tombóla, the Alberta Cultural event at Stephansson House. The displays, demonstrations, activities and enter- tainment were enioyed by a very large crowd. In October, we sponsored 2 dele- gates to attend the Museum confer- ence held in Red Deer. Their activities included visits to surrounding muse- ums and they reported a very informa- tive two days. In November we participated once again in the Scandinavlan Yulestue with Icelandic displays and bake sale of Icelandic treats. We worked at 7 bingos during the year. Our share of profits are used for general upkeep and special projects. It was a great honour for me, to represent our lcelandic Society at the invitation of the Danish Heritage Society to attend the Thanksgiving Service and Reception at which Her Majesty Queen Margretha II of Denmark and His Royal Highness Prince Henrik were present. This Royal visit to the small hamlet of Dickson reminded me so much of the visit of President Vigdís Finnboga- dóttir to the neighbouring small ham- let of Markerville. There must be something special about our area and people. INL president’s report, „ Communication: I am sure you will agree, that we are not “short” on communication from INL Head- quarters.The reams of paper that is sent out to our mailing list every nionth is “phenomenal”. We have kept you updated with all the Minutes — general and special, as 'vell as current information bulletins. We rely on the Chapter Presidents and Secretaries to relay this informa- tion to their membership. We have increased our advertising in Lögberg- Heimskringla, as it is one of our best supporting means of creating aware- ^ess and communication because it feaches such a wide scope of readers. We are grateful for the interest and coverage they have given us these Past years but then, of course, we are interesting!! □ □ □ Pinancial Assistance: We were extremely disappointed this year to ieam that we would not be awarded a grant from the Secretary of State Multiculturalism Department of the Federal Government toward our Youth Development program and our convention. We must all be fully aware, that the INL is not a funding organization nor can it raise funds independently from the Chapters/Members. As a National organization, the INL is not eligible for Provincial Heritage grants. We are a non-profit organiza- tion, with basically no means of financial support, other than dona- tions and membership fees, which are just not in line with our needs. We well appreciate the problems that Chapters and members are encoun- tering — and truly hope, that the increase of membership fees to the INL will not have to become an “item”. This issue was discussed at the meetings in November — and suggestions were made for altemate ways of maintaining our Head- quarters Office and replenishing our depleting funds, so that we may con- tinue to uphold our profile of today. One of the more significant sugges- tions that came from one of the chapter presidents was — that per- haps an annual one-day fund raising blitz for the INL Headquarters by each Chapter/Member be consid- ered. It is inevitable, from all current reports from the Federal and Pro- vincial Governments, that financial assistance will soon perhaps be “his- tory”. It has certainly given us the opportunity to be where we are today — but, we will have to attempt ways of supporting our financial resources for ourselves. You will see, from our Financial report and our budget, that most of our assets are “ear marked” — leav- ing us little to operate in the fashion we are now. There is a cost increase in almost everything — postage, rent, office supplies, telephone, paper, printing — and so on. We must be extremely careful in our administra- tion and any commitments. As you know, we have a heavy financial commitment to the HIP Committee — one which the INL could ill afford, but saw the desperate need for their cause at the time. The com- mitment of $50,000.00 (pledge) over a period of 16 years, was made at the annual general meeting in Vancouver in 1986 — and one we have to hon- our. The INL could be assisted by Chapters and members, if they have intentions of supporting HIP further, by allowing us to include your contri- butions as part of our commitment. Our Treasurer, Bill Perlmutter, designed a letter to all of you in that regard, explaining the details. In closing, I want you to know that the INL appreciates all of you for your untiring efforts and continu- ing support. Like you, we of the INL Executive, are all volunteers, doing the best we can for our common cause of preserving our heritage in all respects. It has been a great privilege and a delight to represent you as your President for this past year. □

x

Lögberg-Heimskringla

Direct Links

Hvis du vil linke til denne avis/magasin, skal du bruge disse links:

Link til denne avis/magasin: Lögberg-Heimskringla
https://timarit.is/publication/160

Link til dette eksemplar:

Link til denne side:

Link til denne artikel:

Venligst ikke link direkte til billeder eller PDfs på Timarit.is, da sådanne webadresser kan ændres uden advarsel. Brug venligst de angivne webadresser for at linke til sitet.