Lögberg-Heimskringla - 28.07.2000, Blaðsíða 8

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 28.07.2000, Blaðsíða 8
8 « Lögberg-Heimskringla » Special Issue • Friday 28 July 2000 Steve Riley took a chance Clifford Stevens Gimli, MB PROBABLY THE MOST LAMENTED misadventure on Lake Winnipeg was the stranding and subsequent sinking of the S.S. Chieftain at the mouth of the Red River on the moming of June 2, 1915. The S.S. Chieftain was built on the model of an ocean-going tug boat. She met all her expectations. She had plenty of power in her engine and boiler. She was owned by the Dominion Fish Company and provided fast passenger and freight service from Selkirk to Gimli and Fort Alexander. When the railroads took over the passenger busi- ness, the Chieftain went back to being a fishing and freighting boat. Fluctuations in the fishing business finally brought her under the ownership of the Northern Fish Company based at Warren’s Landing. With her power and quick answers to her helm, she was very well adapted to this area which was restrict- ed and rock-bound and was well known to fishermen and Lake Captains alike. The Chieftain would tow a fleet of fishing boats to the fishing grounds each moming at first light. Daylight was essential for the navigating of the ten- mile channel to clear waters. Lighthouse range beacons on shore were the principle channel markers. Buoys were a very uncertain aid as the fast waters could move from ten to fifty feet in a single night. There were four- teen or more changes of bearings in the ten-mile channel—a tall tree back from the shoreline; a white house; and a clos- ing on a high bluff of timber were all reliable bearings for a pilot to watch for. In the spring of 1915, the waters of Lake Winnipeg were very low. This made the operation of the freighting and fishing business very tricky. The entrance channels of the ports and har- bours were badly affected and one of the worst was the entrance into the mouth of the Red River. This channel, even at the best of times, was beset by shifting sand bars. Such were the conditions that Captain Steffanson (better known as “Steve Riley”) found hiinself in on the morning of June 2, 1915. To make mat- ters worse, a strong northwest wind was blowing. Captain Steffanson studied the conditions in the channel for a time through his binoculars, then told Árnaöaróskir á Islendingadagurinn á Gimli ágúst 2000. Please see Riley on page 21 Sveinson and Sons Ltd. CRONSHAW JE WELLERS JEWELLERY - SOUVENIRS - WATCH REPAIRS ENGRAVING - CRYSTAL - SILVER DISTRIBUTOR OF MOST KiNDS OF "FRESHWATER FlSH' & ‘SMOKED FISH' \8US. 642-8889, RES. 642-8277 BOX 1667, GIMU. MANTTOBA ROC1B0 J ■end,nea . 'eurinn [ f v V Les Thordarson & Greg Harrop Gimli Lumber & Supply Ltd. Colonization Road. Box 1306 Gimli, Manitoba ROC ÍBO Toll Free Telephone (204) 642-7496 1 - 800-224*1449 = SHOPPERS DRUG MART “Everything you want in a Drug Store’’ (Ron Corrigal Pharmacy Ltd.) 377 Main Street Selkirk, Manitoba R1A 1T7 Phone: 482-5600 Monday - Friday 9 am -10 pm Saturday 9 am - 9 pm Sunday and most holidays 12 noon - 6 pm 40 Centre GIMU, MAN. 642-5039 LUNDAR PHARMACY Keith and Davilyn Eyolfson Prescriptions, Drugs, Cosmetics, Giftwares, Stationery, Confectionery PHONE 204/762-5431 - LUNDAR, MANITOBA MOTORS l7tRBORG P0NTIAC • BUICK • CHEV 0105 • G M C Bruce Ball Shari Ball Brodie Ball Tyson Ball Ron Rogowsky Mandy Huck Lance Fridfinnson Alvin Johnson Vanessa Frldfinnson Dave Leduchowski Maurice Legros Kim Masiak John Martens Betty Friesen Miles Gislason Dwayne Bardarson Boyd Benson Kevin Peterson Bryan Gislason Steve Cecchetto Phone 376-2342 <m \b unn* fiin* im mi 'wiwm mri 1 á rwfRr ,hi\rmm « rim \ rin wwnitt

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