Lögberg-Heimskringla - 28.07.2000, Blaðsíða 9

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 28.07.2000, Blaðsíða 9
Lögberg-Heimskringla • Sérútgáfa • Föstudagur 28. júlí 2000 • 9 History Sigtryggur Jónasson “Father of New Iceland” Nelson Gerrard Historian, lceiandic National League Arborg, MB Without question the single most important player in the great drama that began with the founding of New Iceland on the shores of Lake Winnipeg in 1875, Sigtryggur Jónasson—visionary leader, entrepreneur, statesman, and “Father of New Iceland”—deserves acknowledg- ment on the 125th anniversary of this first Icelandic settlement in the Canadian West. From humble beginnings as a farm boy in Northern Iceland, Sigtryggur rose by sheer initiative and ability to positions of power and distinction in this, his chosen land—Canadian Federal Agent, transport and lumber magnate, ship’s captain, editor and publisher, and Member of the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba. Perhaps the most unique of his honours, though, and the one closest to his heart in later years, was his com- munity’s bestowal on him of the title “Father of New Iceland.” Though not the scion of a privileged aristocratic family in his homeland, Sigtryggur Jónasson was of stalwart and gifted farm folk whose ancestors num- bered many outstanding individuals. One of his best-known cousins was Iceland’s poet laureate Jónas Hallgrímsson, who penned the famous words “Hvað er svo glatt, sem góðra vina fundur...” Bom on the farm of Bakki in Öxnadalur in 1852, Sigtryggur was provided with a good upbringing and home education by his parents, Jónas Sigurðsson and Helga Egilsdóttir, and as a lad he entered the service of Governor Havstein at Moðruvellir near Akureyri, where he gained some formal training and much valuable experience as the Governor’s clerk. Iceland’s narrow valleys and the economic and political climate of the day became too confining for young Sigtryggur’s widening horizons, howev- er, and in 1872 he left his homeland at age twenty, travelling via Scotland to Canada—the first Icelander to settle per- manently in this country. Within two ýears, while working in Ontario, Sigtryggur had mastered the English language and the ways of this country, and through a successful log- ging venture he also gained consider- able experience as an entrepreneur. The flow of immigration to Canada from Iceland had begun in 1873, and through unselfish efforts to assist his countrymen in Ontario, Sigtryggur found himself cast in the role of interpreter and gov- emment agent. In 1875 he was elected to a delegation entrusted with the chal- lenge of selecting a site for Icelandic settlement in Canada’s West, and later that same year he played a major role in having the tract of wildemess on the west shore of Lake Winnipeg formally designated “New Iceland.” As this area was then part of the Northwest Territories, beyond the boundaries of “The Postage Stamp Province” of Manitoba, “New Iceland” fell directly under the jurisdiction of Ottawa and required its own local gov- ernment. A constitution for “New Iceland” was thus drafted, four adminis- trative districts were created, elections were held, and a full-fledged council called the Vatnsþing (Lake Assembly) was formed, with Sigtryggur Jónasson as Governor. This honour, indicative of the leadership he showed and the respect he earned through out these events, was his for the most part as long as New Iceland s government endured, and it was a position he filled unofficial- ly for years afterward, both as the eco- nomic benefactor of the settlement dur- ing its darkest hours and as its political advocate in Manitoba’s Legislative Assembly until well after the turn of the century. During those eventful first years, Sigtryggur was instrumental in estab- lishing the region’s first lcelandic news- paper, Framfari (Progress), published in a log building on the east bank of the Icelandic River in what is now Riverton. Besides financing this venture to a large extent and editing Framfari for a time, he founded a lumber and transportation empire on Lake Winnipeg in partnership with Friðjón Friðriksson in 1880, thus providing both the critical employment and positive vision needed to sustain “New Iceland” during and after the painful bloodletting of the “Great Exodus.” Subsequently a ship’s captain, one of the founders and editors of the Icelandic weekly Lögberg, a benefactor of the First Lutheran Church, an immi- gration agent for the Province of Manitoba, an advocate for improved transportation in Iceland (whose efforts led to the eventual founding of the Eimskipafélag), a homestead inspector, and a Member of the Legislature for two terms, Sigtryggur rnoved in elite circles as easily as he did among people at the grassroots level, exercising considerable influence and seeing fortunes corne and go. He became the grand old statesman of “New Iceland”—articulate, dignified, and well-versed in politics—and largely through his ongoing efforts, the settle- ment he was so instrumental in estab- lishing finally took root and flourished. One of the clearest examples of Sigtryggur’s contributions was his suc- cess in lobbying Federal Govemment and Canadian Pacific Railway officials to extend the railroad to Gimli and accept plans for future extensions to Arborg and Riverton. In acknowledg- ment of this accomplishment, so cmcial to the area’s economic development, he was given a standing ovation when the announcement was made at Gimli on the thirtieth anniversary of “New Iceland” in 1905. There is irony in the fact that this great man spent his last years humbly, his achievements increasingly forgotten or unknown. Though he was honoured by his contemporaries on more than one occasion over the years, Sigtryggur out- lived most of those who had been the direct beneficiaries of his personal acts of kindness and charity, and at the time of his death at age 90 in 1942, his mod- est funeral provided scant evidence that here was being borne to the grave one of the most noble and accomplished Icelandic Canadians of all time. Today, on the east bank of the Icelandic River near Riverton, among the resting places of his kinfolk, stands only a modest monument to a true local hero—Captain Sigtryggur Jónasson, “Father of New Iceland.” Doing Business in Manitoba Greetings from J. Timothy Samson, Q.C. J. Douglas Sigurdson •Michael E. Guttormson Helga D. Van Iderstine Kristin L. Gibson Thor J. Hanscll D. Salin Guttormsson Graham E. Robson Aikins, MacAulay & Thorvaldson BARRISTERS AND SOLICITORS 30lh Floor Commodity Exchange Tower, 360 Main Street. Winnipcg, Manitoba, Canada R3C 4G1 Telephone (204)9574X)SO Facsimile (204)957-0840 E-Mail: amt@aikins.com Web Sitc: http://www.aikins.com ÍII rtnnar Photo Drivers Licenses IvWClL Available at Gimli Location 389-4883 WINNIPEG BEACH OFFICE 54 Main, Winnipeg Beach Plaza Tues.-Fri., 9:00 am to 3:00 pm 642-8591 GIMLI 0FFICE 78 Centre Street Mon - Sat. 9:00 to 5:30 Laurenca <1. RUSSIN AGENCIES LTD. INSURANCE "Where our Clients are Number One" Home • CommeróU • Condominiums • Fatm • Hail • Travel • Cottages • Blue Cross Heatth i Dcntat • LKe • Ineome Protection • Boats* Mobile Homes • Coursc ol Conslruclion DR/VEflS LICENSES Erickson Construction (1975) Ltd. Riverton, Manitoba Phone 378-5101 J. A. Erickson and Family dii ii RnH* fiint Link m[ 'ne’Hkist mri h n>r8Htf' mirrkiim « nm \ rin wwihi-

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