Lögberg-Heimskringla - 05.11.2004, Side 9

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 05.11.2004, Side 9
Lögberg-Heimskringla • Föstudagur 5. nóvember 2004 • 9 Journey to Hekkla David Jón Fuller Huntsville, ON The Hekkla Cemetery has a champion in Earl Marchand. Earl, who is descended from Icelandic settlers in Muskoka, has organized images and transcribed infor- mation from the gravestones of the cemetery. The Hekkla Cemetery is among the sites in Ontario’s Muskoka and Parry Sound area which Earl has researched. Earl’s interest in Hekkla is personal. He was born in Parry Sound, Ontario, in 1932 and lived the fírst seven years of his life in Hekkla, before his family moved south during the Second World War. His career with Bell Canada saw him travelling across many parts of Ontario, including the north- west. “I worked for the tele- phone company for 32 years; the last seven I worked on the road,” says Earl. “I worked 13 years in Toronto, and approxi- mately the rest of it out of Huntsville.” As he drives through the area leading to the Hekkla cemtery, it’s clear he knows the area intimately. Though the forest has obscured most traces of human settlement, such as farms and an airstrip — even a region devastated by forest fire in 1999 is barely noticeable — Earl can name places such as family home- steads, the old school, and a former community hall along the old Hekkla Road. “This place is new,” he says from time to time, pointing out a house here or there. The Hekkla Cemetery is a small clearing in the woods beside the road. The Hekkla United Church stands nearby, where it was moved from Ashdown and rebuilt in 1900. Earl fírst got involved in his research after correspon- ding with Don Gislason of Toronto. “Don Gislason had a list of who was married to who, and it was kind of wrong, and Dorrie [Nowak] and I went out and straightened it out, and I sort of got interested. Fifteen years ago we did the correc- tion. And we started, well a friend of mine started a web- site called pio- neercemetaries.com and we started photographing tomb- stones and epitaphs and I just PHOTO: DAVID JÓN FULLER Earl Marchand has worked to preserve the memory of the Hekkla Cemetery. went further with Hekkla.” Earl has sought out cor- roboration for the information on the tombstones to make sure it is accurate, though he admits not everything is per- fect yet. However, he’s well aware of the consequences of errors in the records. “The Humphrey Township has no record of my grandfather in the Rosseau Cemetery,” he says. “They denied his being buried there, but because I went to the funeral I told them that he was. But there’s still no marker. Nobody knows where to put it. I suggested to my cousin, I wanted to put the marker on the [family] plot, because you know where that is, and we’d be somewhere near.” Earl seems to know the Hekkla gravestones like old friends. He should — he has been researching the names on them for years. The oldest gravestone is that of Gisli Thompson, 1840 - 1918, which also marks his wife, Margaret, 1830 - 1917. The disastrous effects of the influenza epidemic can be seen in the death dates on many graves — 1918 and 1919 are common. Though, as Earl mentions, many who caught the flu didn’t die from it. Earl points out his own family gravestone, where his father Wilford A. Marchand and mother Mary Pearl Shortt are buried. Earl’s own name and birth date are inscribed as well, but, as he says, “Fortunately there’s no other date on that þart yet.” OVER 6 ACRES OF VEHICLES \ \ *Jí TTm nrirr Ú * lif í rpn rry jin 1 LaJJLJUx ( Ijurj Visit us on the web at http://www.logberg.com

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