Lögberg-Heimskringla - 11.02.2005, Qupperneq 6

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 11.02.2005, Qupperneq 6
6 • Lögberg-Heimskringla • Friday 11 February 2005 New English translation now available Icelanders on the Pacific Coast: Point Roherts, Blaine, Bellingham, Marietta by Margrét Benedictson The Icelandic Club of Greater Seattle, 176 pages, $19.95 US Fanney Guðjónsson Seattle, WA A new book, Icelanders on the Pacific Coast, is now avail- able in English translation, and features fascinating stories about Icelandic settlers in Point Rob- erts, Blaine, Bellingham and Marietta. The original stories in Ice- landic were written by Margaret J.Benedictson, one of the first outstanding personalities to emi- grate from Iceland. Bom in 1866 in the northem part of Iceland, she immigrated to the US in 1887. She lived in North Dakota, where she married her husband Sigfús Benedictson. Together they published the women’s magazine Freyja for 12 years. They moved to Blaine in 1912. There she wrote eight ar- ticles between 1925 and 1943 on the íirst Icelandic settlers, which appeared in the Almanak published in Winnipeg by O.S. Thorgeirsson. Three students in an Ice- landic class in Seattle — Ted Beck, Baird Barðarson and Will Larson, and their teacher, Arna Garðarsdóttir — translated these articles. Icelanders Ámi Magnússon and Sverrir Magnús- son also contributed. Hulda Em- ils edited the manuscript. These translations will al- low English-speaking people of Icelandic descent to íinally read about their ancestors’ travels, hardships and successes. This book takes us through the first settlers’ travels in their search for a better life on a for- eign ground, far away from their own country. Most came by way of Manitoba and North Dakota, some with stories to tell. The first settlers came to Blaine in 1888 and started clearing for farms and worked in the factories, canning salm- on. Originally the US federal govemment had intended the isolated spit of Point Roberts to accommodate a military base, not to be settled. Icelanders commenced set- tlement in 1893 and soon wrote petitions to Washington and suc- cessfully achieved private own- ership. The main early industry was canning the abundant salm- on that schooled past the spit. Industries in Bellingham em- ploying Icelanders were lumber mills, canneries and shipping. Marietta was a smaller commu- nity supported by farming and fishing. Today, with succeeding gen- erations, the Icelandic language has for the most part been lost. Descendants will thrill to the stories of their ancestors in Eng- lish. The Icelandic pioneers pros- pered and many of their children went on to higher education. The 1990 census indicated that there are some 6,000 Icelandic de- scendents in Washington State, along with newer Icelanders still emigrating from the old country. Margaret writes about all these people with warmth and gentleness, although I think she must have been like so many Icelandic women that emigrated after her, strong, opinionated, in- dustrious, well-read and beauti- ful. The book can be bought by writing to The Icelandic Club of Greater Seattle, c/o Sig Johnson, 654 W Olympic Pl. # 302, Se- attle, WA 98119. The price is $19.95 US plus $2 mailing with- in the US. For Canada: $19.95 plus $4 in US equivalent. From Icelanders on the Pacific Coast Wlten Gitðrun got there, it was her intention to visit a woman friend who had a home in Gardar. She started out late in tlie day with the children, who were six and eight. The conditions were bad. The way was completely covered with snow and slush. The people in Mountain hegged her to wait until the next day, hut Guðrun didn ’t want to and said that she could make it in a day. The distance was said to be six miles. It is believed that dusk fell and she took the wrong path. She had asked her children to wait for her while she searched for the right way to thefarm and cautionéd them to go no farther until she came hack for them, or someone else came to Itelp. People believe she knew that her days were numbered and she died that night. The day after, a traveller reported thcit he had seen the alter- nate route tliey had taken. The childreh saw this man and called to him but were not heard. The next day a search party went out andfound them all. Guðrun had died, but the children, who had followed their mother’s advice and who had walked back and forth all night, were alive and harmed little if at all. Every Canadian loves a challenge, right? On average, each Canadian produces five tonnes of greenhouse gases a year. Driving, heating and cooling our homes, using appliances... almost anything we do that uses fossil fuels for energy also creates greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. And these emissions are causing our climate to change. Take the One-Tonne Challenge - reduce your energy use and your GHG emissions by 20%, or one tonne. You’ll save money, and help to prótect our climate and our air quality. Get your Guide to the One-Tonne Challenge. Visit climatechange.gc.ca or call 1 800 O-Canada (1 800 622-6232), TTY 1 800 465-7735. One-Tonne Challenge Take action on climate change Government Gouvernement ofCanada du Canada Visit us on the web at http://www.lh-inc.ca

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