Lögberg-Heimskringla - 26.08.2005, Blaðsíða 6

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 26.08.2005, Blaðsíða 6
6 • Lögberg-Heimskringla • Friday 26 August 2005 An importantpart of the The IceFest in Kinmount attracted many guests and people showed interest in the history. Guy Scott Kinmount, ON In the 1850s, the govemment of Canada West opened up a huge tract of wildemess called the Ottawa-Huron Tract for settlement. This section of Ontario was on the Canadian Shield and was bounded by Geor- gian Bay (Lake Huron) and the Ottawa River. It contained some of the best forests in Canada, but as a whole was “marginal” farm land. Agricultural settlement was encouraged and soon the region was filled with pioneer farmers and happy lumbermen. Access to this region remained a prob- lem, despite a series of colo- nization roads built at govem- ment expense. It became clear by 1870 that railways were the answer to improved access into these “back townships” (back of the Lake Ontario shore front). In 1874, a railway line called the Victoria Railway was char- tered to run between Lindsay (the front) and Haliburton (the back). A halfway point on the line was the sleepy pioneer vil- lage of Kinmount, nestled in the valley of the Bumt River at the intersection of the Monck and Bobcaygeon Roads. No firm plan The new railway company faced many problems such as rocky terrain, large river cross- ings and financial shortfalls. But an immediate problem was a shortage of labour. The lum- ber camps soaked up available labour at a higher wage, so an altemative sourece of railway “navvies” was needed. About the same time (the summer of Pickerel • Salmon Shrimp • Lobster • Crab Harðfiskur • and more! WE PACK FOR TRAVEL 596 Dufferin Ave. 589-3474 VISIT OUR NEW LOCATION 625 Pembina Hwy. (1 block south of Grant) 477-6831 1874), a group of 360 Icelandic immigrants were sitting idle in a warehouse in Toronto. They had just immigrated from Iceland and arrived in Can- ada with no firm plan for their fu- ture in their new residence. They were “recruited” to work on the new railway line, and dispatched to the Kinmount section. They had no concept of what awaited them at their destination, and the locals had no idea of what was coming to town. A great-great uncle of mine (affectionally called “Uncle Charlie”) was hired by the rail- way company to team the new arrivals from the head of the rail line at Coboconk to their new home outside of Kinmount. The local teamsters expected to pick up a crew of burly railway navvies. The accommodations for the newcomers consisted of “lumber shanty style” barracks build as a temporary residence for single men. To their surprise, at the sta- tion they faced whole families of dazed and confused immigrants, ill with various ailments, hav- ing no clue where they were and speaking not a word of English. The 90 railway navvies tumed into whole families numbering 360! Two small children died on the short joumey and many oth- ers were so sick they died within days of their arrival. Dysentry and dehydration caused by dia- horreaha were the main culprits and carried away the young chil- dren and weaker adults. Furthermore, the locals were confused about what Icelanders really were. Informed Iceland was a cold, northem island, they expected Eskimos (geography not being a strong suit in 1870). Thus the Icelanders were nick- named the “blue-eyed Eskimos.” Overcrowded shanties The colony got off to a poor start and went downhill from there. The lumber shanties (sev- en in number) were designed for about 100 single men and were grossly overcrowded. Unsani- tary conditions were eventually improved by the railway com- pany. The diet prescribed by the employers was unsuitable for the newcomers. Icelanders were not used to the heavy food eaten by lumbermen. Culture shock was a big problem. Most of the newcom- ers had been fishermen or small livestock herders back in Ice- land. Now they were expected to be day-labourers who worked 10-hour days, six days a week. They didn’t fully comprehend they had to show up for work on time, every day. On any given day, at least 25 per cent of the workforce failed to show for a variety of reasons. The Icelanders were not used to chopping trees, grubbing out huge stumps and filling in ravines and swamps. They were forced to “leam on the job,” to the frustration of the railway supervisors. As only one man, S. Jonsson, spoke any Eng- lish, communication with the lo- cals was difficult. No jobs Nevertheless, the Icelanders soldiered on through the winter of 1874-5. Railway construction was actually continued through the winter months just so they could be kept employed. Then, in the spring of 1875, disaster struck. The railway company ran out of funds, work was suspended and the Iceland- ers were laid off. Now what? With no jobs, no farms and unskilled for the local job mar- ket, the new colony was in peril. Free farmland was offered by govemment officials to every family who wanted to take up pi- oneer farming. But the land was poor (a local joke goes, “How do you make a million dollars farming at Kinmount? Start with two million!”), and the Iceland- ers iacked many of the necessary skills (except determination) to be pioneer farmers. The land was covered by dense tree cover and pioneer farmers were nick- named “axmen.” The Icelanders, coming from a relatively tree- less land, were not competent as lumbermen. They also wished to settle in a group to be near each other. There was not a large enough tract of land left near Kinmount to accommodate this wish. They were to be scattered over many townships to become farmers. Times were tough. Many Ice- landers moved away to find employment. The colony was slowly dissolving. Relocation In their hour of darkness, fate intervened in their favour. One day, a young woman named Caroline Taylor was passing through Kinmount to visit her uncle working as a missionary in the lumber camps in Haliburton. She happened to notice several Icelandic women dressed in their native costumes, walking down the main street of Kinmount. Her curiosity aroused, she in- quired who they were. A local person summarized their plight. Intrigued, and feeling sorry for their situation, she told her uncle who promptly came to their aid. The end result of Charles Taylor’s mission was the decision to relo- cate the Icelandic settlers to the Gimli area of Manitoba. Thanks to Taylor’s lobbying, the Govem- ment of Canada paid transporta- tion costs and gave a land grant. The scattered immigrants were gathered from all over the area and sent to Gimli by the end of 1875. The rest is another story. All the remaining Iceland- ers, save one woman who mar- ried a local man, had come and gone from Kinmount within one year. Had they waited a little lon- ger, would history have marched down a different road? Perhaps. The railway restarted work in the fall of 1875 and jobs became plentiful again. Kinmount started towards a new zenith of prosper- ity with the opening of the Victo- ria Railway in 1876 and became a properous railway and lumbering centre. Prosperity arrived on the heels of the departing Icelanders. And yet, Kinmount could not steal a place in their hearts. Sad memories of lost children, hard times, strange customs and unfa- miliar geography prodded them to move to the more congenial surroundings of Manitoba. And what did they leave behind? Hayford, the “shanty- town” was soon erased by time. Other workers completed the railway. Their farming attempts were taken up by new settlers. Memories, legends and over 20 unmarked graves were all that was left... until recently. The decendents of those gal- lant Icelandic settlers returned and erected a magnificent me- morial to the memory of their ancestors whose first stop in Canada was a pioneer village on the Burnt River. For despite all their cares and woes in a new world, retuming to Iceland was never an option. The Icelanders just had to find their niche in Canada. Kinmount was not it, Gimli was. And thus ends an- other chapter in the history of the great nation called Canada. Guy Scott is an author in Kinmount, Ontario, and has, among other things, written the book History of Kinmount, A Community on the Fringe. Visit us on the web at http://www.lh-inc.ca

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