Lögberg-Heimskringla - 23.09.2005, Side 6

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 23.09.2005, Side 6
6 * Lögberg-Heimskringla» Friday 23 September 2005 Descendents of the Bjarnason family at the road in Churchbirdge named for them during a family reunion and road dedication in 2001. Vi Bjarnason Hilton stands third from the right. ‘Bloom where you’re planted’ A former Churchbridge gal reminisces David Jón Fuller Vi Bjamason Hilton spent the first eight years of her life in Churchbridge, SK and it has had a lasting influence on her. Hilton recently retumed to her ancestral home for a re- union last July in Churchbridge, where both sides of her grand- .parents homesteaded. Her ma- temal grandparents Petrún and Kristján Kristjánson came from Iceland and settled in Thing- vallabyggð in 1900. Her pa- temal grandparents, Björg Pé- tursson (from Ames, MB) and Sigurdur Bjarnason, met in Sas- katchewan. Hilton is also de- cended from a local Ijósmóðir (midwife) of some renown named Oddný (Magnúsdóttir) Bjamason. Though she has lived in many places since her family moved from Churchbridge, she still has strong connections to the town. Her brother Sammy Joe (Sigurður Jóhann) Bjama- son still lives there on the origi- nal family homestead, and the baptismal font in the Concor- dia Lutheran Church is dedi- cated to her langamma Oddný. More recently in 2001, a road in Churchbridge was named for the family — Bjarnason Road — and the dedication was the occasion for a family reunion. Hilton was bom in 1935 and grew up speaking Icelan- dic. “The north part of our farm had the Pennock school on it,” she remembers, “so all the little ones from the south were Icelandic and all the little ones from the north were Ger- man. The German kids spoke German and the Icelandic kids spoke Icelandic.” Butatschool, she remembers, everyone was careful to speak English. As a young girl going to church, she says, she had seen the baptismal font dedicated to Oddný. But the aspect of church she remembers most was Pas- tor Kristoffersson’s sermons. “When you’re sitting on your mom or dad’s lap,” she laughs, “and you’re looking towards the back, where most of the Oddný (Magnúsdóttir) Bjarnason men sat, [you’d see] they were all sleeping. So my concept of going to church was that when the sermon came, you could sit back and relax — or sleep.” Concordia Church no lon- ger stands on its original site. In the beginning it was an Icelan- dic church; but more recently it has been used by the German community as well. The build- ing was moved into the town of PHOTO COURTESY OF ARNt JOHNSON The Concordia Lutheran Church at its original location. Churchbridge in 1967. Pres- ently a memorial cairn marks the spot where it once stood. Across the road from the church was the old Concordia Hall, which also conjurés up many memories for Hilton. lt was the site of dances, birthday parties and tombólas. Hilton re- members leaming to dance on her mother’s and father’s arms, and attributes her lifelong love of music to the performances of the Gunnarson boys, who per- formed at many of the events. Of course, the children had to go to bed earlier than the adults, and Hilton remem- bers especially the cold winter nights when they were tucked in at the hall. “We little kids were all put into these four little bunks, and our mattresses were the coats,” she says. Lucky was the child who got to sleep in the warmer upper bunk. Unfortunately, says Hil- ton, even in the 1940s the hall was in poor shape and difficult to heat. It was eventually tom down. Perhaps not surprisingly, given its central role in social occasions, the hall has also been marked with a separate caim. Among the places Hil- ton has since called home are Minnedosa and Brandon, MB, where she studied at Brandon College; Digby, NS; Victoria, BC; Winnipeg, MB, where she studied att United College; and Chiliwack, BC. Nowadays she lives in Winnipeg. In every community, she has gotten in- volved with the local Icelandic organizations. Part of the reason for all that moving was being mar- ried to Maj. Ken Hilton of the Canadian Armed Forces. Her philosophy on calling so many places home is, “You have to be happy where you are, so ‘bloom where you’re planted’.” Hilton doesn’t really think of Churchbridge as home any- more, but she still has strong feelings for it. She has encour- aged her relatives to come together to help care for the Thingvalla and Concordia Cemeteries, where, she jokes, “the Bjamasons are so thick they’re about to fall through!” She adds with a smile, listing all of her close relatives buried in the cemetery, “I’m going out there too.” From Esterhazy to Calagary As the bylines in this issue show, Calgary’s Gwen Mann has close ties to Church- bridge. Olivia Guðrun Gwen- dolyn Johnson was bom in Esterhazy, Saskatchewan on August 4, 1942. Her grand- parents were pioneers lo the Icelandic settlements north of Churchbridge, SK. Gwen received her edu- cation in Churchbridge, then took nurse’s training at York- ton, graduating in 1963. In 1966, Gwen married Lloyd Mann, a chemical engi- neer also from Saskatchewan. His career in the oil industry took the fantily to many loca- tion, Edmonton, Slave Lake, San Francisco -and back to Calgary. Today she is an active rpember of the Leif Eiriksson Icelandic Club of Calgary, and proud of her heritage. Visit us on the web at http://www.lh-inc.ca

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