Lögberg-Heimskringla - 15.12.2007, Side 11

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 15.12.2007, Side 11
Visit us on the web at http://www.lh-inc.ca Lögberg-Heimskringla • 15. desember 2007 • 11 Photo Mystery: Do you know these people? Lögberg-Heimskringla features this series of photographic mysteries in conjunction with the Nel- son Gerrard’s “Silent Flashes” project, which explores early photography among Icelandic immigrants and their descen- dants in North America during the settlement period — from 1870 to 1910. All unidentified photo- graphs featured in this series were taken in Icelandic settle- ments in Canada and the United States during this era, and your input is invited if you can pro- vide any clues as to who these people are. Any successful solutions will be published, but more importantly these old photo- graphic treasures can then be archived for future generations. Some may also be featured in the upcoming book Silent Flashes. To obtain further informa- tion on the “Silent Flashes” proj- ect or to provide input, contact Nelson Gerrard at (204) 378- 2758 or eyrarbakki@hotmail. com, or by mail at Box 925, Arborg, Manitoba R0C 0A0. Check out the “Silent Flash- es” website and photo archive at www.sagapublications.com. Questions on your own photographic mysteries are also welcome. Unidentified Dakota family, photographed at Cavalier by Ás- geir Sölvason, about 1895. From the Pioneer Daughters In 1940, The Pembina County Pioneer Daughters began collecting information on North Dakota’s homesteading period in the late 1800s in the form of memoirs and genealogical data. George Freeman of Grand Forks, ND has compiled all of the accounts on the early settlements into three volumes, now available in hardcover. For more information on the Pembina County Pioneer Daughters Biographies, contact George Freeman at 2091 27 Ave. So., Grand Forks, ND, 58201, by phone at (701) 772-3397, or e-mail gfreeman@gra.midco.net. ÞÓRÐUR DIÐRIKSSON (Thordur Didriksson) was born 25 March 1828 at Holmar, Kross, Rangarvalla; his parents were Diðrik Jónsson, born 16 Sep- tember 1794, died 11 July 1841, and Sigríður Árnadóttir, born 25 August 1798, died 17 December 1892. He first worked on the farm owned by Ólafur Jónsson at Fagri- höll, Kross, Rangarvalla, until he was 12 years of age. He then went to work and lived with Höskuldur Jónsson at the farm Butra, Kross, Rangarvalla, until he was 21 years old. In 1853 or 1854 Thordur went to Copenhagen, Denmark to learn the trade of goldsmith. While in Copenhagen he met Mormon missionaries and ac- cepted their message and joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Lat- ter-day Saints. He was baptized 17 February 1855. Upon returning to Iceland Thordur was full of enthusiasm and excitement about his new- found faith. His message was not well accepted and he was turned away with scorn and treated some- what as an outcast. This was the same reception that Gudmundur Gudmundsson had received in the same area just a few years before. Thordur was discouraged by his lack of success and decided to go to Zion, in Utah. He left Ice- land in July 1855. He stayed in Copenhagen for four months before leaving for Utah. He sailed from Liverpool on 12 December 1855. The terrible weather encountered while cross- ing the Atlantic Ocean lengthened the travel time by almost twice the usual. The ocean was very rough and the food supply became lim- ited in quantity and quality. Many passengers became ill and died at sea. Thordur himself became very ill and was near death. He arrived at New York 15 February 1856. He was delayed at Castle Gardens in New York for eight days and then he travelled by train to Altum, near St. Louis, MO. He stayed there until June. He traveled by steamship up the Mississippi River to Omaha, NE. From Omaha he traveled by hand- cart to Utah. Leaving Omaha in mid-July 1856, he arrived in Salt Lake City three months later. He stayed in Salt Lake City for a short time and then went to Provo, UT where he stayed for several months before settling in Spanish Fork. He was the fourth Icelander to immigrate to Utah. In Spanish Fork, Thordur met and married Helga Jonsdottir on 2 January 1858. Helga was born 12 July 1814; her parents were Jón Hálfdanarson, born in 1771 and Kristín Þorleifsdóttir, born 7 June 1782. He also married a Danish woman, Maren Jacobsen, on 17 Icelandic Emigrants to Utah ÞÓRÐUR DIÐRIKSSON (Thordur Didriksson) Beginning in 1854, Icelanders who had converted to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints emigrated to the United States. David A. Ashby is currently working on a book, Icelanders Gather to Utah, 1854 – 1914: From Iceland to Spanish Fork, Utah, collecting biographies of Icelandic immigrants to the state. The book is edited by Bliss K. Anderson and Hálfdan Helgason. Excerpts will appear in Lögberg-Heimskringla with the author’s permission. For more information, visit http://groups.msn. com/IcelandicAssociationofUtah/iau.msnw. A person’s number (see below) refers to that person’s listing in LaNora Allred’s The Icelanders of Utah. Gudrun Arnadottir was born at Sydra Holti in Svar- fadardal, Iceland, Aug. 6, 1846. She was married June 9, 1865 to Tomas Johannson, who was born July 22, 1838. They farmed in Iceland until the summer of 1888, when they emigrated to America. To them were born thirteen chil- dren, five of them died young; the other eight children all came to Dakota. They came by boat and rail via Winnipeg to Mountain, N. Dak., Where they found a home with Gudrun’s sister, Mrs. Thordis Bjornson, the first winter. In the spring of 1889 they bought a farm near Gardar, N.D., where they lived for seven years. There were no home- steads left in that locality when they came, so they had to buy in order to be near their kinsfolk. It was hard to make a living on this farm, the soil was poor, so they sold it and in the spring of 1899 moved to Morden, Man., where they and two of their oldest boys were able to homestead. Here they lived for seven years, which would have been happy ones if Gudrun’s health had not been failing. She had long suffered from a painful head ailment which necessitated many operations, so that when the younger boys decided to go to Saskatchewan to homestead, it was not deemed wise to take her so far from medical aid, and her children in N. Dak. offered them a home. Here they lived till the summer of 1913 when they went to Saskatchewan and where they stayed till their deaths. Gudrun died March 5, 1920, and Tomas Sept. 15, 1921, at the home of their son Jonas, and are both buried at Mo- zart, Sask. Their golden wedding [anniversary] was celebrat- ed the 9th of June 1915, with a host of friends and relatives present. They were always in moderate circumstances, but nev- er so poor that Gudrun could not share with those who had less. She was generous to a fault, her hospitality unbounded. Proud of her ancestry, with love and faith in her children she was the ideal mother. A good Christian, kind to the sick, both man and animal, and often acted as midwife where doctors were not called. Loving her native land dearly, she was never sorry she came to America for although she always worked hard, she found life easier here. The children took their father’s name calling themselves Thomasson. Their names are: 1. Arni, 2. Katrin, 3. Johann, 4. Sigurbjorg, 5. Paul, 6. Sigurros, 7. Jonas, 8. Thordis. [Note: genealogical info included in book edition.] Mrs. Thomas Johannson Continued on page 15

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