Lögberg-Heimskringla - 01.03.2009, Blaðsíða 13

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 01.03.2009, Blaðsíða 13
Visit us on the web at http://www.lh-inc.ca Lögberg-Heimskringla • 1. mars 2009 • 13 Photo Mystery: Do you know these people? From the Pioneer Daughters 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. [Note: genealogical data included in book edition.] Ellenor Jane Ginn, one of the Pioneers of Pembina Coun- ty, came to her homestead near Mountain, in the year 1882. Her husband John Ginn filed on land near Mountain, in the spring of 1882, and then returned to Manitoba and put in his crop there. In September, 1882, he died. After the harvesting of the Manitoba crop, Mrs. Ginn and part of her family came to the Dakota Homestead and completed the dutied of “proving up”, on the land. Mrs. Ginn also filed on a quarter for herself. (This could be done at this time). Ellenor Ginn was a woman of sterling qualities. She knew what pioneering meant to the fullest extent. As a girl of fifteen she came from Ireland with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Kerr, and shared in their pioneer life in the woods near New Castle, Ontario, Canada, about 1844. In 1854, Ellenor was married to John Ginn, a settler living near Blackstead, Ontario. When the Ginn family moved from Ontario to Aenaud, Manitoba, in 1875, they came boat to Duluth, then by train to Fisker’s Landing, (new Fisher), a town in Minnesota, near East Grand Forks. They had two or three days wait for the flat bottomed Red River Boat, which took them down the river to a place called Whiteheads Landing; practically on the site of St. Jean, Manitoba, and due west from Armaud. It was here that a near tragedy occurred. While waiting for the father to come with the ox-team to complete their journey, the youngest son, Robert Wesley, strayed away and was hopelessly lost in the wilderness of wild grass. The few settlers and everyone, searched but no trace of the small boy could be found. The anxious searchers found tracks of bear and other animals, which added to their fears. Robert stumbled on and on, and as night fell, lay down and slept on the wet grass. In the morning he started out again and providentially came to a settlers camp and they returned him to his mother. When the Ginn’s lived on their homestead near Moun- tain, their nearest place to market grain and by supplies was St. Thomas. A long trip with load and team. Mrs. Ginn found little difference in the Pioneering in Canada and that in Pembina County. Nine long months when she did not see the face of a white person, except her fam- ily. She was under no illusions as to what life held for her. There was no rosy future, no empty social rounds, no years of twilight rest and gladness. She was old fashioned enough to believe that a Mother’s highest destiny is merged in her family. Her greatest work to guide and develop the spiritual welfare of her children. Her strong Christian character was the greatest heritage she could leave her family. She saw them fairly started and settled, then peacefully and content- edly went to her reward. Mrs. Finn is buried in Crystal Cemetery and the body of her husband was brought from Manitoba and rests beside that of Ellenor Ginn. Mrs. John Ginn, Mountain, N.D. (Ellenor Jane Ginn) 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. Three stylish Icelandic immigrant women photographed by Jón Blöndal of Winnipeg about 1890 - location unknown, but Gimli and Winnipeg connections. The Ladies Aid Society is a thing of the past in Elfros, as is much else. The town is very quiet these days, and if one listens carefully it is pos- sible to detect some resent- ment of the larger surrounding communities, whose services, employment opportunities and citified attractions have drawn people away from Elfros over the years. A controversial sale of seven houses “at lawn-sale prices,” as village administra- tor Glenn Thompson char- acterized it, exacerbated the problems in the village. Despair does not seem to be a word in the local lexicon, however. “It’s an attractive area, and people are looking to move here,” Thompson says. The mayor, Keri Zemlak, is by all reports a dynamic civic leader with no shortage of ideas. New houses are being built, and the local school, closed for lack of students, is being redeveloped into a bed and breakfast by an engineering consultant who has purchased the imposing edifice. He will arrive in Elfros at the beginning of May to start the process. And this summer the vil- lage will celebrate its Centen- nial. Beginning on July 24, the town and any lucky visitors will enjoy a weekend of parades, fireworks, picnics, games, beer gardens and all manner of en- tertainment as Elfros prepares for another hundred years as a small jewel on the Saskatch- ewan prairie. More information on the Elfros Centennial is available online at www.elfrosrmcenten- nial.ca. Town heads into 100th year Continued from page 10 Photo: caelum vatnsdal Some public art in Elfros depicts a flag-waving giantess.

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