Lögberg-Heimskringla


Lögberg-Heimskringla - 15.08.2014, Qupperneq 6

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 15.08.2014, Qupperneq 6
Lögberg-Heimskringla • 15. ágúst 1 2014 • 11 ONLINE MAGAZINE: WWW. HEIMSKRINGLOG.COM 10 • Lögberg-Heimskringla • August 15 2014 VISIT OUR WEBSITE WWW.LH-INC.CA 1. Snorri Program Snorri was the first European child born in America. His parents were Vikings from Iceland. The Icelandic National League of North America (INL of NA) for years has run a program to bring young Icelanders to North America (Snorri West Program) and Canadians/Americans of Icelandic descent to Iceland (Snorri East Program). 2. Snorri West Participants In 2014 Signý Æsa Káradóttir (19); Anna Guðrún Ragnarsdóttir (20), Hilmár Páll Hannesson (20) and Kristján Sævald Pétursson (27), were selected to come to America in June/ July 2014 for one month. They visited Washington DC, Ottawa, Toronto (Muskoka/Kinmount) and L’Anse Aux Meadows in Newfoundland. The “kids” loved it there. They got to play the role of Vikings. They got to taste moose meat. 3. Halifax Visit I was asked by the INL of NA if I would host the kids for four days in Halifax. I said I would be glad to do this. Afterwards, I questioned what I had done. I am childless and could be the kids’ grandfather. I asked my friends what to expect. They said they would no doubt like to party all night. I go to bed at 9:30. This terrified me. 4. July 8, 2014. Arrival (a) I picked the kids up at the airport at 10:30 p.m. on an Air Canada flight from Deer Lake. I carried an Icelandic flag which I waved upon their arrival. They had four bags. My car trunk could hold two. They had to jam two in the backseat on their laps. Not a pleasant scene. (b) A very good lawyer friend of mine, Margaret MacDonald, agreed to take care of the girls. I hired Margaret many, many years ago at the Nova Scotia Department of Lands and Forests. She, of course, will deny this. She is now the NS Deputy Minister of Finance. I am so lucky to have her for a friend. 5. July 9, 2014. Markland Visit (a) I made the kids get up at 8 a.m. We hit the road and had breakfast at Irving’s Big Stop in Enfield. Then at 10:30 we arrived at the Memorial Cairn at Markland. I played our Society’s CD on Markland in the car so they would know the history. Glenda Burrows (President) and Bonnie Price (Treasurer) were there to greet the kids. Ásta Sól from Iceland was also there with her family. Ásta was visiting friends in Gaetz Brook. In the past, she worked with the Snorri West Program. I gave everyone the Icelandic version of Guðbrandur Erlendsson’s book, My Life in Markland 1875 - 1881. They were told to memorize it. We visited the log cabin on Lot 3 which the Society took six years to build. It is a replica of the 19 houses built for the Icelandic settlers when they came to Nova Scotia. It was dedicated on June 7th, 2014. Bonnie Price designed the special historic sign in front of the cabin. (b) At noon we had a picnic at Moose River Gold Mines Provincial Park. Many of the pioneer settlers worked at the gold mines located here. It was also the site of the 1936 mine cave in trapping three people. The recovery operation was covered live by Frank Willis on radio CBC. Phyllis Parker, a Society member, made some very delicious minced ham and egg salad sandwiches. The kids liked the minced ham. They ate them for breakfast. We had strawberry shortcakes for dessert. Phyllis made the shortcakes. The kids then visited the museum located there. (c) Myra Jerome, lawyer, is a member of our Society and she invited us all to her home at Ostrea Lake on the Atlantic coast for a BBQ. Myra has an Icelandic sheep dog, Finnur, who went berserk when he heard Icelandic being spoken. He understood the language as he was born in Iceland. Myra had kayaks for the kids. What fun. There was fog in the bay and I could hear them singing Icelandic songs as they paddled around. Myra had wonderful hamburgers and sausages and got the kids to make up a cone dessert which they cooked inside the BBQ to melt. They will never forget that treat. (d) No partying that night. They were in bed with the lights out by 9:30. 6. July 10, 2014. South Shore Visit (a) Up by 8:30. What a drill sergeant! We went to Julian’s Pastry Shop in the Hydrostone for breakfast. We visited the hydrostone houses built after the 1917 explosion which killed over 2,000 people. It was the largest explosion this side of Hiroshima. (b) First stop was Peggy’s Cove. They liked this very much. It was foggy and mystical. Then we visited the DeGarthe Stone Memorial. He was a Finnish artist. (c) Next stop was the Swiss Air Flight Memorial for the jet that went down there killing all passengers. Anna said a prayer for them. When she got up from her kneeling spot she found a four-leaf clover. It is pressed in her diary book. (d) At noon we had lunch at the fish Shack in Lunenburg with Stefan Sopher and his friend. Stefan Sopher is a Gimli Icelander who retired with his wife Marquise in Lunenburg. He had Lunenburg town pins for the kids. After an excellent fish and chips dinner, Stefan treated us all to a very tasty ice cream. We then toured the waterfront and saw the Bluenose II. It is the sailing ship on the back of our Canadian dime. (e) I checked the kids into the hostel at Port Mouton School as my cottage is way too small to handle five people. We visited my 95-year-old aunt, Eleanor Rogers, in Hunt’s Point. She told the kids about her mother, Sigridur Nikolina Erlendsdottir (1878), who came to Markland with her parents in 1879 and then moved with her family to Lockeport. The kids sang her a lullaby before they left. In the car they said that she looked so Icelandic that they expected her to speak to them in Icelandic. (f) I then hosted a BBQ at my summer cottage in East Side Port, L’Hebert. It was the BBQ from hell. I made up a nice salad and forgot to bring any dressing. We were five miles into the woods. I put the European hot dogs in a pot to boil, forgot them, and they imploded. I served them anyway. Hilmár did the hamburgers as I only know how to cook on high and usually incinerate whatever I am cooking. I had one of Marg Robar’s apple pies from Port Mouton. These are ever so good. I transported the ice cream in my cooler for seven hours. You can imagine what this was like when I opened it. I gave them strawberries to put on their pie. (g) We then visited White Point Beach Lodge. This is a very fine beach resort established in 1928. They have rabbits everywhere. We walked the beach. They sky was pink that night and a full moon. I have never seen it so beautiful. I took lots of pictures and I will try to paint a large picture of the scene. The kids said the sky was like their northern lights. (i) All were to bed at the hostel at 9:30. No partying that night. 7. Friday, July 11, 2014: Lockeport Visit (a) I was merciful on this day. They got to sleep in till 9. I served breakfast at my cottage. The hummingbirds were there to greet them. They had never seen a hummingbird. ... continued on page 12 Snorri West participants come to Halifax THE DIARY OF A HOST Snorri West participants at Markland on July 9, 2014, with Bonnie Price and Marshall Burgess on the left and Glenda Burrows on the right Snorri West participants at Lockeport Icelandic Memorial Cairn on July 11, 2014 J. Marshall Burgess QC Halifax, NS PHOTO: ÁSTA SÓL KRISTJÁNSDÓTTIR PHOTO: J. MARSHALL BURGESS QC It can’t be a reunion if you are meeting for the first time. Using the Icelandic Festival in Gimli as the magnet, the grandchildren of Thorsteinn and Gudrun Borgford gathered for the first time ever using the Manitoba locales of Winnipeg, Gimli and Arnes. I never met my grandfather, Thorsteinn, who died in 1959 at the age of 85 years. My grandmother, Gudrun, died in 1944, long before my birth. Although I had briefly met some of my father’s siblings, I had only met one of my many cousins with whom I share a common grandfather and grandmother. Now in our sixties and seventies, we were able to assemble most of the surviving grandchildren of Thorsteinn and Gudrun for four days filled with sharing family history. Karen Botting, who is one of the many grandchildren and an active member of the Jon Sigurdsson Chapter IODE in Manitoba, pulled us all together and provided the structure for us to get the most from our meeting. Our amma, Gudrun, was a founding member of Jon Sigurdsson Chapter IODE in 1916, and served twice as president. Thorsteinn and Gudrun Borgford were active members of the Manitoba Icelandic community. They emigrated from Iceland as children, married in 1895 and had eight children, whose careers took them to the far reaches of Canada and the United States. One of the highlights of the event was a tour of the Manitoba Legislative Building. Thorsteinn, as a partner of the J. McDiarmid Company, was responsible for the construction and the structural engineering of the Manitoba Legislature. His picture graces the historic photo gallery of the construction of the structure nearly 100 years ago. We also toured many of the buildings and houses that our grandfather had built or inhabited during his life in Winnipeg. One evening we were privileged to gather for a meal at the Kennedy House on River Road, an historical part of Manitoba’s early days, where our grandfather had worked and lived as a youth. To our delight, we were joined by Jo Wilson, now 95 years old and a mainstay of the Manitoba Icelandic community. Mrs. Wilson grew up with our parents and knew our grandparents well. She shared with us that our grandmother, Gudrun, was the first to sign her baby book when she was born. She held our attention as she described many of her memories of our family. She told us of an incident where the oldest son of Thorsteinn and Gudrun, Ingi, along with an adopted son, Eddie Christian, both teenagers, wrote their names on the “Golden Boy” before it was placed atop the Manitoba Legislative Building. We were also treated to a story from a manuscript of our grandfather, where young Thorsteinn, after being bullied as the only “fair-haired” boy in the community where he lived and worked at the Kennedy House, got his revenge against a group of local boys who chased him. ... continued on page 12 Brian Borgford Calgary, AB Borgford family reunion union PHOTOS COURTESY OF KAREN BOTTING Thorsteinn and Gudrun Borgford Gudrun Borgford and three of her children, Thora, Helga and Skapti (Scotty) at Árnastaðir circa 1922 From left: Louise Pesnicak, Tom Pesnicak, Frances Vertucci, Karen Botting, Thor Borgford, Solvieg Christie, Brian Borgford, Richard Crogan, Sue Toupal, Paul Crogan with sign from Árnastaðir Aikins, MacAulay & Thorvaldson LLP All Weather Windows Bridgeport Office Solutions CIBC D’Arcy & Deacon LLP Eaton Financial Services Four Points Financial Interlake Formworks Inc. Investors Group Kris Stefanson Lakefish Net & Twine Ltd. LCL Spas and Billiards Lögberg-Heimskringla, Inc Manitoba Home Builders Association Neil Bardal Funeral Paramount Windows Pharmasave Gimli S.N.S Investments Ltd. SkyNorth Air Shelter Canadian Properties Ltd. Stefanson Lee Romaniuk Taylor McCaffrey LLP Tomax Corporation The Floor Show Wall2Wall Media - Home Décor and Renovations HULDUFÓLK ÓDIN Brad Sveinson Character Homes Ltd. - Brad Sveinson Acuity Marketing - Ron Iannone Rona & Keystone Paving - Randy Skulsky PRIZE SPONSORS Lögberg-Heimskringla would like to thank all who contributed to making this year’s tournament a success, and for their support for this important fundraiser for the newspaper. In Support of Lögberg-Heimskringla Thank You to Our Sponsors MAJOR PRIZES Tergesen’s FROGBOX Round Table Steakhouse & Pub Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra

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