Lögberg-Heimskringla - 01.09.2017, Blaðsíða 1

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 01.09.2017, Blaðsíða 1
LÖGBERG HEIMSKRINGLA The Icelandic Community Newspaper • 1 September 2017 • Number 17 / Númer 17 • 1. september 2017 Publication Mail Agreement No. 40012014 ISSN: 0047-4967 VISIT OUR WEBSITE WWW.LH-INC.CA INSIDE PHOTO COURTESY OF WIKIIPEDIA / PUBLIC DOMAIN The importance of this humble vegetable / page 5 PHOTO: STEFAN JONASSON “May you continue to astound us.” / page 8-9 Toast to Iceland PHOTO: STEFAN JONASSON Images from a great day of golf / pages 6-7, 10 The Icelandic Open Thanks to the potato PHOTOS: STEFAN JONASSON Stefan Jonasson The establishment of a newspaper by the first Icelandic immigrants to Manitoba was a forgone conclusion and the settlers of New Iceland wasted little time in acquiring a printing press and launching the enterprise. Framfari began publishing 140 years ago – on September 10, 1877 – less than two years after the settlers’ arrival along the western shore of Lake Winnipeg. Just imagine it. These pioneers had barely begun clearing away bush after building their first rustic homes, not to mention the smallpox epidemic they endured, but they felt the need for a newspaper that would keep the community informed and record their activities for posterity. “There was common agreement that two things were necessary for the preservation of their precious heritage,” it was reported in the first issue, according to Will Kristjanson’s account in The Icelandic People in Manitoba, “a separate colony and a paper in the Icelandic language, published in America. These two projects were so closely linked that it was scarcely to be considered that one could thrive without the other.” The founding of a newspaper was discussed at a meeting in Gimli in January of 1877 and a joint stock company was formed to finance the acquisition of a printing press, Prentfélag Nýja Íslands (New Iceland Printing Company). Shares were sold for ten dollars each, which was as much as the filing fee for a homestead, and enough capital was raised by the end of the first week in February to proceed with the project. One share entitled its holder to one percent of the company. The board of directors consisted of Sigtryggur Jónasson, Friðjón Friðriksson, and Jóhann Briem, who also happened to be the largest shareholders in the new enterprise. They contacted Rev. Jón Bjarnason, who was working as editor of the Norwegian newspaper Budstikken (The Messenger) in Minneapolis, and solicited his help in purchasing a printing press and the type to go with it. Because of the Icelandic language’s unique alphabet, there was a delay in becoming operational, owing to the need to create dies for the distinctive Icelandic letters. The printing press arrived in the New Iceland colony in June and was set up in a small log house at Lundi, now Riverton. The first issue of Framfari (Progress) appeared on September 10, 1877. At the time, the Manitoba Free Press reported, “It is very neatly printed, presents a fine typographical appearance and contains a large quantity of local news, or something in the Icelandic language.” A century later, historian Nelson Gerrard observed, “Despite crude conditions and lack of proper facilities, the paper was extremely well printed with hardly so much as a typographical error, setting a high standard not always met by successors, even those provided with modern amenities.” Sigtryggur Jónasson served as editor for the first eight issues, while the company awaited the arrival of Halldór Briem, who had been selected as the permanent editor. Sigtryggur’s brother, Jónas, who had learned the printing trade in Akureyri, was hired to oversee printing the paper at a salary of 250 dollars a year, assisted by teenager Bergvin Jónsson. Framfari was a four-page newspaper in a tabloid format, more or less the same dimensions as Lögberg-Heimskringla, and it appeared three times monthly. It cost $1.50 a year to subscribe in New Iceland and $1.75 elsewhere. Subscriptions in Iceland cost seven krónur. (By way of comparison, the average industrial wage in Canada at this time ranged from 185 to 245 dollars a year.) ... continued on page 10 Framfari – the first Icelandic newspaper in North America Framfari monument in Riverton Centennial Memorial Park. First issue of Framfari. IMAGE COURTESY OF TIMARIT.IS

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