The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.1946, Síða 46

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.1946, Síða 46
44 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN Winter 1946 uage, looked to their own comfort. The evening before our departure from Tor- onto, Sigtryggur had parted company with us, to proceed to Iceland as govern- ment immigration agent. FriSjon was now chief assistant to Taylor, but FriS- jon was young and inexperienced. We reached the Red River late in the afternoon. The weather was extremely wet and the ground was mud. Here was the end of steel, and a town was form- ing, and the livery stable and even most of the homes were tents. Then began the process of packing the people into boats, which were flat- boats, steamer-towed. That is, the maj- ority were allocated to the flatboats; the elect were given room on board the steamer. Those on the boats had no place except on top of the mass of goods and luggage, and were without cover. Thus we travelled for several days, for there were many stops for the purpose of unloading goods and taking on board wood for the boilers. To make matters worse, the river had become so shallow, that the steamer grounded frequently, and it was often re-floated with diff- iculty. This meant much wading and our journey was slow and laborious. When assistance was required, many of our company made themselves scarce, not least the single men. Towards evening we landed at the junction of the Assiniboine, south of the Hudson’s Bay Company buildings. That same night, and on the following day, a few of our number unloaded the boats, although we were not in the best of con- dition for the work. The pay, however, which was three dollars, made up for that. To this much, for such a short time, we were not accustomed. We were taken to the Immigration shed, Which was not large, or in any way a remarkable building. There we were quartered for the few remaining nights until the seventeenth of October, 1875, when the journey was resumed. Winnipeg was then a very insignifi- cant little town, with few noteworthy buildings. I saw, in passing, one brick building, not pretentious; two brick- faced buildings, not well constructed; three or four hotels, and many log houses. The Hudson’s Bay Company had most of the trade. Grasshoppers haa destroyed all cultivation for three years past, so that it was necessary to bring in all supplies for the few souls who main- tained themselves there, and were near- ing the end of their tether. The delay in Winnipeg was for prepar- ing the so-called boats for the journey. These flatboats could not be rowed and were subject to little control. They drift- ed at the mercy of the current, regard- less of whether it meant life or death. Indeed, the more prudent in our company did not view this means ot transportation with much favor, and predicted that all would be lost. Nevertheless, the work of preparation was pushed, and the boats loaded.We had some supplies for our destination, for all our leaders were not so heedless as to rely on our subsisting entirely on the forest and the lake, even if there was an abundance of both. The leaders’ lack of forethought, as many realized afterwards, when too late, was almost incredible. The people suff- ered for years to come from the improv- ident way in which preparations were made for the settlement. It was indeed a hazardous undertaking to move out into the wilderness, far from all settle- ment, and in the face of winter. Several unattached young ladies stayed behind in Winnipeg, where they secured employment in domestic ser- vice. Some female children remained, too, and also a married couple, Bjorn SkagfjorS and his wife, because of the wife’s illness. As for the main part of the group, these were required to pro- ceed to the site of the proposed settle- ment, and to begin immediately on the work of cultivation; else they would have to pay the expenses of their journey out, and be left to fend for them- selves, with no aid from the govern- ment loan. Whether or not it is correct as stated by GuSlaugur Magnusson in his pion- eering article in the Almanak of 1899,

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