The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1967, Side 69

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1967, Side 69
THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 67 school in the Glenboro district for a while. Entering Gustavns Adolphus College at St. Peter, Minnesota, he taught school during summer months to finance his college education, this until he graduated. Coming to Winnipeg following graduation, he chose to study law and articled with the law firm of Richards and Bradshaw. Called to the Manitoba bar in 1900, he formed a law partner- ship with S. J. Rothwell. He was the first lawyer of Icelandic descent to practice in Manitoba. He was elected to the Winnipeg school board in 190S, and continued as a school trustee for four years. It was in 1907 that he was elected to the legislature for Winnipeg West as a Liberal, defeating Winnipeg Mayor Thomas Sharpe. He became an out- spoken critic of the Conservative government under Sir Rodmond Rob- lin. When in 1910 T. C. Norris became Liberal party leader, Mr. Johnson be- came his right hand man. In the fol- lowing provincial election he was re- turned as M.L.A. for West Winnipeg. It was in 1915, following redistribu- tion, that the Roblin government went down to defeat and the Norris admin- istration took over. Mr. Johnson, elect- ed in the new riding of All Centre Winnipeg, was successively minister of public works and attorney-general. He was an active promotor of progressive social legislation and he was an elo- quent speaker. Mr. Johnson was an outstanding lawyer and he represented the Prov- ince on two occasions, in defense of provincial rights at Ottawa and in the Kelly case before the Privy Council in England. He was made K.C. in 1919. In the reorganization of the Norris government prior to the election of 1922, Mr. Johnson withdrew from active political life and did not offer himself as a candidate in the election. The characteristic energy which he had displayed during the 15 years of his political career had seriously under- mined his health and made it absolute- ly incumbent upon him that he cease such strenuous work. He resumed his practice of law in the firm known as Johnson and Bergman. His interest in human affairs con- tinued unabated. From his earliest days he had evinced keen interest in Canada, an interest that endured and grew stronger with the passing years. Pie maintained to the last his interest in the Icelandic people and the hi- story of the race. In 1926 the king of Norway conferred upon him the Order of St. Olaf for his services to the people of Norway. The same year, at the Norse-American Centennial celebra- tion in Minneapolis and St. Paul, Min- nesota, the king of Denmark and .then also of Iceland, conferred upon him the Order of the Falcon, an honor conferred by the Danish crown upon natives of Iceland who had done great service to their country. In his early years in Winnipeg he was a member of the Carleton Club, a charter member of the Young Men’s Liberal Club, and the first president of the Icelandic Liberal Club. He was married June 21, 1898, to Aurora Frederickson. They had one daughter and two sons, Margaret Ethel, Mrs. T. FI. Joly, Elswood Brand- ur and Cecil Frederick. The Johnson family were Lutherans and burial took place from the First Icelandic Lutheran Church with Rev- erend Dr. B. B. Jonsson officiating and interrment in the family plot at Win- nipeg’s Brookside cemetery.
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