The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1973, Side 25

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1973, Side 25
THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 23 “An Oldtimer’s Tale” was written by a sixteen-year old high- school student as an essay for an Icelandic Festival historical essay competition. An interesting feature of this entry is that it is written by a non-Icelandic student whose sole reference was a history of the Icelandic people in Manitoba in the school library. Part I. and II. of the essay are being published as a sample of the work done. The main part is omitted because the story is well-known to most of the readers of the Icelandic Canadian. —Editor •AN OLDTIMER'S TALE” The History of New Iceland, the first Icelandic Settlement in Manitoba by Jule Nazeravich PART I. “There it is down below, that’s Gimli. We’ll land at the airstrip.” I live in Winnipeg now but this is where I was born and raised. I came to see the festival and my Grandfather who is getting kind of old. It was three years ago when Grandma died. Grandpa get’s quite lonely so I try to visit him as often as I can. “This 'town is so beautiful. I really love it. Hello, Grandpa?” “Hello Paul! Oh I’m so glad to see you son. Oh, come on Paul, please sit down for me. Tell me what you’ve been up to.” “Nothing at all Grandpa. I’m just lazing around these summer days.” “Would you like to go see the parade?” “Yea, I really would.” “I can still remember my young days in the old settlement, Paul. I was born in the summer of 1890, but I had my first taste of life in 1895. That day in spring my mother let me roam away from home. I ran right to the lake where my father was fishing and he heaved me up and looked me straight in the eye. Then he started laughing because he knew he scared me It was four years later that he told me how he came to New Iceland. Ice- land was beautiful but his hardships were too numerous, so he came to Canada. About 150 Icelanders came altogether and they settled in Ontario at Rosseau. They found the land poor, so some tried Nova Scotia. The gov- ernment there offered 100 acres of free land to any person over fifteen. The soil was impossible to work and when these unfortunate settlers heard of New Iceland, they moved here.” “My father came here with the first settlement just before freeze-up in 1875. They sailed from Sarnia to Du- luth by steamer. From Duluth they took the train to Fisher’s Landing on the Red River, and another steamer brought the Icelanders down the Red to Winnipeg. In Winnipeg the settlers put their freight on flat-boats and sailed down to Gimli.” “My father told me of John Taylor, who pictured himself as Moses leading his people to the promised land. He wasn’t Icelandic though. Sigtryggur Jonasson, the first Icelandic settler in Canada, was another great man play- ing a large part in the colonization of New Iceland.” “The winter of 1875-1876 was a cold

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