The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.1974, Blaðsíða 21

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.1974, Blaðsíða 21
THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 19 be arrested and tried for treason. He escaped to Norway in a Norwegian tramp vessel. From Norway he made his way to America and when I first heard of him he was working on a farm in the Norwegian settlement called Muskego in Racine county, Wisconsin. I invited him to visit mp and I remember he went with me to Moscow, Iowa county, Wisconsin, where we both spoke on the 17th of May. Young Olafsson was highly educated. He was well versed in the ancient classics and spoke fluently both Danish and English. With him I took a strenuous course in Icelandic, reading long parts of the eddas and sagas and also of modern Icelandic literature. He remained with us about two weeks and then returned to his work in Mus- kego. His career in this country was most remarkable. He had conceived the idea that it would be a splendid thing for the Icelanders to emigrate in a body to Alaska. In emigrating from and abandoning Iceland they would escape Danish tyranny and be- sides find better soil and a finer climate than in Iceland. But how to carry out this idea, that was the great problem. Prof. Willard Fiske of Cor- nell University and I equipped him with letters to Washington, but after getting there he would have to fight his own battles. After he got to the seat of our government he elbowed his way to members of congress, to United States senators and members of cabin- et and even got an audience and inter- view with President Grant. He told all of them that he wanted the 70,000 people in Iceland to leave the homes they and their forebears had occupied for a thousand years and settle in Al- aska. He made it appear that the idea was perfectly practicable. And what happened? Jon Olafsson received an appointment from President Grant to take two other Icelanders with him and proceed at once to Alaska to sel- ect a site for a settlement. A United States revenue cutter was placed at his service and provisions made for the necessary travel in Alaska. Jon Olafsson and his companions made the journey. Of the trip and of the Alaskan country in general Olafs- son wrote in Icelandic a ponderous report. It was a large octavo pamphlet of, I think, not less than 200 pages. This was ordered printed by the gov- ernment in an edition of several thou- sand copies. In the meantime Jon Ol- afsson through diplomatic correspon- dence had received full pardon for his treasonable poem and so could return to Iceland unmolested. The president of the United States sent him to his native land with a cargo of his pamphlet on Alaska. On his arrival home he at once began to agitate in favor of emigration to Al- aska and distributed his pamphlet. But neither his preaching nor his pamphlet had any other effect than to make him the butt of ridicule. His audiences hissed him and he was, by way of dis- paragement called “Jon Olafsson Al- aska-fari,” i.e. “Alaska-farer”. The whole enterprise was a colossal failure and fell flat. Not a single Icelander was found willing to give up his Ice- land home in exchange for one in Al- aska. Jon Olafsson remained in Iceland, started a newspaper and lived there until in the early ’90s when he again visited America, living most of the time in Chicago and then a short time in Madison, Was. Here he edited a Norwegian paper published by O. S. Buslett. Then he returned to Iceland where he still lives. A,s above indicated Iceland obtained home rule in 1874 and Jon Olafsson
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