The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.1974, Síða 23

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.1974, Síða 23
THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 21 among his countrymen. He is now the president of the Icelandic Synod in Manitoba and North Dakota and the editor of its official organ. A few years ago I had the pleasure of visiting Jon and Laura in their splendid home alongside of their magnificent church in Winnipeg. I now want to add by way of self- praise that through Jon Bjarnason, I became so proficient in Icelandic that when soon after my arrival in Copen- hagen as United States minister the Icelanders connected with the univer- sity and others in that city gave me a reception I was able, to the great and agreeable surprise of my entertainers, to respond to Prof. Finnur Jonsson’s address in their own vernacular. Prof. Jonsson in his address to me not sus- pecting that I would understand Ice- landic spoke in Danish. MORE ABOUT THE ICELANDERS I have already mentioned the Ice- landers in Manitoba. How did they get there? In most of what I have al- ready stated I have intended to lead up to the answer to this question. It was largely with this end in view that I introduced Lord Dufferin to my readers. I have shown how deeply he was intrested in Iceland, its people and its history. I have given an ac- count of Jon Olafsson’s and President Grant’s abortive enterprise to get the whole population of Iceland to em- igrate to Alaska. As stated, the Icelanders continued to emigrate in increasing numbers from year to year. But they had failed to find a large body of unoccupied land where they could settle together and preserve their Icelandic language and traditions and maintain schools, churches and newspapers. I believe it was sometime in the summer of 1878 that three middle-aged Icelanders visited me to discuss this matter with me. We considered North Dakota, the Pacific coast and Texas, where suitable large tracts of land might be available. But the fact was that the Icelanders had no money to buy even the cheap- est land on the market. Then it sud- denly occurred to me that Lord Duf- ferin was Governor-General of Canada; that in Canada there were large tracts of unoccupied land; that Lord Duf- ferin was a friend of the Icelanders and that I knew him. I therfore sug- gested that these three Icelanders should go to Ottawa and find out what Lord Dufferin might be able and willing to do for them. I gave (them a letter to the governor-general. Lord Dufferin received them most royally as if they had been ambassadors from some foreign potentate. He enter- tained them at the government man- sion. His fertile mind soon found a way. He selected a strip of land some thirty miles in length and perhaps ten miles in width on the west side of Lake Winnipeg in the province of Manitoba and in a message to the Canadian parliament he recommended that this strip of country be set aside for an Icelandic settlement and that the land be sold exclusively to Iceland- ers and on very easy terms of pay- ment. The recommendation was adopt- ed with alacrity by the parliament. Here the Icelanders would find a climate not unlike what they had been accustomed to in their native land; they would fin da soil immensly more generous than that of Iceland, and be-

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The Icelandic Canadian

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