The Icelandic Canadian - 01.09.1977, Blaðsíða 8

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.09.1977, Blaðsíða 8
6 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN AUTUMN 1977 colony, it not only being the means of enlightening the colonists themselves on matters pertaining to agriculture and farming in general, but it will also help to increase the population of the colony by attracting the attention of Icelanders in general to its advantages’. To the little group of people in New Iceland, a newspaper served the practi- cal necessity of communication. We - the inheritors - are left to wonder whether they gave one thought to the historic importance of their enterprise. “The Icelandic immigrants in America were from the first concerned about the preservation of their language and nationality. ‘There was common agreement that two things were neces- sary for the preservation of their pre- cious heritage: a separate colony and a paper in the Icelandic language, pub- lished in America. These two projects were so closely linked that it was scarce- ly to be considered that one could thrive without the other Both projects were included among the objectives of the Ice- landic Association formed at Milwaukee in 1874. “The New Iceland colonists were from the first alive to the need for a paper but the process of getting settled and the outbreak of the small-pox epidemic limited their journalistic activity in the first year to the writing of Nyji Thjodolfur, but as soon as the small-pox epidemic began to abate, the first practical move was made. At the Gimli meeting, on January 22, 1877, the founding of a paper was discussed, and the consensus of opinion was that a stock company should be formed to finance the purchase of a printing press. Certain individuals undertook to promote the sale of shares and at a meeting on February 5, they reported a sufficient number of promises to warrant proceeding with the project. The New Iceland Printing Company was formed, by-laws were framed and adopted, a board of directors was appointed, and one-half of the proposed capital, or five hundred dollars, was called in. “The directors immediately wrote to Reverend Jon Bjarnason, at Minneapolis, and obtained his services in the purchase of a printing press and type. Due to the fact that a die had to be made for some of the letters of the Ice- landic alphabet, it was June before the press arrived, and even then it was not complete. The first issue of the paper Framfari (Progress), printed in a log- cabin at Lundi, appeared on September 10, 1877. “The moving spirit in the enterprise was Sigtryggur Jonasson, who gave generous financial support, and the other promoters were Fridjon Fridriksson and Johann Briem, Jonas- son’s brother-in-law. These three contributed a large share of the capital and formed the Board of Directors. “Pending the appointment of an editor, Jonasson undertook the work of editor, with the support of Johann Briem, who made several notable contri- butions to the paper. The printer was Jonas Jonasson, a brother of Sigtryggur, who had learned his trade in Iceland. His yearly salary was two hundred and fifty dollars. “Framfari was published three times a month, a four-page issue, 15Vi by IOV2 inches. The subscription rate was $1.50 in New Iceland, $1.75 elsewhere in Canada, the United States and Europe (seven crowns in Iceland). “The founding of a paper less than two years after the arrival of the first settlers in the colony, in a community of some fifteen hundred people, the majority of whom were destitute, and in the year of a devastating epidemic, is

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