The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1982, Side 46

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1982, Side 46
44 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN SUMMER, 1982 A YOUNG PIONEER by Arnetta Hanson Moncrief In 1881 young Vigfus Hannesson (later changed to Hanson) and his older brother, Hannes, came from Iceland with other settlers, most of whom went to Gimli. Vigfus and his brother decided to seek their fortune in Winnipeg, where they obtained work unloading lumber off the Lake Win- nipeg boats. This was hard work — and often dangerous — owing to slush and slippery ice at the landings. But the boys had great determination, their avowed purpose being to earn enough money to send for their parents, Snaebjom and Solveig, and the rest of their family to come to Canada. They stinted on their food. After a time Vigfus, a growing boy, became too ill to work. However, he re- covered, and soon afterwards found a job with the C.P.R. hotel in the city. His func- tion was to meet the passengers from the East, inducing them to come to the hotel. Carrying a lantern, he would greet the passengers: “This way, follow me to the C.P.R. hotel.” Then he led the way for those who would ‘follow’ him to the hotel. In those days some of the English- speaking citizens showed their contempt for newcomers who spoke a foreign tongue by playing mean tricks on them. One older worker at the hotel picked on Vigfus and once threw his only cap into a swiftly running drainage ditch in which it dis- appeared. When the manager found out, he made this man pay for a new cap for the boy. After this the man ignored Vigfus. His next venture was to work for the Canadian Pacific Railway, now being ex- tended across the prairies and through the Rockies. Many tragic events befell the work crews, one being an epidemic of typhoid fever. Many died and were buried in the snowbanks along the right-of-way. Vigfus decided to leave the camp on foot to go farther east where there was work being done on a snow avalanche. Along the way he encountered robbers on horseback, who, after discovering he had only a small coin on him, felt sorry for him and gave him 25 cents, a considerable sum in those days. Vigfus carried on with his work on the railway and became a brakeman on the trains. Later he gave up his job and his ambition of becoming a conductor. He then went to Seattle where there was more em- ployment. During his first night in a hotel there, he had a vision or a dream, seeming to see the murder of a young woman. The next morning he told the desk clerk what he had dreamt. The man exclaimed: “This is amazing! Everything you have narrated happened in that room a year ago!” Inci- dentally, the murderer was caught. Vigfus was psychic; he sometimes foretold im- portant events. Two cities of Canada, Calgary and Ed- monton, were in their embryonic begin- nings. Vigfus, having saved a considerable sum of money, bought a small property in one of these cities. Later he sold it at a profit. At this time conditions were difficult in Iceland; earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, inclement weather, and famine. As a result Vigfus’ parents, Snaebjom and Solveig, who had been rather prosperous farm-folk, had become almost destitute. The young brothers in Canada sent them their fare. The family then left their farm, Hrisum in Helgafjall’s parish, to migrate to Canada. Later they moved to Dakota Territory where they established their home. Vigfus married a talented young woman, Margret Rose Jonasson, whose parents were pioneers in the Gimli district. She was an artist and her paintings sold well. Vigfus proudly displayed one of them in the living

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