The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1984, Blaðsíða 21

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1984, Blaðsíða 21
THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 19 Now look to your right to see the site of 5. GRACE METHODIST CHURCH (SE comer Main St. and Water Ave.). This church is reputed to be the site of the first Icelandic marriage (1876) and the first Icelandic baptism (1877) in Win- nipeg. The first church service in Ice- landic held in Winnipeg (1877) also took place on this site, conducted by Rev. Jon Bjamason. Turn right (east) off Main onto Water st. and follow it until you are almost on the bridge (Provencher Bridge) crossing the Red River. On your right is Gilroy St. — turn right (south) on it and follow it into a large open area. 6. “SHANTY TOWN” (HBC Flats, near present intersection of Water and Gilroy). In the area south of this inter- section (see map) was “Shanty Town”, where the first Icelanders in Winni- peg built shacks during the winter of 1875/76. The first house was built here by Fridjon Sigurbjomsson. By 1880 the area had a sizeable Icelandic population, although some were be- ginning to move to other areas of the city. Two old forts from furtrading days were once located on top of what is now Gilroy St.; “Fidler’s Fort” (HBCo. 1817-26) which stood imme- diately south of the intersection at Water and “Fort Gibralter” (NWCo. 1807-16) which stood immediately to the south of “Fidler’s Fort”. 7. IMMIGRATION SHEDS (on the Levee, NW shore of the junction of Red and Assiniboine). The first Ice- landers in Manitoba arrived aboard the river steamboat “International” on 11 October 1875, and stepped ashore at this point. Many other early immi- grants — Icelanders as well as others — would step ashore here in the days before the railroad. At the corner of Gilroy and Water, turn left (west) on Water and then proceed along Pioneer Ave. (originally Notre Dame East), the one-way street going west. As you drive along Pioneer you will pass on your left 8. “ICELANDERS HEADQUARTERS” (86 Pioneer Ave.). This is the name given to this site in the 1881 directory of the city of Winnipeg. In all prob- ability the name was used to identify Icelandic housing in this area and was less of a “headquarters” than the name implies. Turn right (north) at the junction of Westbrook and Pioneer, then turn left (west) at Portage Ave. East and follow it to the corner of “Portage and Main” — perhaps the most famous intersection in western Canada! Turn right (north) along Main St. and follow it north using a lane on the right-hand side of the street. 9. ARNI FREDERICKSON’S STORE (403'/z Main St., SE comer at Mc- Dermot Ave.). This corner, now occu- pied by the old Bank of Hamilton Building, was the probable site of Ami Frederickson’s store and shoe repair shop — the first store in Winnipeg owned by an Icelander. Frederickson established it in June 1879, and sold it within the year to Gisli Johannesson. 10. OLAFSON BUILDING (216 James Ave., SE comer at King St.). Now part of the city hall complex, this building was erected in 1901 by Gisli Olafson, a prominent contractor and the first Icelandic member of the Win- nipeg Grain Exchange, and was re- puted to be one of the largest and most dignified commercial building in the city at the time. 11. “VICTORIA PARK” (located west of the Alexander St. Dock, near the bottom of Pacific Ave.). Bounded originally by Pacific and James Ave-

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