The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.1994, Blaðsíða 21

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.1994, Blaðsíða 21
SPRING, 1994 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 131 Sigga Christianson, M.D. 1925 Photo Courtesy: Dr. Stuart Houston meat... no fruit, jams or jellies. We did have a few chickens and... eggs... We always had coffee. Mama made good bread... (and) was smart at whatever she did, especially dressmaking. "s Dora also said that the children learned to speak Icelandic when they moved from Grand Forks because “so many of the older people from the settlement did not use English.” They learned to read Icelandic by reading to their mother from the Icelandic paper, Heimskringla. Dora, aged 9, and 7 year old Babs were thrilled with living in a tent and not having a school to go to. However, Sigga was a dedicated student and was desolate when she discovered that she would have to wait for a school to be built. In Grand Forks, she had loved school and she had decided that, no matter what, she was going to go to university. A year later, she was able to attend the new Mountain School, where she com- pleted her grades 7 and 8. But there were more setbacks to be endured. There was no high school. Fortu- Sigga and Bill Christianson, ca. 1897 Photo Courtesy: Dr. Stuart Houston nately, the family’s nearest neighbour and good friend Bill Olson was able to secure Sigga a position in his mother’s boarding house in Winnipeg. There she was able to work for her room and board and attend high school. She had no warm winter coat and, before she could leave for Winnipeg, $10.00 had to be found for a coat. Her uncle Gisli Sveinsson (Sesselja’s brother, born March 15, 1859) who lived in Loni Beach, Manitoba, heard about his niece’s plight and gave her the necessary money to begin her “longed-for” education. While at Mrs. Olson’s boarding house, Sigga rose at 5:00 a.m. every morning to prepare break- fast for twenty men before leaving for school. After high school, Sigga went on to Normal School in Saskatoon, Sask- atchewan and graduated in 1914. For four years, she taught in the rural schools near Wynyard and Bruno, Saskatchewan in order to save enough money for university. When Sigga was accepted into the College of
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The Icelandic Canadian

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