The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.1994, Blaðsíða 22

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.1994, Blaðsíða 22
132 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN SPRING, 1994 Picture of the family with the woodpile they had to work so hard for. (Not a tree in the pix, all prairie) Photo Courtesy: Dr. Stuart Houston Medicine at the University of Mani- toba, she was one of thirteen women. She continued to teach school during the summer months while she attended medical college in order to be able to continue to pay her expenses. There were no holidays for this very determined and dedicated person. In 1925, the year that Sigga graduated, she was the fifth woman of Icelandic descent in the world to achieve a medical degree. The other four were Steinunn Johannesdottir (Steinunn Alice Hayes) Los Angeles 1902, Kristin Olafsdottir (Reykjavik 1917), Katrin Thoroddsen (1921), and Solveig Thordarson Gislason (1922). For a year, Sigga worked in a tuberculosis sanatorium in Fort Wayne, Indiana. After this year’s absence, she agreed to join her per- sistent suitor, Clarence J. Houston, M.D. (Manitoba, 1926), in Grand Forks, North Dakota. They were married December 3, 1926 in Crook- ston, Minnesota, after convincing the court house clerk that the compulsory waiting period should not apply to Canadian citizens. “He saw no need to protect a couple from another country from rash and impetuous folly.” They went on to practice medicine in Watford City, North Dakota for 13 months. An opportunity to practice in Saskatchewan came up, so they packed their belongings and their infant son and moved to Yorkton, Saskatchewan. For half a century, Sigga and Clarence worked side by side in a practice that served Yorkton and surrounding district - he in surgery and hospital visits and Sigga in paediatrics and gynaecology. Patients regularly came from hundreds of miles away specifically to see Mrs. Houston, the doctor, (Clarence had the appellation Dr. Houston) for she had gained a reputation for having great success with infants who were failing to thrive. Infants were sent to her to be assessed and put on a formula of her own devising. They invariably thrived. “There was nobody in that part of Saskatchewan who was better with children,” recalls Dr. H. Crossley... “Children loved Sigga and she loved her babies. ” 6 A large part of her effectiveness can be credited directly to her personality. “Shed lecture mothers and if they balked... she was firm... (she would) come right out and tell you what she thought. Though physically a small
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The Icelandic Canadian

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