The Icelandic connection - 01.06.2014, Page 35

The Icelandic connection - 01.06.2014, Page 35
Vol. 66 #4 ICELANDIC CONNECTION 177 free, to and from the Cordite Plant to Union Station. Although the factory was decommissioned and destroyed after the war and the site has been cleared, there is still a Cordite Road listed on maps at the farthest eastern boundary of Winnipeg. MacDonald Brothers quickly built a concrete and metal building of over 170 thousand square feet (approximately four football fields size) to set up their factory at the far west end of the city. They began assembling Anson aircraft which became the mainstay of the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan. Quickly, other buildings were erected across the street for more parts manufacture and to house damaged bombers that were now being shipped in. Large quantities of crash damaged airplane parts, many with bullet holes, began arriving and needed to be sorted, repaired and reassembled. In 1940, Margret began working for Canadian Car and Foundry Company (also known as Can Car) in Winnipeg. She was boarding at her aunt Albertina Benson’s place on Home Street in the heart of what was then the Icelandic district of West-End Winnipeg. She was riveting wings and fuselages for the ‘Hurricane’ aircraft. The call for women to work in the factories was ever more urgent as the call for men to join the armed forces shifted from volunteering to conscription. Anna moved to Winnipeg and doubled-up with Margret in the room at their aunt’s house. The Cordite Plant was quick to hire her. She didn’t talk much about PHOTO COURTESY OF BRISTOL AEROSPACE LIMITED, WINNIPEG PLANT her job there other than she said: “I made bombs”. She and her sisters did tell of how they remembered her coming home from work every day dirty, with a black dust on her clothes and the dust ground into the skin of her hands. Lily had been sent to Lundar to attend grade nine because their one-room school only accommodated students up to grade eight. After finishing grade nine in 1941, she too went to Winnipeg and joined the war effort with her sisters. She moved into her aunt’s house with her sisters and got a job with MacDonald Brothers. There were now three of them PHOTO COURTESY OF SHERRY TUBBS FORSTER Workers on break at the Cordite Plant, Anna in the far top right corner

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The Icelandic connection

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