The Icelandic connection - 01.06.2014, Blaðsíða 37

The Icelandic connection - 01.06.2014, Blaðsíða 37
Vol. 66 #4 ICELANDIC CONNECTION 179 When that contract was completed in 1943, Can Car was awarded another contract to build Curtis Helldivers for the United States war effort, many of which were then sent on to Europe for the British Navy under the Canada- US wartime Lend-Lease agreement. Margret told stories of how she had to crawl into the farthest tip of the wing with her riveting tools to finish off the final construction of the airplane. “I was never claustrophobic like so many of the other women, so that job was always mine” she said. They worked ten hour days with a half- hour lunch break and two ten minute rest breaks. It was difficult work in noisy conditions in these monster metal and concrete hangars. It wasn’t all work and no play. Margret recollected making friends with the other ladies during evenings in the barracks and “the conga lines through Winston Hall in our nighties”. Whenever they got together later, the three sisters reminisced about their war years. It was an exciting time to be young and single in the big city. On the weekends, Winnipeg would fill up with young men in uniform. The Halldorsson sisters had three brothers, Harold, Karl and Leo who had joined the Canadian forces and were, at various times, training at the army base in Shilo, Manitoba. Whenever they were on leave, they would head to Winnipeg to visit at Home Street and take their sisters out on the town. There were dances and movie theatres and no shortage of young men in on leave looking to meet the ladies. Harold brought his army buddy Allan Sabiston with him on one of his visits to his sisters. Allan fell madly in love and began spending every leave in Winnipeg courting the lovely Lily who eventually consented to become his bride. Their daughter remembers the story her father told of being so love-smitten, he stole a jeep from the base at Shilo in order to rush to Winnipeg to visit his sweetheart. He got caught and got punishment duty for months. He always said: “I am sure I have peeled more potatoes than any housewife in Canada”.

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