The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.2001, Síða 20

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.2001, Síða 20
146 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN Vol. 56 #3 adoptive father asked him, as the only one he could trust, to travel to Reykjavik and establish a store there. Richard agreed, and armed with a large bag of gold, set out for Iceland. A store was soon established; and Richard found himself the proprietor of a thriving trading business. In due course, the attractive Icelandic women drew the attention of the prosperous young merchant. Richard married, and set- tled down to found a modest Icelandic dynasty. By the time Emily Long was born, her particular branch of this family had fallen on tougher times. They may have been reason- ably well-off, but poor health seems to have been their nemesis. In any case, they were able to provide Emily with good education, which seems to have been gained just in the nick of time. Emily received training as a nurse at Sedisfjord on the East Coast of Iceland, dur- ing three years attendance at a well-known girl’s school there. (The building is still in use as a private home.) Her own family in Iceland were all ill, dying or dead of tuber- culosis—her brother, for example, had tuberculosis of the bone & lost several limbs, one after the other, before death. One gets the impression that by the time she emi- grated, there was virtually no one left of the family but Emily. She was alone in the world except for relatives in Canada. Relatives in Manitoba Emily had relatives in Winnipeg, to whom she came. Her aunt, ValgerSur Pallson (in her 2nd marriage) lived at 532 Beverly Street. Valgerdur was my mother's great-grandmother, on her mother Lizzie's father's side. Valgerdur was originally a Long—her father was Richard Long, a descendant of the original Richard. She also had a brother Sigmundur Long in Winnipeg—Emily's uncle who was a noted writer and poet. He is remembered as being tall, thin, and with brown-grey hair and beard (Sigmundur was recently mentioned as having been the owner of a very recently discovered ancient Icelandic manuscript from the 15th century.). Sigmundur had a daughter Freda, who may be still in Winnipeg, though likely under a married name. After coming to Canada, Emily repeat- ed her entire nursing training in Neepawa, Manitoba, graduating in 1910. It may have been a requirement, or she may have done it just to learn the terminology in English. Some of her notebooks from Neepawa are still around—and they reveal a beautiful strong handwriting, with margins and cov- ers inscribed with English Poetry which she had found inspiring. The verses which she chose to copy out were invariably calls to service and urgings to display strength - service and strength clearly were the watchwords of her life. In Manitoba around that time, Emily became acquainted with Nellie McLung, a prominent feminist and author who led the charge to gain the vote for women in Manitoba. They knew each other well, and corresponded over the years. From Neepawa, Emily went to serve as a doctor's nurse around Wadena. This would have been influenced by the fact that her relatives, the Arngrimsons, my moth- er's family, were twenty miles away at Elfros and at Mozart. At Wadena Emily worked with Dr. Rawlins. In those days, nurses would drive out to the patient's farm or village home with the doctor, there to stay in the patient's home till they were recovered. There were as yet no hospitals in those communities. Since Elfros was the location of Emily's closest family, she came there to rest up at the farm of Sig and Lizzie Arngrimson when the heavy load of caring for the sick became too great. The Great War At the onset of the Great War, Emily went over to England representing the Canadian Red Cross, embarking in 1914. She was immediately put in charge of a hospital on Channel Coast. It promptly filled up (all hospitals in Britain quickly filled up), so the wealthy and titled people opened their large homes for use as hospi- tals and convalescent homes. One such titled person was Lady

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