The Icelandic Canadian - 01.08.2002, Blaðsíða 21

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.08.2002, Blaðsíða 21
Vol. 57 #1 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 19 wagons were ferried across. The horses were led behind the boat and the cattle were made to swim across. Everything was done before night fall, without mishap. It had been a tiresome, dangerous task for both man and beast. That night they pitched their tents near Sage’s place. They were on the north side of the Red Deer River, eleven families and four single men, a total of about fifty people. Included in the group, was Gudmundur Jonsson, Olafur Gudmans father who had joined them from Calgary and had previously homesteaded in the area, and Jon Jonsson, who had left Dakota the winter before and had worked for Olafur Gudman. Olafur had hired him to help his father build a house on the homestead. While there Jon filed on a homestead for himself and his father who was still in Dakota. Jon went back to Calgary to work for some time but his wife and family stayed with the group. The next day, the 28 th of June, the men started to look around. Everybody had had enough traveling and wanted to settle down. They scattered far and wide looking for suitable places to build. Some went far- ther than necessary, for they found it hard to work together when they were so far apart. Now, after ten years, it gives me shivers to think back to the situation then - to be out there with women and children, altogether penniless in a wild country, 100 miles from civilization and the comforts of life. It was awful and for a long time many paid for the dream that brought them out here. But on the other hand, it was mar- velous how well everything went and how well all of the obstacles and hardships were conquered by those first pioneers. Most of us have agreed that the age of this settlement is June 27th, 1888. Pioneer Women Address by Rosa Benediktson Madam Chairwoman, Ladies and Gentleman; The role of the pioneer woman was different from the present day life of a housewife. They lacked the amenities, which we of this modern age, take so much for granted. They had to be brave, fearless and resourceful, in order to meet the needs of their family, and to take part in the building of a good community, from a wilderness area. It required strong faith, and determination to come to an unknown land, where you had to carve out your exis- tence, with your bare hands, so to speak. I do not ever recollect hearing of how hard a task it was. Rather it was a challenge, which that hardy breed of women met with courage. Both my grandparents with their teenage children emigrated from Iceland in 1873 to Wisconsin, U.S.A. and settled on a homestead. Their next move was to Pembina, North Dakota. Again they homesteaded in the fertile Red River Valley, in contrast to the hardwood forests of Wisconsin. Then after 16 years in the U.S.A., my . O^jjNOURAQIHVE A ROF ^ C'° Qa've. (ZanteA. 24-Hour Supervision Government Approved An Intermediate Care Facility Herman Thorvaldson, President 495 STRADBROOK AVENUE We offer a Brand-new Facility Personal Furnishings

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