The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.2002, Blaðsíða 20

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.2002, Blaðsíða 20
104 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN Vol. 57 #3 The Romance of the Falcons Respectfully dedicated to the memory of the late “Buster” Thorsteinson, a sportsman and gentleman. Trudging through a driving snowfall with his skates and hockey outfit, a big broad-shouldered Icelander from the South End set out to walk to the mile-dis- tant rink for a crucial game in the great winter sport to decide the supremacy between the North and the South. Turn back the pages some thirty years and endeavour to catch an impression of the spirit which motivated his activities. We can picture him as the snow swirled up and about his sturdy figure, with no thought of the rigours of the elements but with glow- ing heart and with sinews straining with eager anticipation of the pulsating action of the game he loved. He hugs a couple of well-taped sticks under one arm. These are more than pieces of wood to him - his trusty aids. One is almost a “boner” (an expression used for an old worn out stick) but endeared to him through his familiari- ty with the feel of the handle, its balance and the spring of the wood as the flying puck leaves the blade. Gentle of manner, modest of speech, tender of heart - qualities ingrained in him as his heritage from deeply religions fore- bears; yet in keen competition he revelled in his virile power and was at all times eager to match his skill with no quarter asked or given; with a supreme will to victory, no matter what the odds. Thus can be described a youth, typical of the young men who thrilled their friends and supporters with their exploits on the ice in the old “Viking - I.A.C.” (Icelandic Athletic Club (IAC) days. Exhibiting strong evidence of the tradi- tional fighting spirit of their forefathers the Vikings, the Icelandic hockeyists of the early days, beginning about 1897 with play between the Icelandic Athletic Club and the Vikings, waged many a strenuous battle on the blades. In those days, heavy body checking was permitted under the rules and there was much give and take along the boards. The boys played for the thrill of the game and even under a great handicap as to equipment and rink accommodation. Nor was it the fashion to pad to any extent. A small pair of bamboo shin-guards and some padding in the knee-length pants, but no knee, elbow or shoulder pads. Old-time fans will recall that the hockey gauntlets of that day afforded little protection for those who wore them compared with the won- derful gloves now available for hockey players. The old Felag’s Hus (Club House) on Jemima (now Elgin) Avenue, and later club rooms on Princess Street, were the centres for boxing, wrestling, fencing, gymnastics, and so on, among the energetic young Icelanders of that period. The later Olafur Eggertson was a prime mover in the Icelandic Athletic Club while Frank Frederickson (No relation to the Frank of Olympic Hockey fame) was a fine athlete and a leading figure in the organization work (also a leader in dramatic presenta- tions). Another prominent member of the club was Harry Sivertson, son of Sigurdur “Homeopathi,” that grand old man of medicine who ministered to the needs and ills of the old-time Icelandic settlement in Winnipeg. The IAC Hockey Club was organized by some of the boys of the Athletic Club - the Swanson brothers, Jack and “Swanny,” and Harry Sivertson being largely instrumental in bringing this about. At first, there was no hockey opposition from the young Icelanders residing in the then Southern part of the city, but not to be outdone by the North-end IAC, a meeting was one day held at the home of Oliver Olsen, then on Maryland Street, and the Vikings came into being. The rivalry which existed between the North-enders and the South-enders through occasional competi- tions in football and baseball, was to be
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