9 Nov. 1997, Scan Kinmount article.
History of Kinmount,
A Community
on the Fringe.
By:
Guy Scott.
Extract of
chapter eight: The Icelanders at Kinmount.
See also
Icelanders in Ontario
Reasons for coming
to Canada /arrival as railway navies /health problems /interaction with
the 'locals' / economic problems and anxious times / John Taylor rallies
to their aid / scouting a new colony / the end of the Kinmount Colony.
While the first settlers were chopping back the forest in the pioneer settlement
of Kinmount in the new province of Ontario, events were happening thousands
of miles away that would write another chapter of local history.
Tremendous climatic disturbances were rocking the island of Iceland.
Violent storms, summer snows, and tremendous volcanic eruptions plagued
the northern part of the island for several years. Many Icelanders
became fearful and discouraged and decided to immigrate elsewhere.
North America was a logical choice. On September 10, 1874, the steamer
St. Patrick sailed from Saurarkrokur, in northern Iceland, with 375 prospective
pioneers bound for a new life. This group had intended to proceed
from Quebec to the United States, but some smooth talking immigration officers
persuaded them to stay in Canada. The new settlers were worried about
their personal rights and freedoms in monarchial Canada. However,
three pledges were made, in writing, by Canadian officials:
1) The Icelanders
were to be granted full liberty and rights of citizenship in due course.
2) They were
to receive a sufficiently large tract of land so they could settle in a
body.
3) They were
to be granted the right to maintain their language, customs, and heritage.
Canadian officials
- had no difficulty with any of these basic demands. About the same
time as this group of Icelanders reached Canada, the Victoria Railway was
looking for labourers. The Company had failed to recruit enough labour
locally. Somehow, the new arrivals were recruited by Company officials,
with government approval, and ear-marked for the Kinmount depot.
The new immigrants traveled to Toronto where they boarded the train for
the nearest railhead: Coboconk. (Sigtryggur Jonasson was hired as the representative
of the Canadian immigration department.)
Local residents
were hired by the railway company to team the new arrivals from Coboconk
over the newly opened Monck Road to their camps at Kinmount.
The railway
company built five large lumber style shanties (70 feet by 20 feet) to
accommodate the new arrivals. These shanties were spread along the
track south of the village. The nearest was located oneself mile
south of town and the farthest two and one half miles south of Kinmount.
Their main settlement was called Hayford and was likely located near Crego
Creek. The trestle over Crego Creek and surrounding rock cuts were
the main operations at the time. Soon after their arrival in October, 1874,
tragedy began to stalk the beleaguered immigrants.
A major epidemic
of diarrhea and sickness dogged them. A Doctor Fidler was dispatched
by the railway company to check out the situation. In a report of
November 7, he reported that sixteen small children had died in the three
weeks since their arrival. Two children had died in the one night
he spent among them. Dr. Fidler maintained the diarrhea was caused
by the overcrowded shanties, poor sanitation, bad ventilation, and an
unbalanced and strange diet. This report galvanized the railway company
into action. A number of officials, including President Laidlaw,
paid Hayford a visit.
They agreed to
overhaul the existing shanties by installing higher roofs with better ventilation,
as well as building several more barracks to alleviate overcrowding.
The Icelanders were upbraided by Laidlaw for their laziness when only fifty
of ninety men showed up for work in any one day. They were also warned
to adjust their diet and hygiene. Evidently, the Icelanders were
unused to the heavy meat diet they were allotted. Dr. Charles Curry
of Minden was assigned to watch over their health.
They were promised
a school. Sigtryggur Jonasson was to open a store in town to cater
to their needs. William Hartle, Crown Lands Agent, was also assigned
to look after their welfare and assist them in settling on farms in the
area. Part of the plan to assist the newcomers in becoming, permanent
settlers was to settle them on free grant lots in Lutterworth and Snowdon.
Many Icelanders were anxious to locate on farms in order to plant a spring
crop. In the spring of 1875, many Icelanders did actually move to
their locations and begin to chop their lots. The local residents
were impressed with the Icelanders.
Despite a language
gap between the two group - only Jonasson could speak English , there was
some interaction. The Kinmount correspondent for the Lindsay Post
wrote: The Icelanders are getting on favourably and are much liked by the
old settlers as they are genial and accommodating. (Canadian Post, October
30, 1874).
A further report
maintains Kinmount never knew "a more sober, honest, and peaceable class
of people." (Canadian Post, April 23, 1875). The newcomers were invited
to logging bees and were made to feel part of the community. When
the Fenelon Falls Gazette attacked the Icelanders as lazy, drunken bums
better gone from the area, the local residents rallied to their defense.
In the tough times, during the summer of 1875, many local farmers employed
the out-of-work immigrants out of sympathy. Curiosity soon gave way
to acceptance and relations between the locals and the Icelanders remained
cordial down to the end. A major problem for the new settlers was the language
barrier. Only Sigtryggur Jonasson spoke English and the local residents
were not famous for their proficiency in Icelandic.
Consequently,
Jonasson was the interpreter and go-between in dealings with the natives.
High on the list of priorities was a school for the new arrivals where
they could master English. After several delays a school was set
up, during the winter of 1875, with Sigtryggur Jonasson as teacher.
The school continued to operate as long as Jonasson was available to teach.
The Icelanders
depended upon the railway as their source of income. Normally work
on the line was suspended for the winter months, but the Icelanders were
kept working through the winter of 1874-5. Then in March, disaster
struck. The Victoria Railway Company ran out of funds and was forced
to suspend operations.
The Icelanders
were thrown out of work. They were suddenly destitute and desperate.
After anxiously waiting for the railway construction to begin again, the
colony began to dissolve. Many who could afford to, moved away in
search of work. Others gallantly took up land and began to clear
farms. They hired themselves out to local farmers and tried to make
ends meet until work on the railway began again. William Hartle,
Crown Lands Agent, helped out as best he could, employing the following
Icelanders as road workers in the summer of 1875:
Ami Thorlakeson
Jon Johnasson
Ingridi Indridian
Pall Bjarnson
Jason Halderson
Jonathan Halderson
Gisli Gislison
Bjorn Jasuas
By May 1875,
only about thirty-five families - one hundred fifty people - remained at
Kinmount. By June a further twelve families had abandoned the area
and moved away. By the end of July, the remainder had given up hope
for work on the railway and drastic action was deemed necessary.
Employment around Kinmount was scarce.
Pioneering was
extremely difficult for those Icelanders unused to the peculiarities of
the area. Many of the Icelanders had been herdsmen and fisherman
back home, a far cry from the shanty/chopping type of farm at Kinmount.
The slow dissolution of the colony was a major crisis to the leaders who
were determined to have the settlers stick together.
In the hour
of crisis, several persons from different backgrounds rallied to the Icelanders
aid. John Taylor, in the service of the British Canadian Bible Society
in 1875, was a missionary among the settlements and lumber camps of Haliburton
.
His niece, Caroline,
on a visit to the Taylor's, happened to pass through Kinmount on her way
north. There she saw several Icelanders and became sympathetic to
their plight. She reported her brief encounter to her uncle, who
traveled to Kinmount, became acquainted with the dissatisfied immigrants
and agreed to help their cause. In the summer of 1875, Northwest
Fever was running unabated through the area, and rumours of the rich and
empty lands in Manitoba reached the ears of the Icelandic community.
John Taylor went to Ottawa and somehow secured government funds for an
advance scouting expedition to the Red River Valley in Manitoba.
meeting,
May 30, 1875, in Kinmount elected John Taylor as leader of the expedition
and Sigtryggur Jonasson, Einar Jonasson, Skapti Arason, and Kristjan Jonsson
as the other members. They left Kinmount on July 2, 1875, and traveled
via Wisconsin to the new province of Manitoba.
They were very
impressed by the territory, the economic potential, the terrain along Lake
Winnipeg (which reminded them more of Iceland than the dense forests of
Kinmount), and the fact that there was unlimited space to live in a body.
The advance party agreed to recommend the new site and return to Kinmount.
The settlers at Kinmount were notified in August to prepare for the move.
Only one thing
stood in their way: money. John Taylor made an appeal to the government
in Ottawa for a. grant, but was initially refused. Governor General
Lord Dufferin then intervened and the grant was secured. The entire
Kinmount group packed up and trekked to Manitoba. Other small groups
and individuals who had left Kinmount earlier were contacted by Sigtryggur
Jonasson and invited to the new site. They all agreed to move to
the new colony.
Icelanders who
had settled previously in Wisconsin also joined the Kinmount emigrants.
Word was sent back to Iceland and eventually more Icelanders immigrated
to Manitoba. The colonists settled on the shores of Lake Winnipeg
around what was to become the town of Gimli and their descendants live
there to this very day. The Icelandic settlement at Kinmount was
a well meaning idea that failed. It might have succeeded had not
work on the Victoria Railway halted for a year. The new immigrants
were suffering culture shock and could not acclimatize themselves to hacking
a farm out of the Snowdon bush.
The lots they
abandoned were later occupied by other settlers and successfully farmed.
The Icelanders also wanted to remain together in a tight body, and there
was just not enough available land at Kinmount to satisfy this desire.
Most were destitute and desperately poor when they left Kinmount, and somewhat
disillusioned with local back township economics. Had they stayed,
in a few short years they would have seen the local economy boom as the
railway brought new economic vitality. Maybe the Kinmount of today
would have been graced with such surnames as Jonasson, Gislason, Thorlakeson,
and Bjarnson.
The Icelanders
must have felt no grudge against their former friends in Kinmount for they
continued to correspond with the locals after their move. One such
letter in January 1876, informed their Kinmount friends that the new colony
had been established. (Canadian Post, January 28, 1876).
All they left
behind were memories, legends, and about thirty unmarked graves of those
Icelanders who made Kinmount their final stop.
See also
Icelanders in Canada
"Guy Scott was
born and raised in Kinmount. From an early age, he
was taught by
various family members to have a keen appreciation for
history.
A lifelong ambition was to become a history teacher and write a
book about history.
To that effect he graduated from Carleton University
in Ottawa with
an Honours B.A. in history (1979), and from the University
of Ottawa with
a Bachelor of Education degree (B.ED. 1980).
Although his
first interests lay in world history, he realized a terrible void existed
in published local history. The Kinmount community had a story
that needed telling. Work on this book was begun in 1983, the Ontario
Bicentennial year. Previously the author collaborated on the booklet
"Memories of Somerville Township" published for the Bicentennial.
After three exhausting years, 'A History of Kinmount' was completed."
Guy Scott's book, "History of Kinmount - A Community on the Fringe"
containing a
chapter on Icelandic settlers, published 1987, can be ordered from him
at:
Box 10, Kinmount,
ON - Canada - K0M 2A2, Phone (705) 488-3182,
or work (705)
488-2211, FAX (705) 488-3343.
Guy has also
written another excellent book, "History of Agricultural Societies and
Fall Fairs in Ontario - 1792-1992", published in 1992 by John Deyell
of Lindsay, ON.
Each title sells
for $15.00 CDN or US , plus $4.00 shipping and handling.