The Icelanders at Kinmount
History of Kinmount, A Community on the Fringe
Extract
of Chapter 8: The Icelanders at Kinmount
By: Guy Scott,
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
Canadian officials - had no difficulty with any of these basic
demands. About the same time as this group of Icelanders reached
Local residents were hired by the railway company to team the new
arrivals from Coboconk over the newly opened
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
They were promised a school. Sigtryggur
Despite a language gap between the two group - only
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
Consequently,
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 Thorlakson
· Jon Johnasson
· Ingridi Indridian
· Pall Bjarnson
· Jason 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
A meeting in Kinmount,
They were very impressed by the territory, the economic potential, the
terrain along
Only one thing stood in their way: money. John Taylor made an
appeal to the government in
Icelanders who had settled previously in