Bjorn Ingvar Sigvaldason was born 14 April 1878 at Audunarstadir i Vididal,
Thorkelsholshreppur, Vestur-Hunavatnssysla, Iceland, the eldest child born to
Sigvaldi Johannesson, a farmer, and his second wife Ingibjorg Steinnun
Magnusdottir, married in 1877 according to family records. Sigvaldi’s first
wife, Gudrun Thorsteinsdottir, died following the birth of their son, Johannes
Lindal Sigvaldason in 1876.
Pages
- 2024 Transfer of Library of Books to University of Iceland: Óskar Sigvaldason
- Detailed List of ICELANDIC BOOKS in Collection
- LINKS TO BOOK COVERS AND FIRST PAGES
- BIO: BJORN INGVAR SIGVALDASON 1878-1947
- BIO: GUÐJONA LARA JOHNSON 1891-1986
- SIGVALDASON FAMILY PHOTOS
- SIGVALDASON HERITAGE HOUSE in Arborg, MB
- A STORIED PAST by Kristjana Magnusson Clark
- OLI MOOSE, a short story written by Emil T.Sigvaldason of Lethbridge, Alberta
Thursday, July 9, 2015
Biographical Information of GUDJONA LARA JOHNSON 1891 - 1986
Gudjona Lara
Johnson
(1891-1986)
·
Born
4 February 1891 at Churchbridge, Saskatchewan, Canada, the eldest of two
children of Gudni Jonsson (who took the English surname of Johnson after
arriving in Canada) and Thora Jonsdottir. Gudjona Lara Johnson’s only sibling was a brother,
Kristjan Thordur Johnson (ca.1892-1943), who married Halldora “Dora” Johannson
Nielson, a widow from Copenhagen, Denmark with a daughter whom Kristjan adopted.
A STORIED PAST by Kristjana Magnusson Clark
During a trip to Arborg, Manitoba
last October, I walked through our old family home, the Sigvaldason House,
which is now awaiting restoration at The Arborg & District Multicultural Heritage
Village. The original owners of this home
had been The Oblate Fathers who were affiliated with the St. Benedict’s
Convent. My parents, Bjorn and Lara Sigvaldason, were the second owners,
followed by my brother Bjossi Sigvaldason and his family, then by the Frank
Koblun family and lastly, the David Smolinsky family, who so generously donated
the house to the Arborg & District Multicultural Heritage Village.
As I stepped into the house a flood
of memories assailed me, for it has been said that every old house attains a
certain mysterious beauty, with its storied past.
I was now reminded of some special events that had taken place during the many years when we sixteen children, ten girls and six boys, had lived there.
When I walked into Dad’s office room
upstairs, I was reminded of how I loved to sit by the sunny west window,
reading for hours on end. This small, sunny room, where the dappled afternoon
sunlight cast tender ripples of light and shadow, was conducive to reading. The
wonderful set of Book of Knowledge on the shelves in Dad’s office opened up a
completely new world to me. |
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