The
First Icelandic Unitarian Society of Winnipeg was established on February 1,
1891 at the city's Progressive Society Hall, where its founding minister, Rev. Björn
Pétursson, had been conducting services for nearly a year. Björn had been a
member of the Althing in Iceland and he was the first settler at Sandy Bar in
the Manitoba’s New Iceland colony. The congregation’s first president was Jón
E. Eldon, editor of Heimskringla, and
he was succeeded by Jón Ólafsson, another prominent journalist. The first
Unitarian congregation among the Icelandic immigrants in North America, this
was also the first Canadian Unitarian congregation west of Hamilton, Ontario.
Rev. Björn Pétursson (1826-1893) |
The groundwork for
the new congregation began to be laid in 1886, when Björn Pétursson, a
59-year-old Icelandic immigrant who had been in North America for about a
decade, read an advertisement for the Post Office Mission, an early Unitarian
outreach effort. He sent away for materials and received a reply from Jennie
McCaine, who was the general secretary of the mission in St. Paul, Minnesota.
Over the course of the summer and early autumn, Björn devoured the materials
Jennie had sent him and, in mid-October, he wrote to her, saying, “I am fully
satisfied that I belong to your church, heart and soul. ... I recognize in the
Unitarian movement the reformation I have long hoped for and expected and should
be glad to get a chance to promote the same among my countrymen …”
The son of a
minister, Björn had been expelled from the theological school in Reykjavík for
leading a student rebellion. After more than twenty years as a farmer in the
east of Iceland, he joined the westward migration of Icelanders to Manitoba,
accompanied by his first wife and their children. They claimed land at Sandy
Bar, near Riverton, and later moved to Dakota Territory, where he was a
founding member of the Icelandic Cultural Society, an association of
freethinkers, patterned on the Ethical Culture movement of Felix Adler. Björn
was well liked by those who knew him, although he did not shy away from
controversy.
Towards the end of
1886, Jennie set out to secure funding to establish a mission among the
Icelandic immigrants. She also arranged for Björn to attend the annual
meeting of the Minnesota Unitarian Conference that year, when it was held in
St. Cloud, and she made his acquaintance there. By then a widower, he was
evidently much more charming, trustworthy, and inspiring than she had even
imagined. In time, religion led to romance and the two of them were married in
Winnipeg on March 11, 1890 – the same month that Björn began conducting
Unitarian services in the city.
If Björn was the natural
spokesperson, it was Jennie who was the organizational genius behind the
mission. Together, they organized the First Icelandic Unitarian Society of
Winnipeg on February 1, 1891 with 60 charter members. Björn was the reluctant
minister of the new congregation, for he had hoped to recruit the noteworthy
Icelandic minister and poet Matthías Jochumsson to serve instead, but this
dream was not to be.
Soon, construction of a
chapel to house the young congregation was underway on the northeast corner of
Sherbrook Street and Pacific Avenue. By the beginning of December in 1892, the
building was fully enclosed and the congregation was furnishing the interior.
The first service was held on Christmas, which fell on a Sunday that year. It
was a small chapel: a wooden building, twenty-eight feet by fifty-four feet,
along with a 300 square foot annex to serve as an auxiliary meeting room. It
was plainly furnished and could seat 250 people. An appeal to American
Unitarian churches raised $1,284, just $16 short of the mortgage, which was
settled before the congregation occupied the building.
Jennie McCaine Peterson (1838-1918) |
The new church was
christened “Unity Hall” and it was Björn’s and Jennie’s vision that it would be
a community centre and not simply a place of worship. It was anticipated that
the church would be used for a wide variety of purposes, both sacred and
secular. So it was: the Winnipeg Secular Association met regularly at Unity
Hall and Jennie often spoke before this group of freethinkers.
Looking back on the
early years, we would now say that Björn and Jennie shared the ministry,
although it was Björn who could speak directly to this immigrant congregation.
However, Jennie preached increasingly for Björn as his health deteriorated
during the last year of his life. Björn died a little more than two and a half
years after the congregation was founded, but Jennie continued the ministry
(assisted by translators) until the middle of 1894, when Rev. Magnús J.
Skaptason arrived in Winnipeg to assume the leadership of the fledgling
congregation.
Confident that the
Unitarianism had been firmly planted among the Icelanders of Winnipeg, Jennie
departed for St. Paul and, from there, she eventually made her way back to New
England, where she died in 1918 at the age of 80. She kept in touch with former
congregants and Björn’s family through faithful and regular correspondence,
continuing to advocate for the Icelandic mission for the remainder of her days.
2 comments:
Thanks Stefan for this great article about my great great grandfather.
Thanks Stefan for this great article about my great great grandfather.
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