Recording available: New Iceland in Canada - 150th Anniversary Reflections Webinar
Click HERE for the recording from the event on September 29th, 2025
In 1875, Canada established a reserve for Icelandic immigrants on the shores of Lake Winnipeg that the Icelanders called Nýja Ísland (New Iceland). As Parks Canada notes on a historic monument in Gimli, Manitoba, "New Iceland represents a distinctive episode in the early settlement of the Canadian West." Timed to coincide with the 150th anniversary of the founding of New Iceland, this webinar offers fresh insights into Icelandic emigration to Canada in the 1870s. In addition to exploring the push and pull factors that led to the foundation of New Iceland on the Western shores of Lake Winnipeg, the webinar also addresses the Icelandic emigrants' relations with Indigenous peoples, an important area of new historical research.
Agenda
11:30: Welcome
- Ambassador Hlynur Guðjónsson , Embassy of Iceland in Ottawa
11:30-12:05:New Iceland in Canada: 150th Anniversary Reflections
- The Icelandic Emigration to the Americas 1860-1914 From an International Perspective: Dr. Ólöf Garðarsdóttir, Professor in Social History, Dean of School, School of Humanities, University of Iceland
- Canada and Icelandic Immigration in the 1870s : Dr. Ryan Eyford, Associate Professor, Department of History, The University of Winnipeg
12:05-12:30: D iscussion and Q&A
Moderator: Valgeir Thorvaldsson, Founder, The Icelandic Emigration Center at Hofsós
12:30: Closing Remarks
- Ambassador Jenny Hill , Embassy of Canada in Iceland
Dr. Ólöf Garðarsdóttir is a Professor in Social History and the Dean of the School of Humanities at the University of Iceland. Her main research focus has been in the field of demographics and family history. Dr. Garðarsdóttir is a widely published author on migration, fertility, the history of health and public health, with emphasis on infant health, but also on childhood and the history of education.
Dr. Ryan Eyford is an associate professor in the Department of History at the University of Winnipeg. He is the author of White Settler Reserve: New Iceland and the Colonization of the Canadian West (UBC Press, 2016).