Jón Ólafsson (journalist)

This is an Icelandic name. The last name is a patronymic, not a family name; this person is properly referred to by the given name Jón.
Jón Ólafsson.

Jón Ólafsson (20 March 1850 – 11 July 1916) was an Icelandic editor, journalist, and poet.

He was the half-brother of Páll Ólafsson. He became a journalist in Iceland in 1868, but due to disobedience to the authorities, he had to emigrate to North America in 1872. There, a lawyer convinced him that it would be a good idea for people from Iceland to immigrate into Alaska, especially to the Island of Kodiak. Jón made a petition to President Ulysses S. Grant and met with him, but neither that nor the bill to Congress lead to success, as the government of Canada had in the meanwhile offered land around Winnipeg to immigrants from Iceland.[1] Jón wrote a book on his ideas for a glorious Icelandic Alaska detailing his high hopes.

References

  1. Sigurður Gylfi Magnússon (2012). Wasteland with Words: A Social History of Iceland. Reaktion Books. p. 78.

External links


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