© 2025, Christian Cassidy
I have come across many Icelandic immigrants who got into the local building trade, such as Vopni, Clemens, and Oddson after arriving in Manitoba. Whilst looking into the history of a house history on McGee Street, I came across carpenter Loftur Jorundson who certainly left his mark on the West End during its formative years.
Researching Jorundson was a bit of a challenge because of his name. Icelandic names are notoriously misspelled in English language sources like street directories, newspaper articles and even census records. For instance, his last name is spelled four different ways in street directories from 1895 to 1901. Icelandic sources use Loptur Jorundsson.
Here is what I could find about Loftur Jorundson:
(Library and Archives Canada)
Loftur Jorundson was born in 1861 at Hrisey, Iceland and came to Canada in 1888, likely first settling in the Lundar area. He married fellow Icelander Jónína Eiriksdottir in 1889 and they went on to have five sons: Eiríkur (b. ca. 1891); Sigtryggur (b. ca 1893); Jorundur (b. ca. 1895); Ingigunnar (b ca. 1898); Thorhallur (b. ca 1901); and Jens-Júlíus (b. ca. 1911).
Census records indicate that both Loftur and Jónína came to Canada ca. 1888, so they married quite soon after arriving. According to this community history, Jónína came to the Lundar region with her parents and siblings. It is unclear if the two knew each other in Iceland, met on the passage, or had a very quick courtship in Canada.

C. E. Steele's 1894 Birds Eye View of Winnipeg shows a sparsely populated West End. The streets would not be laid out formally like this for several years. Blue star is Portage, green star is Maryland, yellow star is McGee, purple star is Ellice.
(Full map at Manitoba Historical maps on Flickr)
Coming to the West End
The earliest sign I can find of the Jorundsons in Winnipeg comes in the 1895 street directory, the data for which would have been compiled in 1894. Loftur is listed as a carpenter living at 625 Ness Avenue. By 1897, the growing family had relocated to Simcoe Street.
At the time, the West End beyond Maryland Street would not have been formally subdivided by the city into proper streets, sidewalks, and boulevards. Streets like Simcoe would have been little more than country lanes serving the pasture land, dairy operations, and horse stables that operated in the area.
When the family first arrived on Simcoe, it contained ten houses on it from Portage Avenue to Notre Dame, none with street addresses. By the time they got a street address in 1903, the Jorundsons were at number 372 (now demolished), and there were just 15 houses on the street.
The Jorundson family moved to 339 McGee Street in 1904, a house that Jorundson built himself. In 1907, he built another at 351 McGee and this became the family home for years to come.
Not long after arriving in the West End, Loftur Jorundson took his carpentry skills up a level and became a commercial home builder.
Between 1902 and 1906, he received at least 14 building permits in his name for houses on West End streets such as Toronto, Victor, Sherbrook, and Furby. Five of them were for houses on Jane / McGee Street between Livinia Street (now St. Matthews Avenue) and Portage. (it may have been more permits but due to the spelling of the last name might not appear.)
The home building permits end in 1906 for a time. Jorundson may have worked as a subcontractor for a developer of larger structures as he returns to building in 1908 with several much more ambitious building permits to his name.
Jorundson's largest project was likely the 29-unit Quo Vadis Apartments on Qu’Appelle Avenue at Kennedy, just off Central Park. He took out the $56,000 building permit for the block which, was designed by architect David W Bellhouse, in May 1908. The three-storey plus full basement building measured 50 x 120 feet and was built of red brick with concrete trim.
This building was a bit of trailblazer as it was amongst the first wave of middle-class apartments built in the city. Prior to this, apartments were for the most part considered tenements, a place where poor people lived packed together to save on costs.
It was thanks to large group of Icelandic builders, developers, and architects, such as Paul Clemens and Thorstein Oddson, that the "three-storey walk-up" became respectable places to live and they built hundreds of them around the city. The Warwick Block, located a block from the Quo Vadis and constructed the following year, is often considered the first upscale apartment block in the city featuring balconies, fireplaces, a glassed-in courtyard, ad servants' entrances.
In 1909, came the five-unit terraced housing block on St. Matthews Avenue at Simcoe that Jorundson both designed and built using day labour. It stood until around 1980 and is now the Simcoe Street Tot Lot.
In June 1911, Jorundson teamed up with fellow Icelander and architect Paul M Clemens for the 21-suite Diana Court apartments on Furby Street. The building was renovated in 2013 and 2015, but shut down in 2018 and again in 2024 by city inspectors for health reasons.
It is likely the only substantial Jorundson building that is still standing.
Another permit was granted in September 1912 for an apartment on Maryland Street between Ellice and Sargent which he also designed. This was most likely the three-storey, ten-suite Loma Linda Apartments at number 516. It was just 25 feet wide by 100 feet long to fit onto a residential lot.
"For rent" ads for the block end in 1977 and in 1980 there was mortgage sale of a lot of two apartment blocks - the Queens at 516 Maryland and the Loma Linda at 514. The Queens still stands but the Loma Linda or its address does not appear in "for rent" ads again and was presumably demolished soon after the sale.
The last building permits issued to Jorundson were for two dwellings on Fleet Street between Lilac and Aynsley in 1913, a departure from his West End stomping grounds. I also found a newspaper mention of him owning four houses on Vernon Road in St. James in the 19-teens.
After this point, mentions of Jorundson and budling permits end. As noted below, he could have gone to work for one of his sons, become a subtractor, decided to get out of the construction business and become a landlord as he appears to have owned and rented out several of the properties he constructed.
Wartime
The First World War would have been a stressful time for the family as their three eldest would have been old enough to volunteer. None of them did.
Newspaper records show that a “J. Jorundson” of 351 McGee Street applied for an exemption from the draft. It didn’t work as 24-year-old John (Jerundar), a carpenter like his father, was drafted and assigned to the #10 Engineers Depot.
It appears that John served his time in Canada and was dismissed in March 1919 as being “medically unfit” for service. He suffered from ongoing bouts of abdominal pain and injured his wrist whilst winding equipment which required him to wear a splint. (By 1919, the war was over so the bar for getting a medical discharge from service was much lower than it would have been a couple of years earlier!)
You can read John’s full war record here.
Another son, Sigtrigur, was drafted in June 1918 towards the end of the war. He was discharged weeks later after his medical examination found him unfit for service. He got his hand caught in a planing machine in 1912 (perhaps working with his father?) that left him with “impaired function of his right hand”.
You can read Sigtrigur Jorundson’s war record here.
Post War
The Jorundson family stayed at 351 McGee until around 1918. They then disappear from street directories for a while, perhaps returning to the Lundar area or an extended vacation?
A classified ad that same year shows that son Eiríkur set up E. Jorundson and Co. carpenters and builders at a house the family rented a few doors down at 339 McGee Street, a house that Loftur Jorundson built in 1904 and presumably still owned.
Loftur and Jonina reappear in street directories at 444 Maryland Street in 1920 and eventually returned to 351 McGee Street for a year.
Several members of the family then reunited at the Quo Vadis apartments in 1922 where Loftus is listed as the caretaker.
By 1934, Loftur and Jonina moved to 555 Whytewold Road. Their son Julius moved into 583 Whytewold. These properties were likely semi-rural with large lots attached to them as the as neither of them exist today. The area became a suburban residential development in 1957.
Jonina Gorun Jorundson died at the family home in 1941 at the age of 75.
Loftur remarried Jóna Gíslason in 1944 at the age of 83! He died on March 5, 1952 at the age of
Loftur Jorundson kept a fairly low profile. His name is mentioned in passing in newspapers but he was never quoted or interviewed, even in the Icelandic press.
Some of those passing mentions show that he was a trustee of the Icelandic Lutheran Tabernacle at Sargent and Furby in 1905 and 1906. He was on the board of the 21st annual Icelandic celebration at Elm Park in 1910. In 1911, he was fined $5 by the city for not cleaning up the horse manure at 339 McGee Street.
Google translation (Icelandic to English) of Heimskringla obituary:
He was born June 16, 1861. He moved to the West in 1888 and lived in Winnipeg most of the time since then, mainly engaged in house building. He was married twice. His first wife was Jónína Magnússon. They were married in 1889. She died in August1941.
Their children were 6 boys. Four of them are living. They are: Sigtryggur; Ingigunnar; Thorhallur and Júlíus. Those who are deceased are Eiríkur and Jorundur. Loft's second wife was Jóna Gíslason. They were married on January 1, 1944. She survives him and currently lives with her daughter Mrs. Gisel on Beresford St.
The funeral took place Saturday, March 8 from the Mordue Bros. funeral home on Broadway. Rev. Philip M. Pétursson officiated. Burial was in Brookside Cemetery.