Identity area
Type of entity
Family
Authorized form of name
Woronuk, Erena
Parallel form(s) of name
Standardized form(s) of name according to other rules
Other form(s) of name
- Lazoruk, Erena
Identifiers for corporate bodies
Description area
Dates of existence
1894-1991
History
Nicolas Woronuk was born May 1, 1889, in the village of Onut, province of Bukovyna, Austria. In the late 1890s, his uncle emigrated to Canada and settled in Gardenton, Manitoba. He was followed by Nicolas' sisters and their husbands in 1903, and Nicolas' father, George, in 1904. In two years George earned enough money to provide passage for his son, and Nicolas arrived in Canada May 6, 1906. Unfortunately, due to delays in his lengthy trip, his mother heard rumors that he had died at sea and she died of shock. In 1910, the remainder of George Woronuk's children, a son Simon and two younger daughters, also came to Arabaka, MB.
Nick worked in logging camps, on farms and on the railroad, and by 1911 had saved $700. On November 12, 1911, he married Erena Lazoruk. Erena was born Nov. 16, 1894 in the village of Tovtry, Bukovyna, Austria. She came to southern Manitoba with her parents in 1903. Soon after their marriage, Nicolas and his brother-in-law, Mike Lazoruk, began to prospect for better land, and in 1913 chose some river lots in the Rycroft area. On September 12, 1913, five families began their trek to the Peace country: Nicholas and Erena Woronuk with their infant son; Nicholas and Sophia Lazoruk with four children; Michael and Dora Lazoruk with two children; Stephen and Elena Chalus with an infant son; and Yakiw amd Wasylena Lazoruk, the parents of these young couples.
When Nick, Elena and their one-year old son, George, arrived at their homestead in Late November, 1913, their joy at finishing an arduous journey was replaced with the prospects of a bleak, cold winter. Their cash was gone, their milk cow had died on the trail, and they had no food or milk for their child and only tents for shelter. They were very grateful to the Alexander family who helped by giving them some wheat and straw for feed and bedding. In January, 1914, after building a shelter for the oxen and a log shack to live in, the four husbands and four teams of oxen travelled back to Edson to pick up the cargo they had left in storage, returning in March.
In the fall of 1914, Nicolas returned to Edson on foot to guide his father, who had also left Manitoba to settle in Rycroft. Their first crop, in 1914, was hit by frost but enough was salvaged to provide relief, and gradually their hopes for a better life were realized. As the railway progressed westward and then south to Grande Prairie in 1916, it sliced through Grandfather George Woronuk's homestead on river lot 39. On the southern section of that divided lot, the hamlet of Rycroft took shape. In 1924, Nick Lazoruk and Nick Woronuk purchased a Case steam engine and started a business threshing crops in the area. Nick and Erena bought more land and in 1929 they built a new Aladdin home.
Nick and Erena had five sons who received their educations at local schools and went on to further education. George and Alex became teachers and businessmen, William a successful farmer, and Merose and John were, both dentists. Nick passed away in 1957, and Erena in 1991.
Places
Tovtry, Bukovyna, Austria
Rycroft, Alberta
Legal status
Functions, occupations and activities
Mandates/sources of authority
Internal structures/genealogy
Daughter of Yakiw and Wasylena Lazoruk.
Wife of Nicolas Woronuk.
Mother of George, Alex, William, Merose, and John Woronuk.
General context
Relationships area
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Rules and/or conventions used
Status
Final
Level of detail
Partial
Dates of creation, revision and deletion
Description entered March 5, 2015.
Language(s)
- English
Script(s)
Sources
Family history is in library book, "Wheat Fields and Wild Flowers".