Friday, July 6, 2012

WWII Internment Camps in Canada


Post card of German prisoners of war at Internment Camp 30,
Bowmanville, Ontario, December 1944

 
On September 3, 1939, Canada declared war on Germany. Internment camps were established across the country to house military prisoners of war, merchant seamen, refugees, and other civilian detainees. When Italy declared war against the Allies on June 10th 1940, residents of Italian descent were subject to internment. The Japanese in Canada were interned in 1942.

The Canadian government set up over two dozen camps during the war, housing over 35,000 military prisoners and interned civilians. The first German prisoners arrived in Canada soon after the declaration of war. Jewish refugees who had been residents or were citizens of enemy countries were regarded as enemy aliens and were also interned in camps upon their arrival in Canada. Germans and Japanese (civilians only) made up the majority of prisoners in internment camps in Canada during the war.

Classification of Prisoners

After 1943, prisoners held in Canada were almost all German military personnel who were assigned colors according to their allegiance to Nazism. Anti-Nazis were Whites, those with no particular allegiance were Greys, and Nazi hardliners were Blacks.

Designation of POW camps (Alphabet/Numbers)
Camps were first designated by letters of the alphabet. On October 15, 1941, the letters were changed to numbers corresponding to military district numbering. POW hammers with numbers were distributed to the internments camps in early 1943.
Covers to and from many of the internment camps are shown in this posting.

Reference  

 Thematic Guides : Internment Camps in Canada during the First and Second World Wars (Library and Archives Canada)

Internment Camps


No. 10 Internment Camp : Chatham and Fingal, Ontario


The Chatham/Fingal camp was a tented camp housing merchant seamen who were employed in farming projects in southwestern Ontario. The camp was first opened in 1944 and closed at Fingal on November 14, 1946.

 
Internment Camp 10, September 29, 1945
Prisoner had been transferred from Camp 23, Monteith

 
P.O.W. 10 circular date stamp


No. 20 Internment Camp. Gravenhurst, Ontario, (formerly camp C)


The Gravenhurst camp opened on June 30 1940 in the Calydor Sanitorium (TB), near Gravenhurst. This resort-like camp in the Muskokas housed officers and other ranks until closing on June 29, 1946. In December, 1944, the camp became a "Black" camp for officers, i.e. die-hard Nazis.


Internment Camp 20 (Gravenhurst) November 20, 1944


P.O.W. 20 circular date stamp
November 20, 1943

No. 21 Internment Camp, Espanola, Ont. (formerly Camp E)

The Espanola camp opened on July 7 1940 on the mill site owned by Abitibi Power and Paper, 40 miles west of Sudbury. Over 1400 German army, navy and air force arrived from Britain in July 1940. In May 1943, over 1000 were transferred to Lethbridge (camp 133). The camp closed on November 30, 1943.


Camp "E", Espanola, Ont. to Vienna
Base A.P.O. cancellation, July 17, 1941


From Internment Camp "E"



Camp "E", Espanola, Ont. to Vienna
Base A.P.O. cancellation, January 20, 1941


From Internment Camp "E"



Internment Camp 21 (Espanola) to Konstanz, Germany
Base A.P.O. January


Sender: Theodoe Kutsche
Internment Camp "21"


No. 22 Internment Camp, New Toronto (Mimico), Ontario (formerly Camp M)

The Mimico internment camp opened on June 25, 1940 at the Ontario Reformatory, Mimico. Enemy merchant seamen and civilians were transferred to the camp which closed on April 30, 1944.


Internment Camp "M" (Mimico, Ont.) to Sao Paulo, Brazil
Base A.P.O. October 18, 1941




No. 23 Internment Camp, Monteith, Ontario (formerly camp Q)

The Monteith camp was located in northeastern Ontario at the Ontario Government Detention Farm, 35 miles south of Cochrane. Internees and enemy merchant seaman first arrived at Monteith on July 14, 1940. The camp closed in December 1946.



Hampstead Rd., London, to Aliens Internment Camp, Liverpool
July 13, 1940 (2d. post card rate shortpaid 1/2d. and taxed 1d.)
Forwarded to Internee Camp "Q"


Internee at Camp "Q"


Oakland, California to Camp "Q", October 3, 1940



Internment Camp "23" (Monteith)
Base A.P.O. May 5, 1942


From Internment Camp "23"



San Francisco to Internment Camp "23" (Monteith), July 7, 1944


To Internment Camp "23"


Veteran Guards Of Canada

In May 1940, the Veteran Guards of Canada was created. The Veteran Guards consisted mostly of First World War veterans too old for battlefront duty. They assumed responsibility for guarding POWs in May 1941.


From Veteran Guards of Canada member at Internment Camp "23", Monteith
Canadian War Legion Services stationery
North Bay and Timmins R.P.O., November 1944



From Pte Woodrow, 6 Active Coy, V.G. of C.
Monteith, Ontario


No. 30 Internment camp, Bowmanville, Ontario

Opened in November 1941 at the Ontario Boys' Training School, the Bowmanville camp housed officers and orderlies. It became a grey officers' camp in December 1944 and closed on July 30, 1945.


Internment Camp "30" (Bowmanville)
Base A.P.O. March 17, 1942





Post cards of group photos were made available to POWs


Address side of post card
Internment Camp 30 (Bowmanville), December 1, 1944


P.O.W. 30 circular date stamp
December 1, 1944


No. 31 Internment Camp, Fort Henry (Kingston), Ontario (formerly camp F)

In September 1939, Fort Henry was a receiving station and temporary internment centre until the camp at Petawawa was ready for occupancy. Fort Henry opened as a camp on June 29, 1940 with the arrival of 600 enemy merchant seamen and German merchants from West Africa. The camp closed on December 20, 1943.

 

Bad Wilsnack, Germany to Internment Camp C, January 28, 1941
POW had been transferred to Camp F, Fort Henry  (Blue crayon marking)

The POW had been interned at Camp C

"F" indicates the POW had been transferred to Fort Henry

No. 32 Internment Camp, Hull, Quebec (formerly Camp H)
Opened August 9 1941 in the newly constructed provincial jail in Val Tetreau, the Hull camp`s first occupants were 90 members of the Communist Party of Canada who were transferred from Petawawa (Camp 33) after trouble developed between them and Fascist internees at Petawawa. Prisoners in Hull Camp were employed on farms in the Ottawa-Hull area, many on farms.
The Camp was disbanded March 20, 1947.


Detroit to County Gaol, London, Ont., February 2, 1941
London Gaol censorship, February 3, 1941
Camp "H" Commandant handstamp, October, 13, 1941


Camp "H" Commandant handstamp
Hull, Que., October 13, 1941


London Gaol censored handstamp (Feb. 3, 1941)
Canada Internment censored handstamp



No. 33 Internment Camp, Petawawa, Ont. (formerly camp P)

Petawawa opened 23 September 1939 at the Forest Experimental Station, Centre
Lake, 12 1/2 miles from the Petawawa Military camp. The first inmates were aliens of enemy origin who were transferred from Fort Henry (Camp 31). In June 1941 the camp included 409 internees of British nationality, 103 of whom were members of either the Communist or the Unity party. There were also 298 internees who were "foreign born" (95 Germans, 174 Italians). The camp which housed Japanese-Canadian internees, merchant seamen, and combatants, closed on March 31, 1946.
(cover not shown)


No. 40 Internment Camp, Farnham, Quebec (formerly Camp A)

The Farnham Camp opened October 11 1940 at the Dominion Experimental Station with the arrival of 139 internees (refugees) from Quebec (Camp L), 180 from Monteith (Camp 23) and 200 from Fredericton (Camp 70).

Farnham`s Status changed to a refugee camp in July 1941. All 445 refugees in camp were transferred to Sherbrooke (Camp 42) on January 23, 1942 and the camp was closed temporarily. Farnham Camp re-opened as an internment camp on April 18, 1942 with the arrival of 597 enemy merchant seamen. Prisoners left for the UK on May 22 1946 and the camp closed on June 17, 1946.


Heatfield, England, to internee at Camp "L" (Cove Fields, Que)
Base A.P.O. (Ottawa) receiver, October 20, 1940
Camp L had closed down. The internee had moved to Camp "A"
at Farnham, Que.




Letter sent to Camp "A"
Farnham, Que.


Camp "A" Farnham, Que., to New York
Base A.P.O. cancellation, February 19, 1941


Sender Dr. Richard Strauss
Camp "A"



Internment Camp 40 (Farnham), Dec. 17, 1942


Internment Camp "40" (Farnham)



Chevaliers de Colomb, Services de Guerre stationery
Correspondence probably from Farnham Internment Camp Guard
Farnham, April 18, 1944


Chevaliers de Colomb
Services de Guerre



Farnham, April 18, 1944


No. 41 Internment Camp, Ile aux Noix, Quebec (formerly Camp I)

The Ile aux Noix camp opened July 15 1940 with the arrival of 273 Jewish internees and became a refugee camp in July, 1941. Most refugees were released by the fall of 1943. The camp closed December 24, 1943.


Internment Camp "I", Isle Aux Noix, Quebec to London, England
Base A.P.O. ,March 17, 1943


Camp "I" return address


Canadian Legion War Services stationery
Letter probably sent by guard at Ile-Aux-Noix refugee camp
Isle-Aux-Noix to Montreal, March 1942


No. 42 Internment Camp, Sherbrooke, Quebec (formerly Camp N)

The Sherbrooke Camp opened on October 15, 1940 in buildings owned by Quebec Central Railway and became a refugee camp on June 30 1941. All refugees remaining in the camp were transferred to Ile aux Noix in November 1942. The camp then housed Enemy Merchant Seamen until June 1946.


Internment Camp "N" (Sherbrooke) to Detroit
Base A.P.O. December 7, 1940


Camp "N" (Sherbrooke)



Montreal to Refugee Camp "N", August 13, 1941


London, England to Internment (Refugee) Camp "N" (Sherbrooke)
June 30, 1942


Refugee camps were placed under the control of the
Secretary of State. The office of the Commission for Refugee
Camps (C.R.C.) censored refugee mail and affixed a
circular C.R.C. numbered handstamp

No. 43 Internment Camp, St. Helen's Island (Montreal) (formerly Camp S)

Opened in July 1940, St. Helen`s Island held Italian Enemy Merchant Seamen and Italian internees. The camp also served as an assembly point for internees and refugees returning
to the UK Most inmates were either released or returned to the UK by the time the camp
closed in November 1943.



Camp "S" (St. Helene's Island) to Oxford, England
Base A.P.O. July 31, 1941





Rome to P.O.W. Internment Camp 43 (St. Helene's Island)
Base A.P.O. receiver June 21, 1943


To Camp "43"


No. 44 Internment Camp, Grand Ligne, Quebec

The Grande Ligne camp was located on a 240-acre farm belonging to the Feller Institute, Grande Ligne Mission which was taken over in January, 1943. The camp housed officers, servants and Enemy Merchant Seamen. It became a grey camp for officers from December 1944. The camp closed in May, 1946.


Internment Camp 44 (Grande Ligne, Quebec), November 6, 1943


P.O.W. 44
Grande Ligne, Quebec
November 6, 1943

No. 45 Internment Camp Sorel, Quebec

Opened May 9, 1945 in a former army basic training centre, Camp Sorel was a "white" camp, composed of officers and other ranks, who were to supply material to be used as propaganda in Germany as well as material to be used in re-education work in "grey" camps Prisoners left for repatriation in March 1946. The camp closed on April 17, 1946.
(Cover not shown)



No. 70 Internment Camp. Fredericton. N.B. (formerly Camp B)

Fredericton Camp was located on the site of former Unemployment Relief Camp (Little River Camp, Colters Siding) in Acadian Forest Experiment Station, 20 miles west of Fredericton
717 internees, many of them Jewish, arrived from Trois-Rivieres (Camp T) August 12, 1940. The camp housed civilian internees and a few merchant seaman until August, 1945. The camp closed on October 14, 1945.


Camp "B", Fredericton, N.B., to Oxford England.
Base A.P.O. cancellation, January 28, 1941


Addressee: Paul Hirsh


Toronto to internee, Camp "B", Fredericton N.B., November 8, 1940


No. 100 Internment Camp Neys, Ontario (formerly Camp W)

Camp Neyes was opened January 13, 1941 on Lake Superior shore at the mouth of Little Pie
River, near Jackfish and Schreiber housing officers and other ranks. Approximately 650 civilian internees arrived from Monteith November 26, 1941. The camp was closed temporarily in December 1943 and 16 re-opened in August 1944 becoming a "super black" camp for other ranks. The camp closed on April 30, 1946.


Internment Camp "W", Neyes, Ontario
Base A.P.O. November 15, 1942


Internment Camp "W"


Internment Camp 100 (Neyes, Ontario) to Memel (Lithuania)
November 15, 1943


P.O.W. 100
November 15, 1943


No. 101 Internment Camp, Angler, Ont. (formerly camp X)

Camp Angler opened in January, 1941 at Ontario Highway construction Camp No. 12. By May 1942, there were almost 700 other ranks in the camp. All prisoners were transferred to Ozada (Camp 133) on June 13, 1942. Japanese-Canadian internees began to arrive at the camp on June 19, 1942. Internees were released one by one, beginning in February 1943. The camp closed on July 29, 1946.


Internment Camp 101 ( Angler)
Base A.P.O. March 2, 1942




No. 130 Internment Camp Seebe, Alta (formerly Camp X)

Opened 6 September 1939 at Eau Clair Camp Kananaskis, a former Unemployment
Relief camp 60 miles west of Calgary. The camp housed Canadian residents of enemy alien origin, mostly German, who were apprehended by the RCMP in the four western provinces
Members of the Communist Party and Canadians of Italian origin joined them in June 1940. 507 German internees, mostly enemy merchant seamen, arrived from Red Rock
(camp R) in October 1941. Camp Seebe became a "super black" camp for officers from December 1944. The camp closed on June 28, 1946


Kananaskis Internment Camp to Winnipeg, September 26, 1939
Postage Free



Kananaskis Camp handstamp, September 26, 1939


"PRISONERS OF WAR CORRESPONDENCE"straightline handstamp


Seebe, Alta., Sept. 29, 1939


No. 132 Internment Camp, Medicine Hat, A1ta.

The Medicine Hat camp, constructed to house 10,000 other ranks, was opened January 1, 1943. The first 500 arrived from Libya on May 8, 1943. 900 arrived from Normandy in July 1944, thousands more in September. Medicine Hat was a camp for "grey" other ranks from December 1944. Most of the camp was transferred to Monteith in February 1946. The remaining 85 were witnesses at trials of accused murderers of August Plaszek and Karl Lehmann. The camp closed on April 30, 1946.


Internment Camp 132, Medicine Hat, January 10, 1944


P.O.W. 132
Medicine Hat


No. 133 Internment Camp, Ozada and Lethbridge, Alta.

A tented camp for other ranks opened at Ozada, Morley Flats, Alberta May 6, 1942. There were almost 13,000 prisoners at the camp by September, 1942. The camp moved to permanent quarters at Lethbridge in November-December 1942. Lethbridge was a camp for for "black" and "dark grey" other ranks from December 1944. The camp closed in the fall of 1946


Internment Camp 133, Lethbridge, July 10, 1943


P.O.W. 133
Lethbridge, Alberta



Internment Camp 133, Lethbridge, March 28, 1944



P.O.W. 133 Air Mail meter
March 28, 1944


No. 135 Internment Camp. Wainwright. Alta.

In December, 1944, the Army training camp at Wainwright, Alberta was converted to a camp to house "black" and "dark grey" officers and servants. The camp closed in June, 1946.
(Cover not shown)



Internment Camp "L", Cove Fields, Ouebec

Camp "L" was opened on July 13, 1940 as a temporary camp to accommodate 743 internees who arrived from the U.K. aboard S.S. Ettrick. All but 90 were, in fact, refugees and 60% were Jewish (i.e. 600 Jews, 102 others) The remaining 90 were considered to be pro-Nazi. The British Government requested that the internees be treated as refugees. The Jewish internees were moved to Sherbrooke (Camp 42) in October 1940.


Heatfield, England, to internee at Camp "L" (Cove Fields, Que)
Base A.P.O. (Ottawa) receiver, October 20, 1940
Camp L had closed down. The internee had moved to Camp "A"
at Farnham, Que.




Letter sent to Camp "A"
Farnham, Que.


Internment Camp "R", Red Rock, Ontario

Camp "R" opened in July 1940 on property owned by Lake Sulphite Pulp Co. Ltd., Red Rock, Ontario. There were 1100 internees, approximately 900 enemy merchant seamen. The internees included merchants and professional men, many of whom came from former German African colonies. "A number of these men are of birth, breeding,- education and wealth". The merchant marine officers were "of quite superior type and largely anti-Nazi" Only 174 were considered anti-Nazi, 78 of whom were Jewish. The camp closed in October 1941 because water supply was "extremely unsatisfactory".


Internment Camp "R", ( Red Rock, Ont.) to New York
Base A.P.O. Nov. 25, 1940




Internment Camp "T", Trois-Rivieres, Quebec

The Trois-Rivieres camp opened in July 1940 in the Exhibition Buildings to accommodate internees from the U.K. (515 Jews, 202 others). The pro-Nazi internees were
transferred to New Toronto (Camp 22) in July 1940. The remainder transferred to Fredericton (Camp 70) August 12, 1940 and Camp "T" closed.
(Cover not shown)



Quebec Citadel

The Citadel was used as a temporary internment camp for enemy aliens in the fall of 1939. The aliens were transferred to Petawawa (Camp 33) on December 7, 1939.
(Cover not shown)

Monday, July 2, 2012

Scots at Government House 1893 - 1898

A Scottish influence on the Canadian political and social scene was felt in the 1890s when John Campbell Gordon, Lord Aberdeen, served as Canada's 7th Governor-General from 1893 until 1898.

Lord Aberdeen


Lord and Lady Aberdeen in Canada

Lord Aberdeen had visited Canada twice before becoming Governor- General. In 1891, he bought the Coldstream Ranch in the northern Okanagan Valley in British Columbia and launched the first commercial orchard operations in that region. During his vice-regal tenure, he and his wife Ishbel devoted much of their vice-regal time to good works. Aberdeen traveled extensively throughout the country and is described on the Canadian Govenor-General's website as having "transformed the role of Governor General from that of the aristocrat representing the King or Queen in Canada to a symbol representing the interests of all citizens".

Lady Aberdeen (1857-1939) was president of the International Council of Women for thirty-six years (1893–1936) and the National Council of Women of Canada for six years (1893–1899). In 1897, she founded the Victorian Order of Nurses for Canada and became the first President of the organisation. She also established the May Court Club, the first women's only service club in North America.

Invitations to state dinners were greatly prized during the Aberdeen govenor-generalship. Lady Aberdeen became famous for her tableaux, dramatizing incidents in Canadian history, conscripting household staff, guests and family members to play roles. In honour of the Queen's Jubilee in 1897,Lord and Lady Aberdeen,  staged a huge pageant in Toronto celebrating Canada's progress in industry, arts, sciences and sports.









Aberdeen-Tupper Constitutional Dispute 1896

Aberdeen's tenure was not without controversy as he became embroiled in a precedent-setting Constitutional battle with then Conservative Prime Minister Sir Charles Tupper, pictured at left.

Following the election of 1896 in which Sir Wilfred Laurier won 55% of the seats in the House of Commons, Tupper, who had won 51% of the popular vote, initially refused to cede power, insisting that Laurier would be unable to form a government.

When Tupper attempted to make appointments as prime minister, Lord Aberdeen refused to make some appointments to the bench and to the Senate. Tupper then chose to resign and Aberdeen invited Laurier to form a government.


John Sinclair (Baron Pentland)



Serving Aberdeen as comptroller of the Governor-General`s household was fellow Scot John Sinclair who had served as an elected member of the British Parliament from 1892 to 1895. Sinclair would later become the Secretary of Scotland and the Governor of Madras from 1912 to 1919.


Ottawa to Barrie, January 13, 1897
Government House correspondence
John Sinclair franking

Aberdeen Household

The Aberdeens had four surviving children, the youngest of whom, Archie and Marjorie, are seen in the photograph below with their parents and John Sinclair.


L. to R.: Capt. John Sinclair, Lady Aberdeen, Lord
Aberdeen, Archie Gordon, and Marjorie Gordon.


Marjorie Gordon`s piano playing is admired by John Sinclair in this 1896 photograph:




Marjorie Gordon married John Sinclair eight years later in 1904. They had two children.

Sunday, July 1, 2012

Free U.S. Military Mail from Vietnam to Canada

During the Vietnam war, letters and cards mailed by U.S. servicemen to Canadian addresses were mailable free of postage. Free Mail to Canada was introduced by the U.S. Post Office on March 1, 1966 but not all postal employees were aware of the privilege and some free mail was incorrectly rated for collection of postage due from the Canadian addressees. Postal employees were advised of the situation in the August 18, 1966 issue of the Postal Bulletin:




The cover shown below is an example of free U.S. military mail from Vietnam to Canada. The letter was mailed in 1968 from the 65th Engineering Battalion, 25th Infantry Division (U.S. Army) base camp at Cu Chi, to Joseph E. Seagram and Sons, Waterloo, Ont.



APO number 96225 was assigned to the 25th Infantry Division


Army and Air Force Postal Service 96225 machine cancellation
February 24, 1968



The "Castle Club" was an enlisted men's club for the
65th Engr. Bn. at Cu Chi



25th Infantry Division

The Cu Chi base, about 40 miles northwest of Saigon, was one of the six most important American military establishments in Vietnam. It was the headquarters for the whole area to the north-west of Saigon towards Cambodia.


25th Infantry Division Base Camp
Cu Chi

From 1966 to 1970, the 25th Division fought the North Vietnamese Army and the Viet Cong north and west of Saigon.

65th Engineering Battalion

In 1965, the Battalion deployed to Vietnam and during its deployment participated in twelve Vietnam campaigns, receiving a Meritorious Unit Commendation, two awards of the Republic of Vietnam Cross of Gallantry, and the Civil Action Honor Medal. The Battalion departed Vietnam in December 1970.



Saturday, June 30, 2012

Canada and the Cold War:
Emergency Stationery


Today's global fears are trivial compared to the threat of nuclear mutual assured destruction (M.A.D.) faced by Canadians during the cold war years. The possibility of nuclear attack from the U.S.S.R. was a threat taken seriously by the Canadian government. For example, on November 13, 1961, an emergency preparedness drill called Exercise Tocsin was held by the Canadian Government that simulated a nuclear attack on Canada. Every law enforcement agency, provincial, and municipal government took part in the exercise. Part of the exercise was a 13 minute radio programme that was broadcast by every radio transmitter in the country. The broadcast told citizens of Canada what to do in the event of nuclear war. Now that is scary!

What does this have to do with postal history? Well, it turns out that the Canada Post Office (CPO) wasn't going to let a nuclear attack prevent it from delivering letter mail. In 1960, the CPO printed Emergency Change of Address and Safety Notification Post Cards to be used "in time of war" by citizens who survived an attack.

The Emergency Change of Address Post Card was to be used by survivors to advise the post office of their "post-emergency" address so that their letter mail could be forwarded.



Address side


Enlargement of instructions on address side
 



The Safety Notification Postcard was to be used to advise friends and relatives that the addressee had survived the attack.


Address side


Enlargement of instructions on address side




How reassuring it must have been to know that the CPO would deliver mail in the aftermath of a nuclear attack.