Title: Wainwright Internment Camp 135 1944 1946
1Wainwright Internment Camp 1351944 - 1946
- Prepared by
- Capt Kevin Winfield
- June 2005
2Discussion Points
- Historical Overview
- PoW Camps in Canada Alberta
- Wainwright Internment Camp 135
3Historical Overview
- 1939
- German invasion of Poland
- Britain and France declare war on Germany
- Initial engagements result in German PoWs and
internees
4Historical Overview
- 1940
- Fall of France
- Threat of German invasion of Britain
- Growing anxiety over Axis PoWs in UK
5Historical Overview
- 1940
- Canada and Australia petitioned by Britain to
take in PoWs - Canada agrees to help already accepting
captured German merchant seamen as early as
September, 1939
6Historical Overview
- 1940
- First boatload of 3,000 German Officers arrives
in Canada in June
7POW Camps
- Canada eventually establishes 26 Camps
nationwide, housing 37,525 PoWs at their peak - Locations ranged from historic Old Fort Henry
(Kingston) to makeshift barracks in the
Kananaskis - Situated primarily in Alberta, Ontario, Quebec
and New Brunswick
8POW Camps
- German PoW treatment in Canada considerably
better than that of their Allied counterparts - Criticism emerges that PoW camps were too posh
- Actual conditions varied, but much truth in
claims
9POW Camps
- Alberta technically
- operated five camps
- during WW II
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Kananaskis (Seebe)
Medicine Hat
Ozada
Lethbridge
Wainwright
10POW Camps
- The PoW Camps in Alberta were the biggest in
North America - The largest of these were in Lethbridge and
Medicine Hat identical in design, they held up
to 12,500 PoWs and cost more than 2 million to
construct
11Internment Camp 135
- Construction of Wainwright Internment Camp 135
began in late Autumn, 1944 - Almost six feet of ground frost recorded
- Despite very poor weather conditions, the Camp
was completed by end January, 1945
12Internment Camp 135
The first 523 prisoners arrived Monday morning,
29 January 1945, by train escort from Kananaskis
(Seebe) Camp 130
13Internment Camp 135
- Wainwright PoW compound relatively modest in its
size - Guarded by World War One Veterans
- PoWs consisted of officers, ORs and captured
civilians - Internee population peaked at 1090 in May 1945
14Internment Camp 135
Camp Perspectives Under Construction
15Internment Camp 135
Camp Perspectives PoW Barracks (facing
northwest)
16Internment Camp 135
Camp Perspectives PoW Barracks (facing north)
17Internment Camp 135
Camp Perspectives Building 27 (facing northeast)
18Internment Camp 135
Camp Perspectives Inside Building 27
19Internment Camp 135
Camp Perspectives Inside Building 27
20Internment Camp 135
Camp Perspectives German PoW Band
21Internment Camp 135
Historical HighlightsJan 44 to Jun 46
Only two prisoners successfully escaped
(re-captured the following month)
A 20 foot tunnel (with an eight foot shaft) was
discovered during a surprise inspection of a PoW
Barracks
Only one PoW death occurred at the Campa suicide
by a Luftwaffe Lieutenant near the Buffalo Park
Gates
22Internment Camp 135
- As the PoWs were officially British (and not
Canadian) prisoners, they had to be returned to
Europe after the war for release - The warning order for their mass return from
Wainwright was received on 14 May 1946, just over
a year after the war in Europe had ended
23Internment Camp 135
- The last of the remaining PoWs left Wainwright 10
days later, on 24 May 1946 - The Camp staff and Guard company were reduced to
nil strength on 14 June 1946, marking the end of
Internment Camp 135
24Legacy Projects
CFB/ASU Wainwright POW Tower Display
Wainwright District Museum
Battle River Historical Society
Wainwright Main Street Project