| During World
War I, under the War Measures Act, internment camps were established
at 24 locations across the country. About 8,000 people, mostly Ukrainians
and other Europeans, were detained because they were considered to
be enemy aliens. Four of these camps were located in national parks
at Banff, Jasper, Yoho and Mount Revelstoke. The camp on Mount Revelstoke
has been commemorated with the Mount Revelstoke Internment Camp Commemoration
along the Meadows-in-the-Sky Parkway.
Some citizens
of Revelstoke urged the federal government to have internees complete
the new road to the summit of Mount Revelstoke. The Dominion Parks
Commissioner of the time, J.B. Harkin, agreed that they could provide
a much-needed workforce for developing tourist facilities.
In 1915, an
internment camp was built about halfway up Mount Revelstoke. From
September 6 to December 20, 225 internees and 100 guards lived in
log buildings. Weather conditions and labour disputes resulted in
the men spending most of their time clearing snow and cutting firewood
rather than working on road construction as had been expected. The
water supply for the site was inadequate for the winter, so the
internees were sent to Camp Otter in Yoho National Park, and the
Mount Revelstoke camp was closed.
Although the
First World War ended on 11 November 1918 some prisoners remained
detained in other camps until the late spring of 1920, when Canada's
first national internment operations finally ended.
Many of the
internees were Ukrainian immigrants, who had come to Canada to work
on construction of the railway and in forestry or mining operations.
They were travelling with Austrian passports, as they had come from
what was Galacia and Bukovyna, part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire
before the First World War. By the outbreak of the war, many of
these men were considered aliens and interned if they were unemployed,
without identity papers or had failed to report regularly to the
police.
A new interpretive
station near the internment camp on Mount Revelstoke tells this
story and commemorates a little-known chapter in Canadian history.
To learn more about the national parks labour camps story, read
the comprehensive account, Park Prisoners by Bill Waiser, published
by Fifth House Publishers. It covers the history of these camps
between 1915 and 1946 in depth and contains many archival photographs.
Copyright Parks
Canada
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