Castle Mountain Internment Camp

 (1915-1917) - A World War I Canadian internment camp established in 1915 near Castle Mountain, Alberta, Canada. Abandoned in 1917.

History
A World War I Canadian internment camp established in July 1915 near Castle Mountain, Alberta, Canada.

The Castle Mountain Internment Camp was established as a work camp and opened to accept internees on 14 Jul 1915. The first 60 internees arrived by train and were settled into tent quarters in a barbed wire compound. The camp was located at the foot of Castle Mountain near the unfinished end of the Banff to Lake Louise road (now the Bow Vally Parkway, Hwy 14.) The internees were assigned to work on that road using axes, picks and wheelbarrows.

The workday required eight hours of labor six days a week but the march to and from the work site sometimes stretched the work day into 13 hours. Conditions were harsh and supplies, including food, were scarce. There were frequent escape attempts. During the harsh winter months the detainees were removed to the Banff Cave & Basin Internment Camp and housed in frame barracks until the weather permitted a return to Castle Mountain.

The camp was closed on 15 Jul 1917 and the remaining internees were removed to the Kapuskasing Internment Camp in Ontario. The internees had completed some 10 kilometers of road and part of the original Banff Springs golf course.

Current Status
Markers, memorials and a statue located near Castle Mountain, Alberta, Canada. Information about the camp can be found at the memorial site and at the Cave and Basin Internment Camp Interpretive Center in back of the Cave & Basin National Historic Site Visitor Center.

See Also:
 * Canadian World War I Internment Camps

Sources:
 * Enemy Aliens, Prisoners of War: Canada's First World War Internment Operations, 1914-1920, Parks Canada Brochure, undated

Links:
 * Canadian First World War Internment Recognition Fund
 * Wikipedia - Ukrainian Canadian internment
 * Historica Canada - Internment
 * Parks Canada - Banff National Park