According to the Canadian War Museum, Canada interned 8,579 “enemy aliens” in twenty-four receiving stations and internment camps across Canada from 1914–1920. This number included 2,009 Germans, 5,954 Austro-Hungarians, 205 Turks, 99 Bulgarians, and 312 people classified as “miscellaneous,” 23,24 a category that included homeless people, conscientious objectors, and members of outlawed cultural and political associations. As well, 81 women and 156 children — the dependents of male internees — were voluntarily interned.
Lieutenant General William Otter classified 3,138 people as prisoners of war, a number that included German officers and enlisted personnel who had been apprehended either in Canada, Newfoundland, or in the British West Indies. The other 5,441 people who were interned were civilians.
The federal government employed internees on numerous mining and logging operations as well as…