Home > CMH > Vol. 34 (2025) > Iss. 1
Abstract
Histories of internment in Canada have paid much attention to internees’ experiences but far less to those of the guards. Correcting this trend, this article offers a detailed case study of one soldier, Watson Kirkconnell, who worked at the Fort Henry and Kapuskasing internment camps. Drawing on his valuable but heretofore unutilised archive of material, this article provides a vivid social history of the camps through Kirkconnell’s eyes. Nuancing the historiography of wartime internment, this article demonstrates how commandants determined the experiences of both internees and guards alike and, at the same time, that staff could sometimes mitigate their superior’s cruelty.
Recommended Citation
Meister, Daniel R. "Through the Eyes of a Guard: Watson Kirkconnell and Great War Internment in Canada." Canadian Military History 34, 1 (2025)