During World War I, Stobs military training ground near Hawick was used as a mass internment camp for 4,500 prisoners; German civilian ‘enemy aliens’ who had settled in Britain before 1914 and were considered potential spies, civilian passengers and sailors from captured enemy ships, and military prisoners-of-war captured in Europe or at sea.
Although the majority of internees were German, there were some Austrians and some Turks.
There’s a free conference next summer about the Stobs camp, an opportunity to hear experts who have researched Stobs as well as camps in England, the Isle of Man, Ireland and others around the world, to see camp artefacts and perhaps to identify them, and visit the site with the Council’s archaeology officer, Dr Christopher Bowles.
If you have family members that worked at Stobs, or you’re descended from someone who was interned in one of the camps, I think you’ll find this conference especially interesting. Dr Bowles would also like to hear from anyone that has memorabilia relating to the camp.
Provisional programme.
The conference is on 18th and 19th June 2016 at Hawick. If you would like to attend, I suggest you register now at archives@scotborders.gov.uk
Thursday, December 10, 2015
Hawick’s German Prisoners - Stobs Internment Camp in Global Context, 1914-1919
Labels:
Austrians,
Christopher Bowles,
Conference,
England,
Germans,
Hawick,
Ireland,
Isle of Man,
Prisoners-of-War,
Stobs,
Turks,
World War I
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