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Bowmanville POW camp

Buildings and structures in ClaringtonMilitary history of Canada during World War IINational Historic Sites in OntarioUse Canadian English from January 2023World War II prisoner-of-war camps in Canada
Camp 30 Bowmanville 5
Camp 30 Bowmanville 5

The Bowmanville POW camp also known as Camp 30 was a Canadian-run POW camp for German soldiers during World War II located in the community of Bowmanville, Ontario in Clarington, Ontario, Canada (2020 Lambs Road). In September 2013, the camp was designated a National Historic Site of Canada.In 1943, prisoners Otto Kretschmer and Wolfgang Heyda were the subject of an elaborate escape attempt named Operation Kiebitz.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Bowmanville POW camp (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Bowmanville POW camp
Lange Gasse, Wien Josefstadt

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Wikipedia: Bowmanville POW campContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 43.926944444444 ° E -78.666666666667 °
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Address

Lehrerhaus

Lange Gasse
1080 Wien, Josefstadt
Österreich
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Camp 30 Bowmanville 5
Camp 30 Bowmanville 5
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Cream of Barley Mill
Cream of Barley Mill

The Cream of Barley Mill is a historic mill in the town of Bowmanville, Municipality of Clarington, Ontario, Canada. Scottish immigrant John MacKay created a new hot cereal product called "cream of barley". In 1884 he bought the preexisting Caledonia Mill, situated on the banks of Soper Creek on the outskirts of the town of Bowmanville, to manufacture his product. The mill was originally built in 1805 by Leonard Soper as a grist mill, and was owned and operated by several others before being bought by McKay. McKay designed and installed new equipment for the milling of barley.The cereal became popular, and MacKay's company shipped Cream of Barley throughout Canada and the British Empire.In 1904 the mill burned, and a new brick mill was built to continue manufacturing the cream of barley cereal.A campground and park, aptly named "The Cream of Barley Campground", was developed on land to the north of the millhouse. In about 1922 a petting zoo was added to the park. By 1928 the mill, camp and park (which now included tourist cabins) were owned James Morden and operated by Alfred Shrubb, formerly a world-renowned long distance runner. By 1946 the park included tennis courts.In the 1950s, with the business under Shrubb's ownership, Cream of Barley began to lose market share to the new cold breakfast cereals. The mill was sold, and over the years the Cream of Barley Mill tourist park and campground were absorbed into what is now the Bowmanville Zoo.In 1973 the Cream of Barley millhouse was purchased by the town of Bowmanville, and since that time has housed the Visual Arts Centre of Clarington, a not-for-profit artistic and cultural centre. The mill building has been designated by the municipality as an architecturally protected historical building under the Ontario Heritage Act.