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Karl Gast

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Karl Gast

Birth
Germany
Death
22 May 1916 (aged 36–37)
Amherst, Cumberland County, Nova Scotia, Canada
Burial
Kitchener, Waterloo Regional Municipality, Ontario, Canada Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Nova Scotia death record-
Karl Gast died 22 May1916 in Amherst, Cumberland County; death record can be found in Registration Year: 1916 - Book: 41 - Page: 324 - Number: 1309.
*Matrose Gast, who was a sailor in the German Navy during the First World War, died in the Amherst Internment Camp of dementia, complicated by hypertension and pneumonia; he had been ill for 9 months. On this death record his rank is noted as being “Stoker (German Navy)”.

Single, he was born in East Prussia, Germany; he was 37 years of age and was Lutheran. Matrose Karl Gast was a POW, held at the Internment Camp in Amherst, Nova Scotia. In August 1914 he was one of the German sailors taken prisoner off the ship “Kaiser Wilhelm Der Grosser” when it was intercepted and captured in the South Atlantic Ocean. Originally held on McNab’s Island, in Halifax Harbour, the German prisoners were later moved to the Amherst camp in Cumberland County; it was located in an iron foundry on the corner of Park and Hickman Streets in Amherst.

Those POW inmates who died while being held here were laid to rest in the Amherst Cemetery; there is a monument at the rear of this cemetery which lists their names. In 1970, on a joint request from the Commonwealth and the German war commissions, the remains of all German POWs who died while at this Canadian war internment camp were exhumed and reburied in the Kitchener-Waterloo, Ontario, cemetery.
Nova Scotia death record-
Karl Gast died 22 May1916 in Amherst, Cumberland County; death record can be found in Registration Year: 1916 - Book: 41 - Page: 324 - Number: 1309.
*Matrose Gast, who was a sailor in the German Navy during the First World War, died in the Amherst Internment Camp of dementia, complicated by hypertension and pneumonia; he had been ill for 9 months. On this death record his rank is noted as being “Stoker (German Navy)”.

Single, he was born in East Prussia, Germany; he was 37 years of age and was Lutheran. Matrose Karl Gast was a POW, held at the Internment Camp in Amherst, Nova Scotia. In August 1914 he was one of the German sailors taken prisoner off the ship “Kaiser Wilhelm Der Grosser” when it was intercepted and captured in the South Atlantic Ocean. Originally held on McNab’s Island, in Halifax Harbour, the German prisoners were later moved to the Amherst camp in Cumberland County; it was located in an iron foundry on the corner of Park and Hickman Streets in Amherst.

Those POW inmates who died while being held here were laid to rest in the Amherst Cemetery; there is a monument at the rear of this cemetery which lists their names. In 1970, on a joint request from the Commonwealth and the German war commissions, the remains of all German POWs who died while at this Canadian war internment camp were exhumed and reburied in the Kitchener-Waterloo, Ontario, cemetery.

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  • Created by: Darren Arndt
  • Added: Sep 5, 2009
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/41607892/karl-gast: accessed ), memorial page for Karl Gast (1879–22 May 1916), Find a Grave Memorial ID 41607892, citing Woodland Cemetery, Kitchener, Waterloo Regional Municipality, Ontario, Canada; Maintained by Darren Arndt (contributor 46971852).