04/11/2026
This weekend's post is about a man named Walter Hitschfeld, who was interned at the New Brunswick Internment Camp between Minto and Fredericton. Hitschfeld was born in 1922 in Vienna, Austria. He moved to England shortly before the war to finish school, being considered a "refugee from N**i oppression." Despite this, Hitschfeld was sent to Canada in 1940 and interned, both in New Brunswick and near Farnham, Quebec. He was sponsored for an early release from internment for his performance in university courses within the camp.
After release, Hitschfeld attended the University of Toronto. He became a Canadian citizen and earned his Bachelor's degree in Engineering Physics in 1946. Then, he entered the graduate physics program at McGill University, specializing in atmospheric physics, and earned his PhD in 1950. While he was a student, Hitschfeld joined the Storay Weather Group. In 1951, he started lecturing in physics at McGill University, and he also served as Chairman of Meteorology from 1963 to 1967.
Over the years, Hitschfeld contributed to scientific papers, meteorology research, and even served on national and international committees. He was also President of the International Commission on Cloud Physics of the International Association of Meteorology and Atmospheric Physics from 1975 to 1984 and President of the Canadian Meteorological Society from 1973 to 1974. He was elected Fellow of the American Meteorological Society in 1968 and Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada in 1978.
In 1980, he briefly resigned from McGill University to catch up on the latest information in cloud physics and weather modification. Hitschfeld resumed his work at McGill University in 1981.
Hitschfeld eventually passed away on May 28th, 1986, after battling cancer for about a year.
Unfortunately, we don't have a picture of Walter Hitschfeld, but if you have one, know of one, or know of where one can be found, please let us know!
As always, if you want to hear more about this part of New Brunswick's history, follow us here on Facebook to keep up with our posts and come visit this summer for a tour of the New Brunswick Internment Camp Museum in Minto, New Brunswick. We hope to see you here!