In 1909, a
Canadian military training camp named "Camp Sewell" was established 10 kilometers west of
Carberry, south of the
Canadian Pacific Railway line. It started out as a city of tents and covered a large area. The name of the camp was changed in 1915 to "Camp Hughes" in honour of Major-General Sir
Sam Hughes, Canada's Minister of Militia and Defence at the time. Extensive trench systems, grenade and rifle ranges, and military structures were built at Camp Hughes between 1915 and 1916, and a variety of retail stores and entertainment complexes on a double-avenued area close to the main camp formed a lively commercial midway. During
World War I, more than 38,000 troops of the
Canadian Expeditionary Force trained at the camp, and by 1916 it had grown to such a large size that it had the largest population of any city in the province of
Manitoba outside of the capital city,
Winnipeg. Many of the soldiers who trained at Camp Hughes were later involved in the
Battle of Vimy Ridge in
France on April 9, 1917. The soldiers and support staff stationed at Camp Hughes maintained very close social and economic ties with the town of Carberry, which is located a short distance away from the site. The Canadian Army continued to train soldiers at the camp until 1934, when the camp closed and the troops were moved to nearby Camp Shilo, now
CFB Shilo, and
Kapyong Barracks, a now closed part of
CFB Winnipeg, for financial and logistical reasons. The former camp saw some use during World War II. By the early 1960s, the site re-opened as a
Cold War remote transmitter station for Camp Shilo. A one-level bunker was built on the property. The bunker was closed in 1992 and has since been demolished. ==Today==