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Journey of century-old chair carved by WW I Quebec prisoner ends at war museum

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Montreal

Very few archival items exist from Canada's First World War internment camps. But now, the Canadian War Museum in Ottawa is adding a hand-carved wooden chair to its collection thanks to a B.C. woman who got curious about its origins and reached out to CBC Montreal for help last year.

Tale of who carved the chair and link to Quebec internment camp at heart of donation

Leah Hendry · CBC News

· Posted: Apr 10, 2026 4:00 AM EDT | Last Updated: 5 hours ago

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elderly woman pointing to grapevines engraved on back of old chair.
Margalo Whyte inherited this chair from her grandfather. She was always curious about where it came from and who carved it. Last year, she reached out to CBC Montreal for help in tracking down the artist's identity. (Murray Titus/CBC)

Over a century after it was carved in a First World War internment camp, a handmade wooden chair has found a new home at the Canadian War Museum in Ottawa.

“It’s hard not to notice the beautiful craftsmanship of this piece,” said Meredith MacLean, a collections specialist at the museum.

Believed to be made from yellow birch or oak, the chair is engraved with grapevines, oak leaves and acorns. On the back, a large French inscription lists the date — 1915 — and a message that says it was carved by a detainee at the Spirit Lake internment camp, which operated in Quebec’s Abitibi region from 1915 to 1917.

During the First World War, the Canadian government detained Ukrainians and other Eastern European immigrants in these camps because officials considered them to be enemy aliens.

Before it was donated, the chair sat in a corner of Margalo Whyte’s home in Tsawwassen, B.C., for years. She inherited it from her grandfather, who had lived in Ottawa. She has no idea how he acquired it as their family had no connection to the camp.

Curious about the chair’s origins, Whyte contacted CBC Montreal last year for help in tracking down the identity of the man who carved it.

Using genealogical records, CBC discovered the chair was likely carved by Sirghi Sofian, a Romanian immigrant who was detained at Spirit Lake along with his wife and three children.

Engraving in French on back of chair
A large French inscription on the back of the chair says it was carved in 1915 by a prisoner at the Spirit Lake internment camp, located near the town of Amos, Que., about 600 kilometres northwest of Montreal. (Murray Titus/CBC)

After he was released in 1916, Sofian and his family spent a few years in the Windsor, Ont., area and then moved to a small farming community in Michigan. 

His life was not an easy one. He worked as a carpenter, in factories and later as a farm manager, but the work was poorly paid. In 1933, Sofian sent U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt a hand-carved table as a Christmas present in a bid to ask him for financial assistance.

Read the full story about how CBC tracked Sofian and his chair’s journey here

Once Whyte learned about Sofian’s story, she took some time to decide where the chair would go next.

“There was an element of satisfaction donating the chair to a Canadian museum since the chair was originally created in Canada and is part of Canadian history,” Whyte told CBC by email.

Items from this era ‘very uncommon’

Archival items from this time period are rare, particularly from Spirit Lake.

“Before this, I think we had a collection of photos and one archival piece, a Christmas card in our collection,” said MacLean. “They are very uncommon, so we were quite interested in this piece because it’s a 3D artifact.”

The chair’s backstory also makes it special. It's unusual to know so much about a prisoner.

"It helps to connect to the history if we have people who lived through these events, who experienced internment and we can talk about them as human beings, right?" said Stacey Barker, a historian at the museum.

chair sitting in living room
Archival items from internment camps are extremely rare, which makes the chair a special addition to the Canadian War Museum's collection. (Murray Titus/CBC)

Barker and MacLean said they’d like to figure out how the chair ended up in Whyte’s family. Large pieces like this are usually commissioned by camp guards. 

“It is interesting, the relationship between the people who were interned and the people who were guarding them,” said MacLean. “We have a number of artworks in our collection that were created by people who were interned and given as gifts to the guards.”

There are no immediate plans to display the chair, but it could be loaned out to other museums or used the next time the museum does an exhibition on internment camps as a tangible relic from a past few Canadians are aware of.

WATCH | Learn more about the unique history of this chair:

This century-old chair reveals the story of its maker — a prisoner in a WWI Quebec internment camp

The engraving on the back of the chair helped trace the craftsman's story, which includes 100 years of twists, turns and correspondence with an American president.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Leah Hendry is an investigative reporter with CBC in Montreal. She specializes in health and social issues. She has previously worked as a reporter for CBC in Vancouver and Winnipeg. You can email story ideas or tips to [email protected].

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