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Berlin-to-Kitchener name change

The city of Berlin, Ontario, Canada, changed its name to Kitchener by referendum in May and June 1916. Named in 1833 after the capital of Prussia and later the German Empire, the name Berlin became unsavoury for residents after Britain and Canada's entry into the First World War.

In the 19th and 20th centuries, most residents of Berlin and neighbouring Waterloo were of German origin.[note 1] The towns and their citizens lived peacefully and enjoyed a unique blend of German and British culture. Following Britain and Canada's entry into war against Germany in August 1914, German Canadians experienced increasing anti-German sentiment. In early 1916, business and community leaders began pushing for Berlin to either seek a new name or amalgamate with Waterloo. Rising tension in the community culminated in soldiers of the local 118th Battalion ransacking German social clubs and attacking an outspoken German Lutheran preacher.


In a vote characterized by intimidation, the 19 May 1916 referendum on whether to change the city name decided "yes" by a slim margin. A vote held the following month to determine a replacement name saw lower voter turnout. The vote settled on Kitchener, named for the recently deceased British Army officer Horatio Herbert Kitchener. Kitchener prevailed in a tight race over the only serious competitor, Brock – for Isaac Brock, a British military leader in the War of 1812. The city officially changed names on 1 September 1916.


Towns across the English-speaking world retreated from their German culture during the First World War, with similar cases seen in the United States and Australia. The Berlin–Kitchener change distinguished itself by the levels of violence and protest. The name change failed to assuage outside suspicion of the city and its German population, propelled partly by opponents unsuccessfully petitioning the Ontario Government to stop the change from proceeding as well as the election of an anti-conscription candidate in Waterloo North in the 1917 federal election. After the war, the city experienced a decline in its German culture with German Canadians being culturally assimilated into the broader Canadian identity.

List of Australian place names changed from German names

Swastika, Ontario

Chadwick, W. R. (1992). . Waterloo, Ontario: Wilfrid Laurier University Press. ISBN 0-88920-226-5.

The Battle for Berlin, Ontario: An Historical Drama

Hopkins, J. Castell (1917). . Toronto: The Canadian Annual Review, Ltd. pp. 554–555.

The Canadian Annual Review of Public Affairs: 1916

Hopkins, J. Castell (1918). . Toronto: The Canadian Annual Review, Ltd. pp. 436–437.

The Canadian Annual Review of Public Affairs: 1917

Mercer, Greg (23 August 2014). . Waterloo Region Record. Metroland Media Group. Archived from the original on 4 September 2014.

"Missing Kaiser statue 'a mystery that will never be solved'"

September 2016 panel by the Waterloo Centre for German Studies and Kitchener Public Library.

Von Berlin to Kitchener: Connotations and Cultures, A Discussion Panel

"" entry at Library and Archives Canada, Archived 10 January 2021 at the Wayback Machine

What's In a Name? Berlin to Kitchener

"" entry at the Canadian War Museum, Archived 9 November 2020 at the Wayback Machine

Life at Home During the War: Enemy Aliens: Anti-German Sentiment

digital exhibit at the University of Waterloo Library, Archived 29 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine

Motz Family Fonds

digital exhibit at the University of Waterloo Library, Archived 13 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine

Kitchener and First World War

digital exhibit at the University of Waterloo Library, Archived 29 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine

From 'Berlin' to 'Kitchener'