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The World's War

Page 51

by David Olusoga


  Barbeau, Arthur E. and Florette Henri, The Unknown Soldiers: African-American Troops in World War I (1996)

  Black, Jeremy, Introduction to Global Military History: 1775 to the Present Day (2013)

  Cocker, Mark, Richard Meinertzhagen: Soldier, Scientist and Spy (1989)

  Corrigan, Gordon, Sepoys in the Trenches: The Indian Corps on the Western Front 1914–1915 (1999)

  Das, Santanu (ed.), Race, Empire and First World War Writing (2011)

  Dendooven, Dominiek and Piet Chielens (eds), World War I: Five Continents in Flanders (2008)

  Echenberg, Myron, Colonial Conscripts: The Tirailleurs Sénégalais in French West Africa, 1857–1960 (1993)

  Ellis, John, The Social History of the Machine Gun (1975)

  Evans, Andrew D., Anthropology at War: World War I and the Science of Race in Germany (2010)

  Farwell, Byron, The Great War in Africa 1914–1918 (1987)

  Fogarty, Richard, Race and War in France: Colonial Subjects in the French Army 1914–1918 (2008)

  Fussell, Paul, The Great War and Modern Memory (1977)

  Gossman, Lionel, The Passion of Max von Oppenheim: Archaeology and Intrigue in the Middle East, from Wilhelm II to Hitler (2013)

  Hedin, Sven, With the German Armies in the West, translated by H.G. de Walterstorff (1915)

  Hochschild, Adam, To End All Wars: A Story of Loyalty and Rebellion 1914–1918 (2011)

  Hodges, Geoffrey, Kariakor: The Carrier Corps (1999)

  Hopkirk, Peter, On Secret Service East of Constantinople: The Plot to Bring Down the British Empire (1994)

  Keegan, John, The First World War (1998)

  L. Mosse, George, Fallen Soldiers Reshaping the Memory of the World War (1990)

  Lentz-Smith, Adriane, Freedom Struggles: African Americans and World War I (2009)

  Levitch, Mark, Panthéon de la Guerre: Reconfiguring a Panorama of the Great War (2006)

  Ludke, Tilman, Jihad Made in Germany: Ottoman and German Propaganda and Intelligence Operations in the First World War (2005)

  Lunn, Joe, Memoirs of the Maelstrom: A Senegalese Oral History of the First World War (1999)

  Lusane, Clarence, Hitler’s Black Victims: The Historical Experiences of Afro-Germans, European Blacks, Africans and African Americans in the Nazi Era (2003)

  McMeekin, Sean, The Berlin–Baghdad Express: The Ottoman Empire and Germany’s Bid for World Power 1898–1918 (2010)

  MacMunn, Major George, The Armies of India (1911)

  Merewether, Lieutenant Colonel J.W.B. and Sir Frederick Smith, The Indian Corps in France (1917)

  Morrow, Jr, John H., The Great War: An Imperial History (2004)

  Mosier, John, The Myth of the Great War (2001)

  Mountain Horse, Mike, My People the Bloods (1979)

  Nelson, Peter, A More Unbending Battle: The Harlem Hellfighters’ Struggle for Freedom in WWI and Equality at Home (2009)

  Page, Malcolm, The King’s African Rifles: A History (1998)

  Paice, Edward, Tip and Run: The Untold Tragedy of the Great War in Africa (2007)

  Reynolds, David, The Long Shadow: The Great War and the Twentieth Century (2013)

  Robb, George, British Culture and the First World War (2002)

  Scheck, Raffael, Hitler’s African Victims: The German Army Massacres of Black French Soldiers in 1940 (2006)

  Smith, Richard, Jamaican Volunteers in the First World War: Race, Masculinity and the Development of a National Consciousness (2004)

  Starling, John and Ivor Lee, No Labour, No Battle: Military Labour During the First World War (2009)

  Stoddard, Lothrop, The Rising Tide of Color Against White World-Supremacy (1920)

  Strachan, Hew, The First World War, Vol. 1, To Arms (2001)

  Vasili, Phil, Walter Tull (1888–1918), Officer, Footballer: ‘All the Guns in France Couldn’t Wake Me (2009)

  Vella, Walter F. with Dorothy B. Vella, Chaiyo King Vajiravudh and the Development of Thai Nationalism (1979)

  Visram, Rozina, Asians in Britain 400 Years of History (2002)

  Wells, H.G., Mr. Britling Sees It Through (1916)

  Williams, Chad L., Torchbearers of Democracy: African American Soldiers in the World War I Era (2010)

  Winegard, Timothy C., Indigenous People of the British Dominions in the First World War (2012)

  Xu Guoqi, China and the Great War: China’s Pursuit of a New National Identity and Internationalization (2005)

  Acknowledgements

  I would like to thank my partner Susie Painter for her endless support and tolerance. To my mother Mrs Marion Olusoga, who taught me to read when my schools failed and now continues to teach me grammar, I am, as ever, grateful, for her vital assistance with the early drafts of this book and for work on translations. Thanks also to my agent, Charles Walker, at United Agents, to Richard Milbank at Head of Zeus for his patience and enthusiasm, and to Mark Hawkins-Dady, without whose assistance, knowledge and insight this book would not have been possible.

  At the BBC I would like to thank Martin Davidson, Commissioner for History, and Janice Hadlow, Controller Seasons and Special Projects, for taking the risk of bringing to the television screen the stories of men and women whose contributions to the First World War are so often marginalized.

  It was through the making of that television series that I crystalized my views on this history, and as with all television projects it was a team effort. I am thus greatly indebted to the hard work and endless enthusiasm of our brilliant Series Producer, Tim Kirby, and our equally insightful Executive Producer, Chris Granlund. Thanks to Ben Crichton for his dedication and camera work and to Alexandra Shaw for her enthusiasm, excellent research and linguistic abilities. Just as critical were the contributions of Wendy Clarke, Monika Kupper, Amanda Robinson, Jane Taylor, Declan Smith, Ian Salvage, Tony Burke, Steve Scales and Michael Duly. I would also like to give thanks to Francesca Kasteliz for helping me to find my voice.

  The television series was produced with the invaluable assistance of Dr Santanu Das of King’s College London, who acted as its historical consultant. He is one of the scholars whose work is giving voice and form to the millions of non-Europeans who fought and laboured in the First World War, and his passion and network of contacts were invaluable. Thanks also goes to the historians who have been so generous with their knowledge and their time: Alison Fell, Sean McMeekin, Geoff Bridger, Heike Liebau, Edward Paice, Paul Van Damme and Philippe Gorczyinski. Particular thanks go to Dominiek Dendooven, curator of the In Flanders Field Museum in Ypres, arguably the most advanced and immersive museum dedicated to the First World War. Dominiek’s generosity, encyclopedic knowledge and his translation of the diary of Pastor Achiel Van Walleghem have been enormously important to both the television series and this book.

  The visits to many of the locations that are described in this book were made possible through the help of many communities and organizations. I would therefore like to thank: the Azania Front Lutheran Church Dar-es-Salaam; The Commonwealth War Graves Commission; In Flanders Fields Museum; Garrison Museum, Zossen; the German Consulate in Istanbul; The British Library; the Lautarchiv at The Humboldt University, Berlin; the villagers of Komkonga, Tanzania; the Sint-Jan-Baptistkerk in Dikkebus; the Tank of Flesquières Association; The Menin Gate and The Last Post Association at Ypres. The journeys to reach many of these locations were undertaken with the assistance of local fixers: Munir Akdogan, Berk Altunay, Martin Zilger, Evarist Komba and Claire Powell.

  David Olusoga

  Index

  Abdülhamid II, Sultan 207, 208, 211, 220

  Aboriginal Australians 25, 274

  Aboriginal Protection Society 318

  Afghanistan 236–40, 242

  Africa/Africans 21, 100–48, 423

  British plan of sending Indian emigrants to 117–18

  British reluctance in recruiting of to army 171–5, 293—4, 296—7

  campaign to capture German Cameroon 109–10

  capture of German South West Africa 10
8–9

  Carrier Corps 139–41, 420

  colonial wars against 102–3

  concern over damaging of white prestige when sending Africans into war 104–5, 109

  death toll 147

  deaths caused by Spanish Flu 372

  destruction of German radio transmitters in 106–8, 114

  Fashoda Incident (1898) 101–2, 117

  German condemnation of Allied deployment of 182–3

  German racial hatred and propaganda campaign against ‘occupying’ 374–7

  German war crime allegations against 186, 187–9

  graves of 419–22, 423

  impact of war on 147–8

  killing of soldiers by disease 131

  and Mangin’s Force Noire theory 157–60, 168

  racist attitudes towards in France 178–9

  remembrance of through collective memorials 422–3

  requisitioning of food from civilians 145

  viewed as a resource by European powers 148

  white racial unity in 103

  see also East Africa (German); Tirailleurs Sénégalais

  African Americans/African-American troops 25, 274, 326, 326–62

  absence from victory parades 403

  assigned to Services of Supply (SOS) and treatment of 338–41

  assignment to labour duties in training camps 336–7

  belief in lack of intelligence 332–3

  chain gang culture 336

  as combat troops 341–50

  conditions of camps 336

  hostility towards recruitment of into army 335

  killing of in France after the war 386–7

  lynching and killing of in USA 329, 392–3

  pre-war military service 332

  pre-war status 327

  racist attitudes against 327

  represented of in the Panthéon de la Guerre 411

  Secret Information Concerning Black American Troops 350–2, 353–4, 388

  segregation of in army 335–6

  service and reputation called into question after the war 388–9

  supposed racial characteristics and stereotypes attached to 328, 365

  transfer of to French Army 343, 352–3

  treatment of after war 388–9

  treatment of combat troops and camp conditions 337–8, 392

  treatment of in France 353

  violence against at St Nazaire 340–1

  violence and hatred faced on returning home after war 390–5

  see also Harlem Hellfighters

  Afridi soldiers 58

  Aisne, Second Battle of the (1917) 190–4

  Aitken, Major-General Arthur 119, 120–1, 122, 123–4, 127

  American Civil War 330, 332, 366, 417

  American Expeditionary Force (AEF) 331, 342, 352, 353, 356, 387

  Amiens, Battle of (1918) 13, 354–5

  Anderson, Colonel E.D. 333, 334, 336, 337

  Anglo-Boer War 48, 108, 129, 366

  anthropologists, German 260–4

  Armistice 370, 372–7

  Army Council (British) 89

  artillery, advances in 26

  Ashanti 18, 134, 136

  Askari 109–10, 113–14, 126, 136–7, 138, 371, 372, 413–15

  al-Askari, Jafar 232

  Askari Monument 422

  Askari Reliefs 412–15

  Asquith, Herbert 47

  Auracher, Dr 120

  Australian Aboriginals 25, 274

  Australian soldiers 287

  Austria-Hungary 18, 24, 100, 276

  Aviation Corps (US Army) 364–5

  Azam Khan 93

  Backhaus, Alexander 262

  Baden, Prince Max von 377

  Bailleul, Jules 407–8

  Balfour, Sir Henry 280

  Ballou, Major General Charles 359

  Baluchis, 129th 66, 67, 133, 135

  Barakatullah, Abdul 237

  Barker, James Ellis 380

  Barnett, Correlli 28

  Barrett, Michèle 419

  Basra (Iraq) 99

  Baster people 109

  Battle of the Frontiers (1914) 100

  Bela Singh 267

  Belfield, Sir Harry 112, 113, 117

  Belgium 100, 186

  ‘Rape of’ (1914) 186

  Belleau Wood, Battle of (1918) 349

  Berlin-Baghdad Railway 210–11

  Berlin Colonial Show (1896) 258–9

  Berlin Conference (1884-5) 105

  Bermuda 279–80

  Bermuda Militia Artillery 279–80

  Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps 279

  Bertillon, Dr Jacques 151

  Bettanier, Albert: La Tache Noire 149–50, 152

  Bevan, Edwyn: Brothers All 22–3, 52–3

  Bibikoff, Massia 44–5

  Bigya Singh 81

  Birth of a Nation (film) 329

  Bismarck, Chancellor Otto von 151

  Black Army Lobby (British) 173–5

  black soldiers see African Americans/African American troops; African/Africans; Caribbean/Caribbean troops

  Bletchley Park 107

  Blixen, Karen 110

  Bloods (Native Canadians) 10, 12

  Boers (Afrikaners) 21, 26, 103, 104, 128, 129

  commandos 129, 146, 366

  uprising of (1914) 108

  Bonar Law, Andrew 52

  Bonarjee, P.D.: Handbook of the Fighting Races of India 56

  Botha, General Louis 108, 109, 313, 314

  Boxer Rebellion 300

  Brant, Lieutenant Cameron D. 5

  Brazil 325

  Brest-Litovsk, Treaty of (1918) 344

  Briggs, Clinton 394

  Brighton Corporation 84

  A Short History 83, 84, 85—6, 91, 92

  Britain

  attacks on foreigners in 37

  colonial recruitment 278–80

  colonial wars in Africa 102

  defeat at Gallipoli 233

  depiction and racialization of Germans 35–7

  focus of Jihad on 222–3

  German East African campaign 119–32

  graves for colonial troops 419–23

  losses during war 401

  and martial-races theory 38, 55–9, 60, 69, 72, 76, 94, 169

  refusal to deploy black men in combat duties on Western Front 379

  reluctance in recruiting African/black men into army 171–5, 293–4, 296–7

  Victory Parade (1919) 401–3

  British East Africa 112, 113, 115

  British Empire 1, 18, 19–20, 21–2, 50, 221, 399–400

  British Expeditionary Force (BEF) 26, 47, 48, 78, 100

  British India Company 41

  British Indian Corps see Indian Corps

  British West Indies 293–5

  British West Indies Regiment (BWIR) 136, 294–6, 396

  Browne, Arthur 421

  Buchan, John: Greenmantle 240–1

  Bullard, General Robert 359, 360

  Burke, Jason 375

  Calcutta Bengali 51

  Cambrai, Battle of (1917) 11–12, 304

  Cameroon (Kamerun) 109–10

  Canadian Brigade, 3rd 4

  Canadian Expeditionary Force/Corps 4, 280

  Cape Coloured Labour Battalion 280

  Caribbean/Caribbean troops 33, 293–5, 396, 401–2

  Carrier Corps (in Africa) 139–41, 420

  Carrier-Belleuse, Pierre 408–9, 410

  Castilia (ship) 41

  Caulfield, Captain 120, 122

  Cavell, Edith 153, 186

  cemeteries 417–18

  Cenotaph 401

  Censor of Indian Mails, Office of 73, 74

  Central Tank workshop (Erin) 304

  Chemin des Dames, Battle of (1917) 190–4, 199

  Cheyenne 365

  Chielens, Piet 418

  China 299–301, 325

  Chinese Labour Corps/labourers 298–311, 325, 403–8, 411, 423

  deployment of 304–5

  forgetting of 403


  initial resistance to by British 301–2

  recruitment 302–3

  relationship with villagers around Ypres 307–8

  riots and fights in camps 310–11

  segregation of from civilians 305–6

  skills and capacities of 303–4

  task of dismantling Western Front after the war 403–8

  and trench digging 303

  Van Walleghem’s observations 305–9, 405–7

  Chirol, Sir Valentine 23

  chlorine gas attack (1915) (Ypres) 1–4, 5, 6–7, 9

  Churchill, Winston 174–5

  Clemenceau, Georges 195, 282

  Clifford, Sir Hugh 421

  Cobb, Ned 391–2

  Colley, Linda 19

  Colonial Office (British) 29, 294

  colonial wars 26, 28, 30

  Africa 102–3

  Commis et Ouvriers d’Administration 199

  Committee of Imperial Defence (Britain) 115–16, 127

  Committee for Union and Progress (CUP) (Ottoman) 206

  Commonwealth War Graves Commission (CWGC) 417, 419; see also Imperial War Graves Commission

  Conan Doyle, Arthur 69

  coupe-coupe 181–2, 202–3

  Cremation Act (1902) 86

  Criminal Tribes Act (1871) 55

  Crisis, The 387, 388–9

  Croad, Hector 372

  Cuba 325

  Danes: in German Army 275

  Dar es Salaam 116

  fall of to Allies (1916) 137–8

  War Cemetery 133–4

  Darre, Walther 384

  Darro, SS 269–70, 271

  Das, Santanu 14, 73, 243

  David, Jacques Louis: Tennis Court Oath 410

  de Launoy, Jane 291

  de Vogüé, Count Eugène-Melchior 154–5

  Les Morts qui parlent 155

  Dendooven, Dominiek 290, 407

  Department of Native Affairs (South Africa) 315

  Deppe, Ludwig 147

  Dernburg, Bernhard: England: Traitor to the White Race 104

  Diagne, Blaise 196–7

  Diallo, Bakary: Force Bronté 181

  Dikkebus (Belgium) 286, 288, 405, 406

  Disraeli, Benjamin 17

  Djemal Pasha 229

  Doegen, Wilhelm 183, 265

  Domfront (Normandy) 387

  Douaumont Cemetery (Verdun) 418

  Douaumont, Fort 166–7, 169–70, 199

  Douglass, Frederick 330

  Downes, W.D. 399

  Du Bois, W.E.B. 326–7, 387–90

  Duwez, Maurice 290–1

 

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