BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY African Soldiers in World War One
The idea that the Great War was an essentially European event is gradually changing.
The enclosed photos are of African soldiers who fought alongside the French Army in World War One and are rare examples of contemporary photographs taken and reproduced in colour, bringing the conflict to light in a powerful new way. The images are of Senegalese and Algerian soldiers and are contained along with hundreds of others on a French language web site here. Many are reproduced on the English language World War One colour photos sitehere.
The story of African soldiers in the First World War has received little attention at a popular level until recently. The facts are that bothFrance and Britain drew heavily upon their colonies for manpower during the war. An estimated 500,000 Africans were deployed in the French and British forces; some as labourers, others as fighting soldiers.
Of the 1,186,000 French troops killed or missing in action in WWI, 71,100 were from the French colonies of Algeria , Senegal , Morocco ,Tunisia and Madagascar . Fatalities included thousands of Muslim soldiers. In 2006, a memorial to Muslims killed at the battle of Verdun was inaugurated by then French President Jacques Chirac.
A major loss of life occurred when the SS Mendi was sunk in theEnglish Channel in 1917. Over 600 black South African soldiers – members of the African Native Labour Corps - drowned in the tragedy. Black South Africans were not permitted to serve as front line troops inEurope and only the white officers on board received any official recognition for their loss in the Mendi incident.
Africa’s other main contribution to the First World War was as an arena of battle – in fact, the first and last shots of the war were fired in Africa. In Tip and Run, Edward Paice Phoenix describes the opening hostilities on the boarder of German Togoland as the British West African Frontier Force attempted to protect British shipping from German colonial forces. In East Africa, meanwhile, the British navy was shelling German positions in Dar es Salaam in modern-dayTanzania .
The War in East Africa saw 200,000 soldiers – all volunteers - involved on the British/South African side against German colonial forces, with over 10,000 black and white soldiers killed. The conditions were extreme and many deaths were exacerbated by the grueling climate, malaria and dysentery. Eventually the South African forces (allied with numerous Indian regiments) were replaced by troops from the British colonies in modern-day Ghana , Nigeria , Kenya and Sudan .
South African writer Hamilton Wende has argued that the experience gained by black Africans who fought in the East Africa campaign was one source of inspiration for the liberation movements that emerged inSouth Africa in the decades following the War as “white and black screamed and died together in the simple equality of human suffering.”
Private Wayne Miner of Kansas City was the last American soldier to die in World War I and was one of the many African Americans who participated in black regiments during the War. Their story is told in a number of publications. One contemporary account is History of the American Negro in the Great World War
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