‘The
near-total exclusion from our history books
of black servicemen in the First
World War is shameful….
Some black servicemen made the ultimate sacrifice …
and
like Walter Tull, died on the battlefields but with
the passing of time, with the
exception of Tull,
the contributions of black servicemen have been
forgotten.’
The story of Britain’s Black Community and the
First World War is told by Stephen Bourne in his book Black Poppies, which has sold 1,500 copies in the first three
months since publication. It is therefore shameful that despite his past
involvement with the Imperial War Museum he and others were not consulted on
the new First World War exhibition. There is growing anger that it does not
include any noticeable recognition of the African, Caribbean, Chinese and South
Asian contribution.
Divided into three sections about the experiences
of black servicemen, citizens and communities,
Stephen synthesises existing knowledge with new research in a very
readable style. It is not intended as a comprehensive or definitive account. He explains that ‘more research needs to be
undertaken for a fuller appreciation and understanding of the subject’,
especially as David Killingray suggested back in 1986 in the War Office and
Colonial papers at what is now The National Archives.
Rich in detail it is a valuable handbook for people wanting to prepare talks
especially at local level as part of putting ‘Black’ into the public’s
consciousness about the true nature of the First World War over the next few
years. It is not just London, Liverpool
and Cardiff, but from Newcastle and North Shields down to Folkestone and
Bournemouth, and across from Truro to Leamington Spa, Oxford and Northampton.
Questions
A unique section gives the responses of Patrick
Vernon (Every Generation Media), Lorna Blackman (Chair, ACLA Cultural
Committee, Hornsey and Hackney), Garry Stewart (ex-servicemen), and Nicholas
Bailey (actor) to the following questions:
·
Why do you think the stories of
African Caribbean soldiers in the First Wold War have been ignored or
forgotten?
·
How/when did you find out that African
Caribbeans served in the First World War?
·
Do you think that the British school
curriculum should include the stories of African Caribbeans in the First World
War?
·
Why do you think the British school
curriculum mainly focuses on African Americans from history, such as Dr Martin
Luther King and Rosa Parks?
·
What do you think we should do in 2014-2018
to ensure that young people in Britain are made aware of the important contribution
made by African Caribbeans to the First World War?
These questions are a useful list to pose at
events on the First World War in general and on the Black role in particular.
Servicemen
Stephen discusses the confusion over interpreting armed
services rules about recruitment of black men and whether they could be
accepted for officer training. It is clear that whatever the formal rules may
have suggested, it was left to individual recruiters and officers to take the
decisions.
There is a chapter reviewing the experience of the
men in the British West Indies Regiment. Stephen is able to quote from the
unpublished war memoir of its commanding officer Lieutenant Colonel Charles
Wood-Hill. There are reminiscences of
members who survived, and chapters about Herbert Morris, the shell-shocked 17
year old Jamaican shot for desertion, and the 19 headstones with the BWIR crest
among the Commonwealth War Graves at Seaford Cemetery in Sussex, and on the regiment’s
mutiny at Taranto in December 1918 over bad treatment while they waited
demobilisation.
The Royal Flying Corps which became the Royal Air
Force in April 1918 had several Indian fighter pilots and a Jamaican.
The
Home Front
Stephen tells the stories of several families who
lived either side of and through the War, details of black entertainers
performing around Britain. Descendants of some of these families are active
today in Britain. I hope that his chapter on the two composers Amanda Ira Aldridge
and Avril Coleridge-Taylor will be the start of in-depth studies by Stephen.
Black
Britain 1919
The third section on the Race Riots in 1919 in
Liverpool, London’s East End, South
Shields, Newport and Cardiff gives eye-witness accounts and details of how the
local black communities reacted.
In the final chapter ‘Black Britain 1919’ Stephen
summarises the picture of the Black presence, particularly in London, and its
level of organisation and their activists: African
Times and Orient Review, and African
Telegraph, the African Students and the African Progress Unions.
In his
Author’s Note Stephen acknowledges his debt to earlier works by Sir
Harry H. Johnson, Peter Fryer, Rainer Lotz and Ian Pegg, David Killingray, Jeff
Green, Ray Costello, Glenford Howe and Richard Smith, and to documentary
producers Tony T. and Rebecca Goldstone at Sweet Patootee for their film Mutiny about the BWIR.
This book is a must to have on your shelves; like
Peter Fryer, Jeff Green and Stephen’s previous books it will remain a valuable
reference book for years to come.
Black Poppies
Britain’s Black Community and the Great War
The History Press
ISBN 978-07524-9760-0
£12.99
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