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Opposition to the Second Boer War

Opposition to the Second Boer War occurred both within and outside of the British Empire. Among the British public, there was initially much support for the war, though it declined considerably as the conflict dragged on. Internationally, condemnation of Britain came from many sources, predominately left-wing and anti-imperialist ones. Inside Britain influential groups, especially based in the opposition Liberal Party formed immediately. They fought ineffectually against the British war policies, which were supported by the Conservative Party of Prime Minister Salisbury.

After the Boers switched to guerrilla warfare in 1900 and the British armed forces adopted scorched earth policies, the intensity of opposition rhetoric escalated. However, at all times supporters of the war controlled the British government, recruited soldiers in large numbers, and represented a majority of public opinion. Outside the British Empire, the Boer cause won far more support, particularly from left-wing political circles. However, all governments remained neutral. "Opposition" includes both opponents of the British war and also opponents of the Boers' war. This article includes opponents and supporters in the general public and the media, in Britain, the British Empire, and major neutral countries.

United Kingdom edit

At the start of the war, Liberal groups mobilized committees to protest the war, including the South African Conciliation Committee and W. T. Stead's Stop the War Committee. A common theme among these groups was the argument that it was a capitalistic desire for the gold and diamond deposits in the Boer Republics that motivated the British government to declare war. Angered crowds often broke up such anti-war meetings, viewing them as unpatriotic. The British press was overwhelmingly in support of the government's decision to go to war, with only the Manchester Guardian and the Westminster Gazette outspoken in opposition.[1] With the press against them, anti-war elements relied heavily on street corner distribution of their numerous pamphlets.[2] Nevertheless a tide of young men volunteered for the war, as many as 100,000 a month at the peak. Liberals split, with many top leaders following Lord Rosebery in support of the war. Many nonconformists, the backbone of the Liberal Party, likewise supported the war.[3]

The 1900 UK general election was known as the "khaki election", where the Conservative government rallied patriotic voters. It resulted in a victory for the Conservative government on the back of recent British victories against the Boers. However, public support waned as it became apparent that the war would not be easy and moral unease developed following reports about scorched earth policies adopted by the British military or the forcible internment of Boer non-combatants in concentration camps. Public and political opposition was expressed by repeated attacks on British government policies by the Liberal MP David Lloyd George.[4]

Lloyd George made his name in opposition, as he alleged that Joseph Chamberlain, his brother, and his son had large personal financial investments in a number of munitions firms that were making heavy profits in the war. The allegations of corruption and greed did not carry public opinion, so the anti-war elements switched to an emphasis on humanitarianism, with heart-rending depictions of the suffering of Boer women and children in the camps.[5] Emily Hobhouse in June 1901 published a fifteen-page pamphlet reporting on the horrific state of the concentration camps, and Lloyd George openly accused the government of "a policy of extermination" directed against the Boer population. In June, 1901, Liberal party leader Henry Campbell-Bannerman took up the assault and answered the rhetorical "When is a war not a war?" with "When it is carried on by methods of barbarism in South Africa," referring to those same camps and the policies that created them. In 1910, when the Boers came to friendly relations with the British, they pointed to the "barbarism" comment by Campbell-Bannerman as a mark of British good faith.[citation needed]

In April 1900, Emily Hobhouse and her friend Catherine Courtney organised a women’s branch of the South African Conciliation Committee with a women’s protest meeting being held at Queen’s Hall, Langham Place, London, on 13 June 1900. The Women's Liberal Federation participated in the Second Boer War protest movement, then moved towards support for women’s suffrage.[6]

Opposition to the war was strongest among the Irish Catholics throughout the British Empire. Many Irish nationalists sympathised with the Boers, having a shared opposition to British imperialism. Though many Irishmen served in the British Army, some fought for the Boers too. Irish miners working in the Transvaal when the war began formed the nucleus of two tiny Irish commandos.[7]

Neutral countries edit

The overwhelming public sentiment in neutral countries, especially the Netherlands, Russia, Germany, France, and the United States, was highly negative. Anger against the British was high, and many people supported the Boers. Many saw the Boers as a group of heroic, outnumbered and brave freedom fighters.[8] That included the general public, the leading newspapers, and many public figures. There was some fear that Germany might involve itself beyond mere rhetoric, but Germany remained strictly neutral.[9][10] Some 225 Russian Army officers took leave to go and fight for the Boers.[11]

Donal Lowry points out that support for the Boers was strongest among anti-imperialists in general and opponents of the British Empire in particular, including French-Canadian separatists in Quebec and Marxist intellectuals such as György Lukács and Karl Kautsky. Irish Catholics in the United States, Australia, Britain and Ireland supported the Boers, who inspired separatist and nationalist leaders, especially in the Irish Republican Army.[12]

In Australia edit

As part of the empire, Australia joined in the war but also suffered doubts about it. Most such doubts followed the English radical critique of war and empire, but others followed a different strain relating to an early form of Australian nationalism. Notable among the nationalist critique were the anti-war cartoons in the Bulletin magazine, which thumped home a nativist message that participation in a war started by Jews, capitalists and imperialists would mean having to accept non-white migrants once peace came (Breaker Morant had contributed to The Bulletin).

The execution by the British army of two Australian lieutenants (Breaker Morant and Peter Handcock) of the Bushveldt Carbineers for war crimes in 1902 and the imprisonment of a third, George Witton, was initially uncontroversial, but after the war prompted a movement to release Witton, which fuelled anti-war radicalism. More than 80,000 signatures on petitions and intercession by a South African millionnaire saw Witton released in 1904. Three years later he wrote his influential apologia Scapegoats of the Empire.

Canada edit

In Canada, attitudes toward the conflict were rooted in ethnic and religious communities. There was a three-way political conflict between Canadians of British descent, Irish descent, and French descent. Many French-Canadians were hostile to the British Empire, and by 1915, were largely refusing to volunteer for military service in the First World War. Protestant Canadians, typically of British descent, were strong supporters of the Empire and the "mother country". They sent thousands of volunteers to fight alongside the British Army against the Boers, and in the process identified themselves even more strongly with the British Empire.[13] Opposition also came from some English immigrants such as the intellectual leader Goldwin Smith.[14] In Canada, the Irish Catholics were fighting the French-Canadians for control of the Catholic Church, so the Irish generally supported the pro-British position.[15]

Assassination attempt edit

In Belgium, the 15-year-old socialist Jean-Baptiste Sipido, a young tinsmith's apprentice, attempted to assassinate the Prince of Wales then passing through Brussels.[16] He accused the Prince of causing the slaughter of thousands during the Boer War. In the following trial the Belgian jury found Sipido not guilty, despite the facts of the case being clear,[17] which the Leader of the British House of Commons called "a grave and most unfortunate miscarriage of justice".[18]

Aftermath edit

The existence of anti-war sentiment contributed to the perceptions of British actions after the war. There was much public outrage in the UK and official Australian government opposition against the use of cheap Chinese labour, known as coolies, after the war by the governor of the new crown colonies, Lord Milner. Workers were often kept in appalling conditions, received only a small wage and were forbidden to socialise with the local population. Some believe the issue of Chinese coolie labour can be seen as the climax of public antipathy towards the war.[citation needed]

Having taken the country into a prolonged war, the electorate delivered a harsh verdict at the first general election after the war was over. Arthur Balfour, succeeding his uncle Lord Salisbury in 1903 immediately after the war, took over a Conservative party that had won two successive landslide majorities but led it to a landslide defeat in 1906.[citation needed]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Élie Halévy, Imperialism and the Rise of Labour, 1895–1905 (1951) pp. 93–99.
  2. ^ John S. Galbraith, "The pamphlet campaign on the Boer war." Journal of Modern History (1952): 111–26.
  3. ^ Halévy, Imperialism and the Rise of Labour, 1895–1905 (1951) pp. 99–110.
  4. ^ Roy Hattersley. David Lloyd George: The Great Outsider (2000) pp. 119–44
  5. ^ Halévy, Imperialism and the Rise of Labour, 1895–1905 (1951) pp. 95–98.
  6. ^ "Today in London's anti-war history: Women's rally against the Boer War, 1900". 13 June 2017.
  7. ^ Donal P. McCracken, The Irish Pro-Boers, 1877–1902 (Perskor, 1989).
  8. ^ Stuart Anderson, "Racial Anglo-Saxonism and the American Response to the Boer War." Diplomatic History 2.3 (1978): 219–36.
  9. ^ J. L. Garvin, The Life of Joseph Chamberlain (1934) 3:508–17
  10. ^ Keith M. Wilson, The international impact of the Boer War (Routledge, 2014).
  11. ^ G. V. Shubin, "'I'd like to go to South Africa': The participation of Russian volunteer officers in the Boer War, 1899–1902" [in Russian] Voenno-Istoricheskii Zhurnal (2001), Issue 1, pp. 65–75.
  12. ^ Donal Lowry, "‘The Play of Forces World-Wide in their Scope and Revolutionary in their Operation [JA Hobson]’: The South African War as an International Event." South African Historical Journal 41#1 (1999): 83–105.
  13. ^ Gordon L. Heath, War with a Silver Lining: Canadian Protestant Churches and the South African War, 1899-1902 (McGill-Queen's Press-MQUP, 2009).
  14. ^ R. Craig Brown, "Goldwin Smith and Anti‐imperialism." Canadian Historical Review 43.2 (1962): 93–105.
  15. ^ Mark G. McGowan, "The De-Greening of the Irish: Toronto’s Irish‑Catholic Press, Imperialism, and the Forging of a New Identity, 1887–1914." Historical Papers/Communications historiques 24.1 (1989): 118–45.
  16. ^ The Manchester Guardian, Thursday April 5, 1900
  17. ^ Summarized by Speyer in "The Legal Aspects of the Sipido Case", Journal of the Society of Comparative Legislation 1900, p. 436.
  18. ^ Speyer, p. 438.

Further reading edit

  • Van Hartesveldt, Fred R. The Boer War: Historiography and Annotated Bibliography (2000) excerpt
  • Wilson, Keith M., ed. The international impact of the Boer War (Routledge, 2014). online review by Matthew Seligmann

Great Britain edit

  • Auld, John W. "The Liberal Pro-Boers." Journal of British Studies 14#2 (1975): 78–101.
  • Beaven, Brad. "The Provincial Press, Civic Ceremony and the Citizen-Soldier During the Boer War, 1899–1902: A Study of Local Patriotism." The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 37.2 (2009): 207–28.
  • Brown, Stewart J. "'Echoes of Midlothian': Scottish Liberalism and the South African War, 1899-1902." Scottish Historical Review 71.191/192 (1992): 156–83.
  • Denness, Zoë. "Women and warfare at the start of the twentieth century: the racialization of the ‘enemy’ during the South African War (1899–1902)." Patterns of Prejudice 46#3-4 (2012): 255–76.
  • Halévy, Élie. Imperialism and the Rise of Labour, 1895–1905 (1951) pp. 69–138.
  • Hinton, Guy. "Newcastle and the Boer War: Regional Reactions to an Imperial War." Northern History 52.2 (2015): 272–94.
  • Johnson, Matthew. Militarism and the British Left, 1902–1914 (Palgrave Macmillan, 2013).
  • McFarland, E. W. "‘Empire-Enlarging Genius’: Scottish Imperial Yeomanry Volunteers in the Boer War." War in history 13.3 (2006): 299–328.
  • McFarland, E. W. "Commemoration of the South African War in Scotland, 1900–10." The Scottish Historical Review (2010): 194–223. abstract
  • Miller, S.M. "In Support of the 'Imperial Mission'? Volunteering for the South African War, 1899–1902" Journal of Military History 69#3(2005), 691–711.
  • Morgan, Kenneth O. "The Boer War and the media (1899–1902)." Twentieth Century British History 13.1 (2002): 1–16.
  • Pelling, H. British Labour and British Imperialism: Popular Politics and Society in Late Victorian Britain (1968).
  • Porter, Bernard. "The Pro-Boers in Britain." in Peter Warwick, ed. The South African War: The Anglo-Boer War 1899–1902 (1980): 239–42.
  • Price, Richard. An Imperial War and the British Working Class (Toronto, 1972)
  • Readman, Paul. "The Conservative Party, Patriotism, and British Politics: The Case of the General Election of 1900" Journal of British Studies 40#1 (2001), 107–45;
  • George R. Witton, Scapegoats of the Empire, (1907) Angus & Robertson, 1982.
  • Wood-Lamont, Sally. Biography of W.T. Stead, W.T. Stead and his "Books for the Bairns", (Salvia Books, Edinburgh, 1987)

Dominions and United States edit

  • Anderson, Stuart. "Racial Anglo-Saxonism and the American Response to the Boer War." Diplomatic History 2.3 (1978): 219–36.
  • Bassett, Jan. Guns and brooches: Australian army nursing from the Boer War to the Gulf War (Oxford UP, 1997).
  • Chaktsiris, Mary G. "‘Our Boys With the Maple Leaf on Their Shoulders and Straps’: Masculinity, the Toronto Press, and the Outbreak of the South African War, 1899." War & Society 32#1 (2013): 3–25.
  • Connolly, C. N. "Manufacturing ‘spontaneity’: The Australian offers of troops for the Boer War." Australian Historical Studies 18.70 (1978): 106–17.
  • Douma, Michael James. "Ethnic Identities in a Transnational Context: The Dutch American Reaction to the Anglo-Boer War 1899–1902." South African Historical Journal 65.4 (2013): 481–503.
  • Heath, Gordon L. (2009). War with a Silver Lining: Canadian Protestant Churches and the South African War, 1899–1902. McGill-Queen's Press. ISBN 9780773577114.
  • Miller, Carman. "Framing Canada's Great War: a case for including the Boer War." Journal of Transatlantic Studies 6#1 (2008): 3–21.
  • Miller, Carman. "Loyalty, Patriotism and Resistance: Canada's Response to the Anglo-Boer War, 1899–1902." South African Historical Journal 41#1 (1999): 312–23.
  • Miller, Carman. Painting the Map Red: Canada and the South African War, 1899–1902 (Montreal: Canadian War Museum & McGill-Queen's University Press, 1993).
  • Mulanax, Richard B. The Boer War in American politics and diplomacy (University Press of America, 1994).
  • Page, Robert J.D. "Canada and the imperial idea in the Boer War years." Journal of Canadian Studies 5#1 (1970): 33+
  • Penlington, Norman. Canada and Imperialism, 1896–1899 (Toronto, 1965).
  • Penny, Barbara R. "Australia's Reactions to the Boer War – a Study in Colonial Imperialism." Journal of British Studies 7#1 (1967): 97–130.
  • Strauss, Charles T. "God Save the Boer: Irish American Catholics and the South African War, 1899–1902." US Catholic Historian 26#4 (2008): 1–26.
  • Wallace, Robert L. The Australians at the Boer War (Australian War Memorial, 1976).
  • Wilcox, Craig. Australia's Boer War: The War in South Africa 1899–1902 (Oxford UP, 2002).

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This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Opposition to the Second Boer War news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Opposition to the Second Boer War occurred both within and outside of the British Empire Among the British public there was initially much support for the war though it declined considerably as the conflict dragged on Internationally condemnation of Britain came from many sources predominately left wing and anti imperialist ones Inside Britain influential groups especially based in the opposition Liberal Party formed immediately They fought ineffectually against the British war policies which were supported by the Conservative Party of Prime Minister Salisbury After the Boers switched to guerrilla warfare in 1900 and the British armed forces adopted scorched earth policies the intensity of opposition rhetoric escalated However at all times supporters of the war controlled the British government recruited soldiers in large numbers and represented a majority of public opinion Outside the British Empire the Boer cause won far more support particularly from left wing political circles However all governments remained neutral Opposition includes both opponents of the British war and also opponents of the Boers war This article includes opponents and supporters in the general public and the media in Britain the British Empire and major neutral countries Contents 1 United Kingdom 2 Neutral countries 3 In Australia 4 Canada 5 Assassination attempt 6 Aftermath 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 9 1 Great Britain 9 2 Dominions and United StatesUnited Kingdom editAt the start of the war Liberal groups mobilized committees to protest the war including the South African Conciliation Committee and W T Stead s Stop the War Committee A common theme among these groups was the argument that it was a capitalistic desire for the gold and diamond deposits in the Boer Republics that motivated the British government to declare war Angered crowds often broke up such anti war meetings viewing them as unpatriotic The British press was overwhelmingly in support of the government s decision to go to war with only the Manchester Guardian and the Westminster Gazette outspoken in opposition 1 With the press against them anti war elements relied heavily on street corner distribution of their numerous pamphlets 2 Nevertheless a tide of young men volunteered for the war as many as 100 000 a month at the peak Liberals split with many top leaders following Lord Rosebery in support of the war Many nonconformists the backbone of the Liberal Party likewise supported the war 3 The 1900 UK general election was known as the khaki election where the Conservative government rallied patriotic voters It resulted in a victory for the Conservative government on the back of recent British victories against the Boers However public support waned as it became apparent that the war would not be easy and moral unease developed following reports about scorched earth policies adopted by the British military or the forcible internment of Boer non combatants in concentration camps Public and political opposition was expressed by repeated attacks on British government policies by the Liberal MP David Lloyd George 4 Lloyd George made his name in opposition as he alleged that Joseph Chamberlain his brother and his son had large personal financial investments in a number of munitions firms that were making heavy profits in the war The allegations of corruption and greed did not carry public opinion so the anti war elements switched to an emphasis on humanitarianism with heart rending depictions of the suffering of Boer women and children in the camps 5 Emily Hobhouse in June 1901 published a fifteen page pamphlet reporting on the horrific state of the concentration camps and Lloyd George openly accused the government of a policy of extermination directed against the Boer population In June 1901 Liberal party leader Henry Campbell Bannerman took up the assault and answered the rhetorical When is a war not a war with When it is carried on by methods of barbarism in South Africa referring to those same camps and the policies that created them In 1910 when the Boers came to friendly relations with the British they pointed to the barbarism comment by Campbell Bannerman as a mark of British good faith citation needed In April 1900 Emily Hobhouse and her friend Catherine Courtney organised a women s branch of the South African Conciliation Committee with a women s protest meeting being held at Queen s Hall Langham Place London on 13 June 1900 The Women s Liberal Federation participated in the Second Boer War protest movement then moved towards support for women s suffrage 6 Opposition to the war was strongest among the Irish Catholics throughout the British Empire Many Irish nationalists sympathised with the Boers having a shared opposition to British imperialism Though many Irishmen served in the British Army some fought for the Boers too Irish miners working in the Transvaal when the war began formed the nucleus of two tiny Irish commandos 7 Neutral countries editThe overwhelming public sentiment in neutral countries especially the Netherlands Russia Germany France and the United States was highly negative Anger against the British was high and many people supported the Boers Many saw the Boers as a group of heroic outnumbered and brave freedom fighters 8 That included the general public the leading newspapers and many public figures There was some fear that Germany might involve itself beyond mere rhetoric but Germany remained strictly neutral 9 10 Some 225 Russian Army officers took leave to go and fight for the Boers 11 Donal Lowry points out that support for the Boers was strongest among anti imperialists in general and opponents of the British Empire in particular including French Canadian separatists in Quebec and Marxist intellectuals such as Gyorgy Lukacs and Karl Kautsky Irish Catholics in the United States Australia Britain and Ireland supported the Boers who inspired separatist and nationalist leaders especially in the Irish Republican Army 12 In Australia editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message As part of the empire Australia joined in the war but also suffered doubts about it Most such doubts followed the English radical critique of war and empire but others followed a different strain relating to an early form of Australian nationalism Notable among the nationalist critique were the anti war cartoons in the Bulletin magazine which thumped home a nativist message that participation in a war started by Jews capitalists and imperialists would mean having to accept non white migrants once peace came Breaker Morant had contributed to The Bulletin The execution by the British army of two Australian lieutenants Breaker Morant and Peter Handcock of the Bushveldt Carbineers for war crimes in 1902 and the imprisonment of a third George Witton was initially uncontroversial but after the war prompted a movement to release Witton which fuelled anti war radicalism More than 80 000 signatures on petitions and intercession by a South African millionnaire saw Witton released in 1904 Three years later he wrote his influential apologia Scapegoats of the Empire Canada editIn Canada attitudes toward the conflict were rooted in ethnic and religious communities There was a three way political conflict between Canadians of British descent Irish descent and French descent Many French Canadians were hostile to the British Empire and by 1915 were largely refusing to volunteer for military service in the First World War Protestant Canadians typically of British descent were strong supporters of the Empire and the mother country They sent thousands of volunteers to fight alongside the British Army against the Boers and in the process identified themselves even more strongly with the British Empire 13 Opposition also came from some English immigrants such as the intellectual leader Goldwin Smith 14 In Canada the Irish Catholics were fighting the French Canadians for control of the Catholic Church so the Irish generally supported the pro British position 15 Assassination attempt editIn Belgium the 15 year old socialist Jean Baptiste Sipido a young tinsmith s apprentice attempted to assassinate the Prince of Wales then passing through Brussels 16 He accused the Prince of causing the slaughter of thousands during the Boer War In the following trial the Belgian jury found Sipido not guilty despite the facts of the case being clear 17 which the Leader of the British House of Commons called a grave and most unfortunate miscarriage of justice 18 Aftermath editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message The existence of anti war sentiment contributed to the perceptions of British actions after the war There was much public outrage in the UK and official Australian government opposition against the use of cheap Chinese labour known as coolies after the war by the governor of the new crown colonies Lord Milner Workers were often kept in appalling conditions received only a small wage and were forbidden to socialise with the local population Some believe the issue of Chinese coolie labour can be seen as the climax of public antipathy towards the war citation needed Having taken the country into a prolonged war the electorate delivered a harsh verdict at the first general election after the war was over Arthur Balfour succeeding his uncle Lord Salisbury in 1903 immediately after the war took over a Conservative party that had won two successive landslide majorities but led it to a landslide defeat in 1906 citation needed See also editList of peace activists List of anti war organizationsReferences edit Elie Halevy Imperialism and the Rise of Labour 1895 1905 1951 pp 93 99 John S Galbraith The pamphlet campaign on the Boer war Journal of Modern History 1952 111 26 Halevy Imperialism and the Rise of Labour 1895 1905 1951 pp 99 110 Roy Hattersley David Lloyd George The Great Outsider 2000 pp 119 44 Halevy Imperialism and the Rise of Labour 1895 1905 1951 pp 95 98 Today in London s anti war history Women s rally against the Boer War 1900 13 June 2017 Donal P McCracken The Irish Pro Boers 1877 1902 Perskor 1989 Stuart Anderson Racial Anglo Saxonism and the American Response to the Boer War Diplomatic History 2 3 1978 219 36 J L Garvin The Life of Joseph Chamberlain 1934 3 508 17 Keith M Wilson The international impact of the Boer War Routledge 2014 G V Shubin I d like to go to South Africa The participation of Russian volunteer officers in the Boer War 1899 1902 in Russian Voenno Istoricheskii Zhurnal 2001 Issue 1 pp 65 75 Donal Lowry The Play of Forces World Wide in their Scope and Revolutionary in their Operation JA Hobson The South African War as an International Event South African Historical Journal 41 1 1999 83 105 Gordon L Heath War with a Silver Lining Canadian Protestant Churches and the South African War 1899 1902 McGill Queen s Press MQUP 2009 R Craig Brown Goldwin Smith and Anti imperialism Canadian Historical Review 43 2 1962 93 105 Mark G McGowan The De Greening of the Irish Toronto s Irish Catholic Press Imperialism and the Forging of a New Identity 1887 1914 Historical Papers Communications historiques 24 1 1989 118 45 The Manchester Guardian Thursday April 5 1900 Summarized by Speyer in The Legal Aspects of the Sipido Case Journal of the Society of Comparative Legislation 1900 p 436 Speyer p 438 Further reading editVan Hartesveldt Fred R The Boer War Historiography and Annotated Bibliography 2000 excerpt Wilson Keith M ed The international impact of the Boer War Routledge 2014 online review by Matthew SeligmannGreat Britain edit Auld John W The Liberal Pro Boers Journal of British Studies 14 2 1975 78 101 Beaven Brad The Provincial Press Civic Ceremony and the Citizen Soldier During the Boer War 1899 1902 A Study of Local Patriotism The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 37 2 2009 207 28 Brown Stewart J Echoes of Midlothian Scottish Liberalism and the South African War 1899 1902 Scottish Historical Review 71 191 192 1992 156 83 Denness Zoe Women and warfare at the start of the twentieth century the racialization of the enemy during the South African War 1899 1902 Patterns of Prejudice 46 3 4 2012 255 76 Halevy Elie Imperialism and the Rise of Labour 1895 1905 1951 pp 69 138 Hinton Guy Newcastle and the Boer War Regional Reactions to an Imperial War Northern History 52 2 2015 272 94 Johnson Matthew Militarism and the British Left 1902 1914 Palgrave Macmillan 2013 McFarland E W Empire Enlarging Genius Scottish Imperial Yeomanry Volunteers in the Boer War War in history 13 3 2006 299 328 McFarland E W Commemoration of the South African War in Scotland 1900 10 The Scottish Historical Review 2010 194 223 abstract Miller S M In Support of the Imperial Mission Volunteering for the South African War 1899 1902 Journal of Military History 69 3 2005 691 711 Morgan Kenneth O The Boer War and the media 1899 1902 Twentieth Century British History 13 1 2002 1 16 Pelling H British Labour and British Imperialism Popular Politics and Society in Late Victorian Britain 1968 Porter Bernard The Pro Boers in Britain in Peter Warwick ed The South African War The Anglo Boer War 1899 1902 1980 239 42 Price Richard An Imperial War and the British Working Class Toronto 1972 Readman Paul The Conservative Party Patriotism and British Politics The Case of the General Election of 1900 Journal of British Studies 40 1 2001 107 45 George R Witton Scapegoats of the Empire 1907 Angus amp Robertson 1982 Wood Lamont Sally Biography of W T Stead W T Stead and his Books for the Bairns Salvia Books Edinburgh 1987 Dominions and United States edit Anderson Stuart Racial Anglo Saxonism and the American Response to the Boer War Diplomatic History 2 3 1978 219 36 Bassett Jan Guns and brooches Australian army nursing from the Boer War to the Gulf War Oxford UP 1997 Chaktsiris Mary G Our Boys With the Maple Leaf on Their Shoulders and Straps Masculinity the Toronto Press and the Outbreak of the South African War 1899 War amp Society 32 1 2013 3 25 Connolly C N Manufacturing spontaneity The Australian offers of troops for the Boer War Australian Historical Studies 18 70 1978 106 17 Douma Michael James Ethnic Identities in a Transnational Context The Dutch American Reaction to the Anglo Boer War 1899 1902 South African Historical Journal 65 4 2013 481 503 Heath Gordon L 2009 War with a Silver Lining Canadian Protestant Churches and the South African War 1899 1902 McGill Queen s Press ISBN 9780773577114 Miller Carman Framing Canada s Great War a case for including the Boer War Journal of Transatlantic Studies 6 1 2008 3 21 Miller Carman Loyalty Patriotism and Resistance Canada s Response to the Anglo Boer War 1899 1902 South African Historical Journal 41 1 1999 312 23 Miller Carman Painting the Map Red Canada and the South African War 1899 1902 Montreal Canadian War Museum amp McGill Queen s University Press 1993 Mulanax Richard B The Boer War in American politics and diplomacy University Press of America 1994 Page Robert J D Canada and the imperial idea in the Boer War years Journal of Canadian Studies 5 1 1970 33 Penlington Norman Canada and Imperialism 1896 1899 Toronto 1965 Penny Barbara R Australia s Reactions to the Boer War a Study in Colonial Imperialism Journal of British Studies 7 1 1967 97 130 Strauss Charles T God Save the Boer Irish American Catholics and the South African War 1899 1902 US Catholic Historian 26 4 2008 1 26 Wallace Robert L The Australians at the Boer War Australian War Memorial 1976 Wilcox Craig Australia s Boer War The War in South Africa 1899 1902 Oxford UP 2002 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Opposition to the Second Boer War amp oldid 1167957431, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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