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Southern Rhodesia in World War I

When the United Kingdom declared war on Germany at the start of World War I in August 1914, settler society in Southern Rhodesia,[n 1] then administered by the British South Africa Company, received the news with great patriotic enthusiasm. The Company administrator, Sir William Milton, wired the UK government, "All Rhodesia ... ready to do its duty".[2] Although it supported Britain, the company was concerned about the possible financial implications for its chartered territory should it make direct commitments to the war effort, particularly at first, so most of the colony's contribution to the war was made by Southern Rhodesians individually—not only those who volunteered to fight abroad, but also those who remained at home and raised funds to donate food, equipment and other supplies.

The original King's Royal Rifle Corps Rhodesian Platoon, pictured at Sheerness, England in November 1914. Third and fourth from the right in the second row sit the commanding officer, Captain J B Brady, and the Marquess of Winchester, who informally sponsored the unit. The majority of the men pictured here were killed in action, and most of the rest were discharged because of serious wounds.[1]

Starting immediately after the outbreak of war, parties of white Southern Rhodesians paid their own way to England to join the British Army. Most Southern Rhodesians who served in the war enlisted in this way and fought on the Western Front, taking part in many of the major battles with an assortment of British, South African and other colonial units, most commonly the King's Royal Rifle Corps, which recruited hundreds of men from the colony, and created homogeneous Rhodesian platoons. Troopers from Southern Rhodesia became renowned on the Western Front for their marksmanship, a result of their frontier lifestyle. Some of the colony's men served in the Royal Flying Corps, one of the two predecessors of the Royal Air Force. The Rhodesia Regiment, the Rhodesia Native Regiment and the British South Africa Police served in the African theatre of the conflict, contributing to the South-West African and East African campaigns.

Though it was one of the few combatant territories not to raise fighting men through conscription, proportional to white population, Southern Rhodesia contributed more manpower to the British war effort than any other dominion or colony, and more than Britain itself. White troops numbered 5,716, about 40% of white men in the colony, with 1,720 of these serving as commissioned officers. The Rhodesia Native Regiment enlisted 2,507 black soldiers, about 30 black recruits scouted for the Rhodesia Regiment, and around 350 served in British and South African units. Over 800 Southern Rhodesians of all races died on operational service during the war, with many more seriously wounded.

The territory's contributions during the First World War became a major entry in many histories of the colony, and a great source of pride for the white community, as well as for some black Rhodesians. It played a part in the UK government's decision to grant self-government in 1923, and remained prominent in the national consciousness for decades. When the colonial government unilaterally declared independence from Britain in 1965, it deliberately did so on Armistice Day, 11 November, and signed the proclamation at 11:00 local time. Since the territory's reconstitution and recognised independence as Zimbabwe in 1980, the modern government has removed many references to the war, such as memorial monuments and plaques, from public view, regarding them as unwelcome vestiges of white minority rule and colonialism. The Zimbabwean cultural memory has largely forgotten the First World War.

Background edit

 
Southern Rhodesia, highlighted in red on a map of Africa in 1914; other British possessions in pink

At the time of World War I (also known as the First World War or the Great War), Southern Rhodesia[n 1] was administered by the British South Africa Company, which had controlled it and Northern Rhodesia since acquiring them through diplomacy and conquest during the 1890s. The white population in Southern Rhodesia stood at 23,606 in 1911 (a minority of 3%),[4] while Northern Rhodesia had about 3,000 white settlers (less than half of 1%).[5][n 2] With the company's charter due to expire in late 1914, most Southern Rhodesian public attention was focused on this issue before the outbreak of war. The settlers were split between those who backed continued administration by the Chartered Company and those who advocated responsible government, which would make Southern Rhodesia a self-governing colony within the British Empire.[8] Still others favoured the integration of Southern Rhodesia into the Union of South Africa, which had been formed in 1910.[n 3] Following the intervention of the war, the charter was renewed for 10 years in early 1915.[10]

Before 1914, Southern Rhodesia's police force was the British South Africa Police (BSAP), first raised in 1889 and reconstituted into a more permanent form in 1896.[11] This paramilitary, mounted infantry force was theoretically also the country's standing army.[12] Organised along military lines,[13] it served in the First and Second Matabele Wars of the 1890s, operated on Britain's side in the Anglo-Boer War of 1899–1902 (alongside the specially-raised Rhodesia Regiment),[14] and by 1914 comprised about 1,150 men (including officers). Reserves existed in the form of the Southern Rhodesia Volunteers, an all-white amateur force with a paper strength of 2,000 intended for mobilisation against local uprisings. Few doubted the Volunteers' enthusiasm, but they were not extensively trained or equipped; though perhaps useful in a Rhodesian bush skirmish, most observers agreed they would be no match for professional soldiers in a conventional war. In any case, the Volunteers' enlistment contracts bound them for domestic service only.[12]

Outbreak of war edit

Announcement and reception edit

 
Men of the 1st Rhodesia Regiment in Cape Town, December 1914

When Britain declared war on Germany at 23:00 Greenwich Mean Time on 4 August 1914, the British Empire's dominions and colonies automatically became involved as well. Word of this reached the Southern Rhodesian capital Salisbury during the night. Early on 5 August, the Company administrator Sir William Milton wired Whitehall: "All Rhodesia united in devoted loyalty to King and Empire and ready to do its duty."[2] A few hours later he officially announced to the populace that Southern Rhodesia was at war.[2] The Rhodesia Herald and Bulawayo Chronicle newspapers published special editions the same day to spread the news;[8] it took about half a week for word to reach the whole country, but jingoistic demonstrations began in the major towns almost immediately.[2]

In the words of the historian Peter McLaughlin, the Southern Rhodesian settlers "seemed to out-British the British" in their patriotic zeal,[15] so it was to the frustration of many of them that the Company did not immediately commit to any martial action. While it sent supportive messages to Whitehall, the Company felt it could not raise any kind of expeditionary force without first considering the implications for its administrative operations; as a commercial concern, it was possible for the company to go bankrupt. Who would foot the bill for war expenditure, its hierarchy pondered: the Company itself, the Rhodesian taxpayers or the British government?[16]

As the local newspapers filled with letters from readers clamouring for Rhodesian troops to be mustered and despatched to Europe post-haste,[16] the administration limited its initial contribution to posting a section of BSAP troopers to the Victoria Falls Bridge to guard against possible German attack from South-West Africa though the Caprivi Strip.[12] In early September, an indignant letter to the Rhodesia Herald from Colonel Raleigh Grey, a major figure in local business, politics and military matters, accused the Company of bringing "a slur on a British country" by doing so little.[16]

Rhodesian Reserves edit

A few days after the war began, the Chartered Company formed the Rhodesian Reserves, an amorphous entity intended to accommodate the many white men who were keen to put on uniform, as well as to make a start towards organising what might eventually become an expeditionary force. Eminent citizens and elected leaders formed their own platoons, each bringing 24 volunteers; three or four of these 25-man troops made a company. Units representing the Caledonian Society, the Lancashire and Yorkshire Society, the Legion of Frontiersmen and other local organisations mirrored the Pals battalions in Britain. Volunteers could opt to serve overseas, within Rhodesia or only locally; around 1,000 had volunteered in all by 13 August.[17]

The Company suggested to the UK government that it might despatch 500 troopers from the Rhodesian Reserves to Europe to act as an all-Southern Rhodesian unit on the Western Front (in Belgium and France), but the War Office in London replied that such an expeditionary force would be more practically deployed in Africa, within the South African forces. When the Company relayed this idea south, the South Africans said they were happy to take the Southern Rhodesians, but only if they enlisted independently in existing Union regiments. The Company found itself in the unusual position of having a prospective expeditionary force that nobody wanted.[18] Unwilling to wait, some Southern Rhodesian would-be soldiers made their own way to Britain to join the British Army directly, as individuals or in groups. By the end of October 1914, about 300 were on their way.[17]

Europe edit

Western Front edit

 
Southern Rhodesian members of King Edward's Horse, a British Army cavalry regiment

In terms of fighting manpower, Southern Rhodesia's main contribution to World War I was in the trenches of the Western Front.[19] As the white Southern Rhodesians in this theatre joined the British Army separately, at different times and under their own steam (or were already connected to specific units as reservists), they were spread across dozens of regiments, including the Black Watch, the Coldstream Guards, the Grenadier Guards, the Royal Engineers and the Royal Marines, as well as many South African units and others.[20] During the war's opening months, Southern Rhodesian volunteers who could not afford to travel to England were assisted by a private fund set up by Ernest Lucas Guest, a Salisbury lawyer and Anglo-Boer War veteran who also organised an accompanying recruitment campaign for European service. Guest stopped recruiting at the company's request after it created the 1st Rhodesia Regiment, an expeditionary force to South and South-West Africa, in October 1914.[21]

A link developed during the war with the King's Royal Rifle Corps (KRRC), whose Southern Rhodesian contingent—numbering a few hundred, chiefly in its 2nd and 3rd Battalions—was the largest on the Western Front.[19] The connection with this particular corps began as the result of a chance conversation aboard the ship that took the first batch of Southern Rhodesians from Cape Town to Southampton in late 1914. The 16th Marquess of Winchester, who had links with Rhodesia dating back to the 1890s, was also aboard the ship, returning from a visit to the colony. Encountering Captain John Banks Brady, the officer of Irish origin who led the volunteers, the Marquess asked where his party was headed. Brady enthusiastically replied that they were going to war together in France. The Marquess suggested to Brady that since it might be difficult to prevent his men from being split up during the enlistment process, it might be a good idea for the Rhodesians to join the KRRC, where he could keep an eye on them through his connections with the Winchester-based regiment. The Southern Rhodesian contingent duly mustered into the KRRC. A designated Rhodesian platoon, widely referred to thereafter as "the Rhodesian Platoon", was formed under Brady at the KRRC training camp at Sheerness, on the Isle of Sheppey in Kent.[22]

They are not only intensely British, but quite intolerably Rhodesian ... they exhibit a tendency to collect together, [and] are inclined to vaunt themselves, to be puffed up by the mere fact that they are Rhodesians.

A contemporary South African opinion on Rhodesians abroad[23]

As a rule, the white Rhodesians overseas combined stridently pro-British attitudes with an even stronger pride in Rhodesia.[7] Many of them saw participation in the war, particularly in distinct "Rhodesian" formations, as a step towards forging a distinctive national identity, like those of Australia and the other more mature British dominions, and building a case for Southern Rhodesian self-government.[24] The existence of an explicitly Rhodesian Platoon in the KRRC endeared the regiment to the Southern Rhodesian public, and attracted many of the colony's volunteers who arrived in England later in the war; in time, the KRRC formed further Rhodesian platoons from additional personnel. While the average Rhodesian colonial, living on the frontier of the Empire, was at least casually acquainted with rifles, most Englishmen had never held one. At Sheerness, Brady's Rhodesian Platoon won a reputation for fine sharpshooting, and set a regimental record score at the shooting range.[25]

Once posted to France in December 1914, the Rhodesian Platoon almost immediately began suffering regular heavy casualties. Southern Rhodesian volunteers continued to arrive piecemeal in England throughout the conflict, so Rhodesian formations on the Western Front received regular reinforcements in small batches, but because casualties were usually concentrated in far larger groups it often took a few months for a depleted Southern Rhodesian unit to return to full numerical strength. A cycle developed whereby Rhodesian platoons in Belgium and France were abruptly decimated and then gradually built up again only to suffer the same fate on returning to action.[26] When the KRRC's Rhodesian platoons took part in British offensives, they were easily recognised by a distinctive battle cry that their men shouted as they went over the top.[7] Sometimes the British and German positions were so close that troopers on each front line could hear what was said in the opposite trench; one group of Southern Rhodesians avoided being understood in this situation by speaking a mixture of Shona and Sindebele (two African languages) instead of English.[27]

The cold is frightfully trying. It is snowing and freezing hard tonight, and it makes me yearn to be back on my farm on the Hunyani ...

A Rhodesian writes home from the First Battle of Ypres, late 1914[28]

Trench warfare was a dreadful ordeal for soldiers, and the Southern Rhodesians, coming from the open veld of southern Africa, had a particularly difficult time getting used to the cold and the mud.[29] Brady reported that some of his men had contracted frostbite within 48 hours of reaching the trenches.[28] Despite this, the KRRC's Rhodesians acquitted themselves well in the eyes of their superiors; Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Edward Hutton, who wrote a history of the KRRC, commented that the Southern Rhodesian contingent "earned for itself great reputation for valour and good shooting".[30] Southern Rhodesians became especially valuable to the KRRC as designated snipers, grenadiers, Lewis Gunners and other specialists.[31] While discussing a KRRC sniper section, Hutton singles its Southern Rhodesian members out for their fine marksmanship, commenting that "accustomed to big game shooting, [they] particularly excelled in this system of 'snipers', and inflicted continual losses upon the enemy".[30] In their 2008 history of sniping, Pat Farey and Mark Spicer highlight the prowess of South African and Rhodesian sharpshooters on the Western Front, and claim that one group of 24 southern Africans collectively accounted for over 3,000 German casualties and fatalities.[32]

 
South Africans and Rhodesians fight the Germans hand-to-hand in Delville Wood

So many Southern Rhodesians were withdrawn from the trenches for officer training that in mid-1915 Brady appealed through the Salisbury and Bulawayo presses for more volunteers to replace those who had been commissioned.[31] A platoon of Southern Rhodesians with the 2nd Battalion, KRRC took part in the "big push" of 1 July 1916, the first day of the Battle of the Somme, charging German positions elsewhere on the line early that morning. There were 90 Rhodesians on the eve of the attack and only 10 alive and unwounded afterwards.[26] On the Somme battlefield itself, Rhodesians were among those at Delville Wood, which began on 14 July. This was the South African 1st Infantry Brigade's first engagement,[n 4] and some of the colonials blacked up and imitated Zulu battle cries and war dances.[34] Despite suffering casualties of catastrophic proportions—about 80% of the brigade's personnel were killed, wounded or captured—they took the Wood and held it as ordered until they were relieved on 20 July.[35] By the time of its withdrawal, the South African Brigade, originally numbering 3,155 (123 officers and 3,032 other ranks), had been reduced to 19 officers and 600 men.[33] Delville Wood was later described by Sir B H Liddell Hart as "the bloodiest battle hell of 1916".[35] "God knows I never wish to see such horrible sights again," a Southern Rhodesian veteran of the battle wrote home; "at times I wished it would come fast, anything to get out of that terrible death-trap and murderous place."[36]

German gas attacks were among the most traumatic experiences for the Southern Rhodesians in Europe. One Rhodesian survivor of a gas attack described the sensation as like "suffocation, [or] slow drowning".[37] The Germans used both disabling agents, such as tear gas and the more severe mustard gas, and lethal chemicals like chlorine and phosgene. Though generally not fatal, gas attacks caused extreme physical discomfort and pain, often to the point where soldiers lost consciousness. Mustard gas in particular caused blistering of the skin, vomiting and internal and external bleeding. The British Army issued gas masks, but according to Brady these did little to help the men. Injuries sustained to the eyes, lungs and nasal passages in gas attacks were often extremely debilitating and lasting, remaining with the men for years after the war.[37]

In July 1917, a KRRC Rhodesian platoon received lofty praise from a senior British officer, who described the colonials as "absolutely first-class soldiers and great gentlemen, every bit as good as soldiers ... as our old Expeditionary Force".[38] Around the same time, a platoon of Southern Rhodesians in the KRRC took part in an engagement near Nieuwpoort in Flanders, where it and the Northamptonshire Regiment manned positions on the eastern banks of the river Yser. After a heavy artillery bombardment, German infantry and marines charged the British positions and surrounded the Rhodesian platoon. Brutal hand-to-hand fighting ensued in which most of the Southern Rhodesians were killed and some were taken prisoner. The Bulawayo Chronicle ran a eulogy for them soon after, comparing their last stand to that of Allan Wilson's Shangani Patrol in 1893.[39] Later in 1917, a Rhodesian platoon in the KRRC fought in the Battle of Passchendaele, near Ypres in western Flanders.[40]

The Western Front continued to receive Southern Rhodesian troops right up to the end of the war, including veterans of the 2nd Rhodesia Regiment's campaign in East Africa.[41] During the conflict's latter stages, the British Army sent some of its Southern Rhodesian officers to the Western Front to promote the colony's benefits, hoping to encourage emigration there by British servicemen after the war.[42]

Salonika edit

The KRRC's 3rd Battalion, including a platoon of 70 Rhodesians, was transferred from France to the Salonika front in 1915. On this comparatively quiet front, they were slowly whittled down over the course of the war: 26 of them remained in January 1917,[26] and by the end of the war so few were left that the platoon no longer existed. Most of the men had been killed in action, while others were prisoners of the Bulgarians.[43]

Aviators edit

 
Lieutenant Daniel "Pat" Judson, the first airman born in Rhodesia

Some Southern Rhodesians mustered into the Royal Flying Corps (RFC), which merged with the Royal Naval Air Service in April 1918 to form the Royal Air Force. Towards the end of the war, the service of airmen from the dominions and colonies was observed by the issuing of shoulder patches denoting the wearer's country of origin: from October 1918, Southern Rhodesians received labels marked "rhodesia".[44] One of the territory's first military aviators was Lieutenant Arthur R H Browne, a fighter pilot from Umvuma in the Southern Rhodesian Midlands, who was attached to No. 13 Squadron, RFC. He was killed in action in a dogfight on 5 December 1915;[45] his aircraft, donated by the people of Gatooma in western Mashonaland, was Gatooma No. 2,[46] one of five aeroplanes purchased by Southern Rhodesian public donations.[47] From Dryden Farm, near the south-western border town of Plumtree, came Lieutenant Frank W H Thomas, an RFC combat pilot who won the Military Cross, as well as the French Croix de Guerre (with palms), before he died on 5 January 1918 from wounds attained on operational service.[48]

Lieutenant Daniel S "Pat" Judson, born in Bulawayo in 1898, became the first Rhodesia-born airman in history when he joined the RFC in April 1916. He was severely wounded while bombing enemy positions in March 1918, but recovered and remained in the unit until April 1919.[49] The first flying ace born in Rhodesia was Major George Lloyd, nicknamed "Zulu",[50] who joined No. 60 Squadron in April 1917, and won four aerial victories before transferring to No. 40 Squadron in July 1917, where he won four more.[51] He received the Military Cross in March 1918 for "conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty",[52] and also won the Air Force Cross later that year.[51] Second Lieutenant David "Tommy" Greswolde-Lewis, a born and bred Bulawayan, was the 80th and final pilot defeated by Manfred von Richthofen, the German ace widely known as the Red Baron. Richthofen downed Lewis just north-east of Villers-Bretonneux on 20 April 1918; the Rhodesian's aircraft caught fire in mid-air, and when it crashed he was thrown from the wreckage. The Baron's bullets had hit Lewis' compass, goggles, coat and trouser leg, but he was practically unhurt, having suffered only minor burns. He spent the rest of the war a German prisoner.[53][n 5]

The Great War airman associated with Southern Rhodesia who ultimately earned the most distinction was Arthur Harris, originally from England, who joined the Royal Flying Corps in late 1915 after serving as a bugler with the 1st Rhodesia Regiment in South-West Africa.[56] Harris alternated between Britain and France during the latter part of the war. He led No. 45 Squadron over the Western Front in 1917, destroying five German aircraft and winning the Air Force Cross, and afterwards commanded No. 44 Squadron in Britain.[57] Intending to return to Southern Rhodesia after the war, he wore a "rhodesia" flash on his uniform during the hostilities,[58] but ended up staying with the RAF as a career officer. He finished the war a major,[59] rose through the ranks during the interwar period and became famous during World War II as "Bomber Harris", the head of RAF Bomber Command.[60]

Southern Africa edit

Maritz Rebellion; formation of 1st Rhodesia Regiment edit

 
The 1st Rhodesia Regiment parades in Bulawayo on its way south, 1914

Apart from the capture of Schuckmannsburg in the Caprivi Strip by a combined force of BSAP and Northern Rhodesia Police on 21 September 1914, the British South Africa Company's own armed forces and police remained almost totally uninvolved in the war until the following month. The South African Prime Minister, the former Boer general Louis Botha, had told Britain that the Union could both handle its own security during the hostilities and defeat German South-West Africa without help, so the Imperial garrison had been sent to the Western Front. Lieutenant-Colonel Manie Maritz—an ex-Boer commander who now headed a column of Afrikaans-speaking Union troops—defected to the Germans in mid-September, hoping to spark an uprising that would overthrow British supremacy in South Africa and restore the old Boer Republics.[61] Botha requested the 500-man column that the Chartered Company had raised, hoping to reduce the possibility of further defections by interspersing his own forces with firmly pro-British Rhodesians. The expeditionary force was promptly formalised in Salisbury, and named the 1st Rhodesia Regiment after the unit of Southern Rhodesian volunteers that had fought in the Anglo-Boer War.[18] Apart from a small contingent of Matabele (or Ndebele) scouts, the unit was all white.[62]

This is the last time I shall see you all together, and I now take the opportunity to thank you for the way you have played the game, and for the trouble you have taken to get fit for duty and to take the field. Remember, Rhodesia looks to you.

Colonel Alfred Edwards addresses the 1st Rhodesia Regiment at Salisbury railway station, October 1914[63]

After six weeks' training in the capital, the 1st Rhodesia Regiment travelled south by railway in late October 1914. During its stopover in Bulawayo, it paraded in front of about 90% of the town's population; Plumtree, the last stop before crossing the border, provided the soldiers with a lavish parting banquet. Notwithstanding these grand farewells, the Maritz Rebellion was all but over by the time the Southern Rhodesian contingent reached its destination at Bloemfontein.[64] The vast majority of South African troops, including most of Boer origin, had remained loyal to the Union government, and the uprising had been quashed.[65] The Rhodesians garrisoned Bloemfontein for about a month, then redeployed to Cape Town, where they underwent further training for the South-West Africa Campaign as part of South Africa's Northern Force, which Botha personally commanded.[64]

1st Rhodesia Regiment in South-West Africa edit

 
A map of the South-West Africa Campaign, showing South African troop movements in red. The main South African force advanced on Windhoek from Walvis Bay, an exclave of South Africa about halfway up the South-West African coast.

During late December 1914, Northern Force travelled to the South African exclave of Walvis Bay, about halfway up the coast of German South-West Africa. The 1st Rhodesia Regiment disembarked on 26 December 1914.[64]

Northern Force made up the northern prong of a pincer movement designed by Botha to encircle the German forces in South-West Africa. Two smaller South African columns came from the Cape and the Orange Free State (the latter coming over the deserts of Bechuanaland). The principal target was Windhoek, the capital of South-West Africa. The field of operations was arid and barren in the extreme; water was a precious commodity, so the South Africans and Southern Rhodesians brought thousands of tons of it with them. In the 100 kilometres (62 mi) of desert between Walvis Bay and Windhoek, temperatures could rise to above 50 °C (122 °F) in the daytime, then drop below freezing at night, all while desert winds blew sand and dust into every bodily and mechanical orifice. Germany based much of its defensive strategy in South-West Africa around the assumption that no enemy commander could feasibly attempt to advance across the desert from Walvis Bay to Windhoek, but Botha resolved to do exactly that.[66]

The South African offensive from Walvis Bay began in February 1915, when Northern Force took Swakopmund—the nearest German coastal settlement, about 20 kilometres (12 mi) north—without facing major resistance. The Germans almost immediately retreated, leaving behind explosive booby traps and other improvised weapons. The 1st Rhodesia Regiment first engaged the Germans while Northern Force moved east across the desert, taking part in a number of minor skirmishes and suffering its first two fatalities in a German ambush. To overcome the natural difficulties of the desert terrain, Botha used fast-moving mounted or mechanised troops rather than regular infantry, so the Southern Rhodesian contingent played little part in the main advance on Windhoek. The Rhodesians guarded the construction of a railway inland for much of the campaign, but participated in Northern Force's victory over the Germans at Trekkopjes, losing Lieutenant Hollingsworth (killed in action) and five enlisted men (wounded). Windhoek surrendered to Botha in July 1915, effectively ending the South-West African front of the war. The local German population did not embark on a guerrilla campaign after Windhoek's fall.[67]

The 1st Rhodesia Regiment was soon posted back to Cape Town, where many of the troopers voiced their dissatisfaction at the lack of fighting in South-West Africa, and requested discharge so they could join the war in Europe. Superiors assured the men that they would see action in East Africa if they stayed, but failed to convince most of them; the 1st Rhodesia Regiment promptly disbanded due to a lack of personnel. The majority of the South-West Africa veterans boarded ship for England to enlist in the British Army, while others mustered into South African units already billed for European service.[67]

East Africa edit

 
German East Africa, highlighted in dark green on a map of Africa. Other German territories in light green

German East Africa, acquired by Germany during the 1880s, covered roughly 900,000 square kilometres (350,000 sq mi), and by 1914 was home to about 5,000 white settlers, most of whom were of German origin.[68] German East African soldiery at the outbreak of war comprised 216 German officers and enlisted men, and 2,450 askaris (native soldiers); police numbered 45 whites and 2,154 askaris.[62] Because of the British Royal Navy's domination of the Indian Ocean, German East Africa was largely isolated from outside help. It therefore fought a war of improvisation, judicious resource management and unorthodox strategy. During the conflict, its military strength grew to a peak of 3,300 whites and anywhere between 15,000 and 30,000 askaris, all commanded by Generalmajor Paul von Lettow-Vorbeck.[68]

2nd Rhodesia Regiment edit

Based around the overflow of volunteers for the 1st Rhodesia Regiment, a core of personnel for a second Southern Rhodesian expeditionary unit was in place by November 1914. This was made into the 2nd Rhodesia Regiment (2RR) during December 1914 and January 1915. The 1st Rhodesia Regiment's lack of combat experience thus far influenced those men in Southern Rhodesia who were yet to enlist; many Rhodesian colonials were keen to fight on the front lines, and some resolved that they might have to travel to Europe to be sure of doing so. Aware of this competition with the Western Front for the colony's manpower, recruiters for the 2RR took great care to assure potential inductees that they would definitely see combat, in Africa, if they signed up for the new unit. The 2RR ultimately had a paper strength of 500 men, the same as the 1st. Thirty black scouts, recruited in Southern Rhodesia, were also attached to the regiment.[69]

Because it was raised with less urgency, the 2RR received better training than the 1st. The course lasted eight weeks, a fortnight longer than the original regiment's training period, and focused heavily on route marching, parade drill, and, in particular, marksmanship—recruits were trained to shoot accurately at ranges of up to 600 metres (2,000 ft). The 2RR left Salisbury on 8 March 1915, moving east to the port of Beira in Portuguese Mozambique, from where they sailed to Mombasa in British Kenya, on German East Africa's north-eastern flank. Travelling aboard the SS Umzumbi, the battalion disembarked in Kenya less than a week after leaving Salisbury. It was immediately sent inland to the operational area around Mount Kilimanjaro, within sight of which it set up camp. On 20 March, the regiment was inspected by General J M Stewart of the Indian Army. "I had expected to see a regiment that would require some training," Stewart said; "I will pay you the highest compliment by sending you to the front today." So began the 2RR's contribution to the East African Campaign.[69]

The 2RR operated with some success during its first year on the front. It usually defeated German units that it encountered, but the Germans, using proto-guerrilla tactics, tended to retreat before they could be overrun. Though generally outnumbered and outgunned throughout the campaign, the Germans had the advantage early on of longer-range artillery than the British; from July to August 1916, 2RR was prevented from moving out of the Kenyan town of Makindu for nearly a month by German bombardment. The huge marching distances, difficult terrain and uncertainty of surroundings meant that the regiment's men were forced to develop enormous stamina and resilience if they were not to be invalided home.[70]

Tropical disease killed or rendered ineffective far more 2RR men than the Germans did; at times the regiment was reduced to an effective strength of under 100 by the vast myriad of potential ailments, including trench fever, blackwater fever, dysentery, pneumonia, sleeping sickness and many others. The 1,038 personnel who served with 2RR in East Africa collectively went into hospital 2,272 times, and there were 10,626 incidences[spelling?] of illness—in other words, the average 2RR soldier was hospitalised twice and reported sick 10 times.[71] In January 1917, only 91 of the regiment's men were considered fit for duty;[71] it was no longer an effective fighting force, and the white Southern Rhodesian manpower did not exist to continue reinforcing it. It was therefore withdrawn from East Africa that month. Those men who were healthy enough to return home arrived back in Salisbury on 14 April 1917, receiving a tumultuous welcome, but the majority of 2RR remained in medical care overseas for some time afterwards.[72]

The Company briefly considered sending a revived 2RR to the Western Front, but the British Army promptly rejected this idea, saying that the unit would be impractical for trench warfare because of its small size. The battalion was thereupon dissolved, but most of its remaining men went to war in Europe anyway, generally with South African units.[72]

Rhodesia Native Regiment edit

 
Men of the 1st Rhodesia Native Regiment marching through Salisbury before going to East Africa, 1916

By late 1915, British forces in the border areas of Northern Rhodesia and Nyasaland, on German East Africa's south-western flank, were severely stretched. Disease was a constant curse, decimating the ranks. Francis Drummond Chaplin, the British South Africa Company administrator in Southern Rhodesia, offered to provide the British with a column of between 500 and 1,000 askaris, and Whitehall accepted this in March 1916; however, there was then disagreement regarding who would foot the bill for the organisation of this enterprise. After this was resolved in April 1916—the Company agreed to pay, conditional on reimbursement by the British Colonial Office—recruitment began in May.[73]

Initial recruitment efforts principally targeted the Matabele, who made up about 20% of the colony's black population, because they enjoyed a popular reputation among whites for being great warriors; the unit was therefore originally called the "Matabele Regiment".[73] This was changed to the more inclusive "Rhodesia Native Regiment" (RNR) on 15 May 1916, as the ranks proved to be more diverse than expected, and included large numbers of Mashonas and other ethnicities.[62] In particular, a disproportionately high number of volunteers came from the Kalanga tribe, a numerically diminutive community in the colony's south-west.[74] The RNR was organised largely along linguistic and cultural lines, with companies and platoons of Matabele, Mashona, Wayao and others. White officers attached to the unit were often recruited because they knew an African language, or could give orders in Chilapalapa, a pidgin of English and several African tongues often referred to by whites of the time as "kitchen kaffir". The ranks' diversity sometimes led to confusion when messages or directives were not properly understood. It became common for black troopers accused of disobeying or ignoring commands to claim ignorance of the language in which they had been ordered.[75]

Commanded by Lieutenant-Colonel A J Tomlinson, the RNR, comprising 426 askaris and about 30 white officers, left Salisbury in July 1916 for Beira. They continued on to Zomba, in Nyasaland, where they were to receive further training closer to the field of operations. When they arrived, the local situation had shifted significantly, so the RNR instead went to New Langenberg, in German East Africa, just north of Lake Nyasa. At New Langenberg the regiment went through a short training course, and was issued with six machine guns. When the unit's training period ended in October 1916 it was divided; one company of RNR men went to Buhora, about 250 kilometres (160 mi) north-east, while the rest went 250 kilometres (160 mi) south to Weidhaven, on the north banks of Lake Nyasa, from where they moved 160 kilometres (99 mi) east to Songea, which they were ordered to "hold ... until reinforced". Apart from a company of men sent to patrol the road back to Weidhaven, the RNR proceeded to garrison Songea.[76]

The Germans, who had left Songea only a few weeks before, sent two columns to retake it during early November 1916–250 askaris marched from Likuyu, and 180 more (with two machine guns) set off from Kitanda. The latter German column spotted the RNR company that was patrolling the road, and at Mabogoro attacked the advance guard, which was commanded by Sergeant (later Lieutenant) Frederick Charles Booth. The Rhodesians were caught by surprise, and many panicked, running about and firing randomly. Booth restored discipline and led the defence until reinforcements arrived. The Germans then retreated and continued towards Songea. During this contact, Booth advanced towards enemy fire to rescue a wounded scout who was lying in the open, and brought him back alive; for this and subsequent actions, Booth received the Victoria Cross in June 1917.[76]

 
A gun from the sunken SMS Königsberg in the field in East Africa in 1916. The RNR captured one of these weapons in November 1916.

The German column from Kitanda reached Songea early in the morning on 12 November 1916, and unsuccessfully attempted a frontal assault on the well-entrenched Rhodesian positions. After the German column from Likuyu arrived in the afternoon, the Germans laid siege to Songea for 12 days before retreating towards Likuyu on the 24th. The Rhodesians were relieved the following day by a South African unit. The RNR then moved back to Litruchi, on the other side of Lake Nyasa,[76] from where they sailed to the German East African town of Mwaya, where they were reunited with the RNR contingent that had gone to Buhora. This second column had ambushed a group of Germans, who were moving towards Northern Rhodesia with a naval gun salvaged from SMS Königsberg (which had been sunk at Rufiji Delta about a year before); after pocketing the Germans, the Rhodesians captured both them and the naval gun.[77]

In Southern Rhodesia, Company officials judged the RNR to have been a success so far, and so decided in January 1917 to raise a second battalion. The unit already in the field was at this time designated 1st Battalion, abbreviated to "1RNR", while the new formation was called 2nd Battalion, or "2RNR".[77] Recruitment was soon under way. Conscious of the difficulty that had been found in persuading rural Mashonas and Matabele to join the 1st Battalion in 1916, organisers for 2RNR principally targeted black men from other countries, in particular migrant workers from Nyasaland and Northern Rhodesia;[78] Nyasalanders eventually made up nearly half of the regiment.[n 6] By the start of March, about 1,000 recruits were training in Salisbury. Meanwhile, 1RNR was instructed to guard the Igali Pass, near the border with Northern Rhodesia, to prevent a column of Germans from threatening the settlements of Abercorn and Fife. When the Germans slipped through, the Rhodesians were pulled back to a position between the two towns and instructed to defend either one as circumstances dictated. The Germans did not launch an attack, however, instead setting up camp in their own territory at Galula.[77]

The Southern Rhodesian commanders planned to destroy the German column by taking advantage of the regional geography; the Germans had Lake Rukwa to their back, and the rivers Songwe and Saisi on their respective left (eastern) and right flanks, effectively hemming them in if they were attacked. The plan was that elements of 1RNR would hold the Saisi while a battalion of the King's African Rifles (KAR) manned the Songwe; the rest of 1RNR would then push the Germans back towards the lake. However, Tomlinson interpreted his orders as requiring immediate action, and attacked before the two flanking lines were in place on the rivers. The offensive had some successes at first, even though Tomlinson was outnumbered, but the 450 Germans, armed with three Königsberg field guns and 14 machine guns, soon withdrew to the higher ground at St Moritz Mission.[77] The Germans counterattacked over the following week. Colonel R E Murray, who commanded a column of BSAP men about 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) away, did not assist Tomlinson, and 1RNR took great losses while repulsing the attack: 58 RNR men were killed, and the Germans captured three Rhodesian machine guns. Tomlinson was blamed by most for the debacle, but he insisted for years afterwards that he had only been following orders from Murray to hold his ground. He expressed incredulity at Murray's failure to reinforce him. An enquiry into the matter was avoided when Tomlinson was wounded and invalided home soon after the battle.[79]

On 5 April 1917, 1RNR crossed the Songwe River into German East Africa and advanced south-east towards Kitanda. It moved up the winding Lupa River, crossing it at each turn, for 53 days, and by mid-June was 30 kilometres (19 mi) north of its target. When it was then ordered to backtrack north to Rungwe, it covered the 420 kilometres (260 mi) in 16 days.[80] Several scholars highlight the distances marched by the RNR, and comment that their physical endurance must have been remarkable, particularly given the speed at which they moved. "One can only marvel at the hardiness and fortitude of these men who matter-of-factly marched distances unthinkable to modern Western soldiers", the historian Alexandre Binda writes.[80] McLaughlin contrasts the RNR's black troopers with the white soldiers of the 2nd Rhodesia Regiment, commenting that the former proved far more resilient to tropical diseases (though not immune), and amazed white observers by not just adapting to the difficult East African conditions, but often marching 50 kilometres (31 mi) in a day.[81] In June 1917, Sergeant Rita (or Lita), a black non-commissioned officer later described by Tomlinson as "a splendid soldier",[82] received the highest award ever given to an RNR askari, the Distinguished Conduct Medal, "for conspicuous gallantry in action on many occasions. His example and influence with his men is incalculable".[83]

The 1st Battalion harassed the constantly moving German flying column during August and September 1917. Two Military Medals were won by RNR soldiers during this time: Sergeant Northcote rescued a wounded askari under German fire in late August, and a few days later Corporal Suga, himself lightly injured, dragged his wounded commanding officer Lieutenant Booth out of the open and into cover.[84] The 2nd Battalion, comprising Major Jackson at the head of 585 askaris and 75 whites, left Salisbury on 16 September 1917,[80] and joined the front on 16 October, when it arrived at Mbewa on the north-eastern shore of Lake Nyasa, intending to ultimately merge with 1RNR.[84] After 1RNR spent two months garrisoning Wiedhaven and 2RNR underwent further training, the two forces joined on 28 January 1918 (becoming known as the 2nd Rhodesia Native Regiment), and immediately made their way south in pursuit of Lettow-Vorbeck's Germans,[85] who were by now down to an effective strength of less than 2,000,[84] and moving through Portuguese Mozambique.[85]

In late May 1918, the two-year service contracts signed by the original 500 RNR volunteers expired, and the majority of those who had not already been discharged—just under 400 men—went home. While passing through Umtali on their way to Salisbury, the soldiers encountered the RNR's original commanding officer, Lieutenant-Colonel Tomlinson, whom they promptly mobbed, excitedly chanting nkosi, nkosi (which roughly means "chief" in Sindebele).[86] In the capital, the RNR men were met at the railway station by thousands of people, including a number of prominent government, military and religious figures. Chaplin, the territorial administrator, gave a speech in which he applauded the troops for "upholding the good name of Rhodesia" and for having played "no insignificant part in depriving the Germans of their power in Africa".[87]

In Mozambique, the RNR encountered Lettow-Vorbeck's supply column near Mtarika on 22 May 1918. It wiped it out (capturing two German officers, two German askaris, 34 Portuguese askaris and 252 carriers), but as the supply column had been marching between the main German column and its rearguard, Lettow-Vorbeck was then able to attack the RNR from both sides. The contact lasted until darkness fell, and the RNR held its position. Lettow-Vorbeck then moved further south, with the RNR following.[85] This pursuit continued for the rest of the war, with Lettow-Vorbeck avoiding contacts so far as was possible and constantly resupplying his men by briefly occupying isolated towns. The RNR chased the German column for over 3,600 kilometres (2,200 mi) around Mozambique and the eastern districts of Northern Rhodesia, but never caught up with him.[n 7] After Lettow-Vorbeck formally surrendered at Abercorn on 25 November 1918, the RNR returned to Salisbury,[88] where the men were discharged during 1919. The regiment existed on paper for two more years before it was formally disbanded in February 1921.[90]

Home front edit

Home service and conscription debate edit

 
Jewish members of the Rhodesian Reserves, pictured in 1916

Southern Rhodesian troops during World War I were all volunteers. Particularly during the war's early stages, not all male settlers of fighting age were expected to abandon their civilian lives for service abroad. Many of them were in vital industries like mining, and the Company administration did not grant financial allowances to support the families of married soldiers, so at least at first, only bachelors in non-essential positions were generally considered to have any moral obligation to sign up. The 2nd Rhodesia Regiment, raised in early 1915, explicitly barred married men from its ranks to preempt the tribulations that might befall their families while they were gone. Men of service age who remained at home were pressured by the national and local press to contribute to local security by joining the Southern Rhodesia Volunteers or the Rhodesian Reserves; editorials told readers that men who failed to do so were not fulfilling their patriotic duty, and warned that conscription might be required if not enough joined up.[91]

The idea of conscription ran contrary to British political tradition, but the sheer scale of the Western Front led to its institution in Britain in January 1916. The Rhodesia Herald and Bulawayo Chronicle newspapers broadcast the news in special editions. While some settlers supported the extension of the same system to white Southern Rhodesians, it was also opposed in many quarters. The British South Africa Company feared that the loss of skilled white workers might jeopardise its mining operations, crucial to the colonial economy, while the Rhodesian Agricultural Union contended that white farmers had to stay on the land for similar reasons. Some, mindful of John Chilembwe's anticolonial uprising in Nyasaland in early 1915, felt that it was necessary to keep a core of male settlers in the colony to guard against a repeat of the Mashona and Matabele rebellions of the 1890s.[91]

By late 1916, most settlers in the colony who were inclined to volunteer had already done so. To free up white manpower, some suggested the recruitment of older men for local service so more of the younger volunteers could go overseas. In 1917, the Chartered Company set up a committee to consider the question of national defence both during the war and thereafter; its report, released in February 1918, described reliance on volunteers as inefficient, and recommended the institution of compulsory service for whites, even after the war (no mention was made of using black troops in the future). The Company published proposals the following month to register all white males aged between 18 and 65 with a view to some form of conscription, but this provoked widespread and vocal dissent, particularly from farmers. In the face of this opposition the administration vacillated until it quietly dropped the idea after the armistice.[91]

Economic impact edit

 
Farming on the Pioneer Citrus Estate near Umtali at the time of the war

The British South Africa Company had reservations about devoting all of Southern Rhodesia's resources to the war effort, in part because of its desire to keep the colonial economy operating. There was indeed tightening of belts in the Rhodesias during the war, but not on the same scale as in Britain. The retail sector suffered, prices for many basic day-to-day items rose sharply, and exports plummeted as much of the white male citizenry went overseas to war, but mining, the industry on which Rhodesia's economic viability hinged, continued to operate successfully, despite occasional difficulties in obtaining manpower. The Company administration posted record outputs of gold and coal during 1916, and began to supply the Empire with the strategic metal ferrochrome. A flurry of new prospecting ventures led to the discovery of another strategic metal, tungsten, near Essexvale in southern Matabeleland in May 1917.[92]

Southern Rhodesia's other main economic arm, farming, performed less strongly during the war, partly because the Chartered Company prioritised the strategically important mines at the behest of British officials. Southern Rhodesian farmers were optimistic at the outbreak of war, surmising that the Empire would become desperate for food and that they would be essentially immune to inflation because they grew their own crops. While these conclusions were on the whole accurate, logistical complications made it difficult for Rhodesian food to be exported, and as in mining there was often a shortage of labour. There were a number of drives to increase agricultural yield with the hope of feeding more people in Britain, but because Southern Rhodesia was so far away it was difficult for the colony to make much of an impact. One of the main culinary contributions the territory made to the British wartime marketplace was Rhodesian butter, which first reached England in February 1917.[92]

The war began to adversely affect the economy in late 1917. The Company threatened petrol rationing in November 1917, and in early 1918 it raised the colonial income tax to help balance the books. By the end of the hostilities the company had spent £2 million on the war effort, most of which was covered by the Rhodesian taxpayers; the Company covered some of the expenditure itself, and also received a small amount of financial aid from the UK government.[92]

Propaganda and public opinion edit

 
A British propaganda poster urging men to "take up the sword of justice" to avenge the sinking of the RMS Lusitania by a German U-boat

Mass media on both sides in the conflict tried to motivate their respective populations and justify the war's continuation by creating an image of the enemy so grotesque and savage that surrender became unthinkable. Like the major newspapers in Britain, the Rhodesia Herald and the Bulawayo Chronicle became key propaganda tools, regularly printing stories of German atrocities, massacres and other war crimes alongside articles simply entitled "War Stories" that told of British Army soldiers carrying out deeds of Herculean bravery. Anti-German sentiment abounded in the territory throughout the conflict, and periodically intensified, often concurrently with the reporting of particularly unsavoury incidents.[93]

During the initial peak of Germanophobia, which lasted the first few months of the conflict, many German and Austrian men of military age who lived in Rhodesia were arrested (officially as "prisoners of war") and sent to internment camps in South Africa. Gertrude Page, one of the colony's most famous novelists, wrote an open letter in response, vouching for the loyalty of a young German in her employ, and received a number of replies accusing her of being unpatriotic.[94] The second period of intensification began following the sinking of the British passenger liner RMS Lusitania by a German U-boat on 7 May 1915. The Rhodesia Herald ran an editorial soon after calling on the Company administration to intern all remaining German and Austrian residents and to close their businesses. A town assembly in Umtali sent the administrator a resolution asking him to confiscate all property in the colony owned by subjects of Germany and Austria within 48 hours "in view of German barbarity". Most of Southern Rhodesia's remaining German and Austrian residents were soon sent to the camps in South Africa.[93]

Further periods of intensified anti-German feeling in the Rhodesias followed the execution by the Germans of the British nurse Edith Cavell in Belgium in October 1915 ("the Crowning Crime", the Bulawayo Chronicle called it), the escalation of bombing raids by German Zeppelins on British cities during 1917, and the British reportage the same year of the Kadaververwertungsanstalt atrocity story—that the Germans supposedly rendered down battlefield corpses from both sides to make products such as nitroglycerine and lubricants.[93]

A small elite of black urbanites, mostly raised and educated at Christian missions, existed in Southern Rhodesia by the time of the war, and these generally identified themselves strongly with settler society and, by extension, the war effort[95] although the vast majority of black people in the colony retained their traditional tribal lifestyles of rural subsistence farming,[96] and for most of them, as McLaughlin comments, the war "could have been fought between aliens from different planets for all their connection with events in Europe".[97] Some felt obliged to "fight for their country", seeing the travails of Rhodesia and the Empire as their own also,[98] but the great bulk of tribal public opinion was detached, seeing the conflict as a "white man's war" that did not concern them. Those who favoured the latter line of thinking cared not so much about the conflict itself but more about how its course might affect them specifically. For example, widespread interest was aroused soon after the outbreak of war when rumours began to fly between the rural black communities that the Company planned to conscript them. News of the Maritz Rebellion prompted a fresh rumour among the Matabele that Company officials might confiscate tribal livestock to feed the white troops going south. None of this actually occurred.[96]

The Chartered Company's native commissioners began to fear a possible tribal rebellion during early 1915. Herbert Taylor, the chief native commissioner, believed that foreign missionaries were secretly encouraging rural black people to emulate the Chilembwe revolt in Nyasaland, and telling them (falsely) that the British were exterminating the natives there. There were few actual attempts to topple the administration in Southern Rhodesia, but the Company still took precautions. Aware that Mashona svikiro (spirit mediums) had been instrumental in inciting and leading insurgencies against Company rule during the late 1890s, the native commissioners enacted new legislation designed to imprison any svikiro who gained significant popularity.[96]

The only real threat of a black rebellion in Southern Rhodesia during the war occurred in May 1916, immediately after the Company instructed native commissioners in Matabeleland to start recruiting for the Rhodesia Native Regiment. Company officials attempted to make clear that the RNR comprised volunteers only, and most Matabele chiefs were not unreceptive to the idea[99]—some, including Chief Ndiweni, attempted to encourage enlistment by sending their own sons off to war[100]—but rumours spread in some quarters that black men were going to be involuntarily conscripted wholesale into the unit. Chief Maduna, in Insiza district, briefly threatened insurrection, issuing rifles to 100 men, but he backed down after a few weeks after it became self-evident that conscription was not happening.[99] Some attempted to dissuade potential RNR recruits from signing up, including a black man in Bulawayo who was fined £4 in July 1915 for spreading a false rumour around the city that the British East Africa Transport Corps' black Southern Rhodesian drivers had had their throats cut by the Germans. Matthew Zwimba, founder of the syncretist Church of the White Bird in Mashonaland, received six months' hard labour the following year for advising black men not to join the RNR on the grounds that the British had, he said, committed crimes against God in 1913.[101]

The colony's small Afrikaner community was split on the issue of war. Some supported the United Kingdom out of loyalty to Rhodesia, but others were still bitter about the Anglo-Boer War and showed little interest in fighting the Germans. In the rural areas, where Afrikaner nationalism was strongest, the Germans were perceived by some Boer farmers as potential liberators from British domination. Southern Rhodesian Afrikaners were often accused of undermining the British war effort. While some leaders of the community publicly came out in support of the war and offered to provide troops, others put pressure on Afrikaans-speakers not to volunteer. When recruitment for the Rhodesia Native Regiment began in 1916, there were reports of potential black recruits being urged not to join up by their Afrikaans-speaking employers.[101]

Women edit

As is common in frontier societies, the Southern Rhodesian settler community was mostly male: at the time of the First World War, white females were outnumbered by males almost two to one. Because white women were so marriageable and cheap black labour was easily available to handle domestic duties, most female settlers did not work and spent most of their days supervising the household and family. The average white woman in the colony continued to live this kind of life during the war, in marked contrast to her British counterpart, who in many cases went to replace the male factory workers and farm labourers who went to war. In Rhodesia little of this sort occurred: there were no munitions factories, and the idea of women working down the country's mines was not considered practical. Some white farmers' wives took over management of the land in their husbands' absence, but this was quite unusual.[102]

The contribution to the war made by Southern Rhodesia's white female population generally comprised organising and running donation drives, comforts committees and other similar enterprises. They sent the troops "comforts parcels", which contained balaclavas, mittens and scarves that they had knitted, as well as newspapers, soap, food (including cakes and sweets), and minor luxuries. These packages did much to raise the morale of the men, particularly those who were in German captivity. Women were also largely responsible for handling mail between Rhodesian soldiers and their relatives and friends back home. After the armistice, they organised financial assistance for those discharged Southern Rhodesian men in England who could not afford to come home, and arranged visits for those convalescing in English hospitals.[103]

As in Britain, some Southern Rhodesian women during the war presented men not wearing military uniform with white feathers (symbolising cowardice). This campaign often went awry, as many of the men presented with the feathers were not in fact shirking from service. In 1916, hoping to save them further harassment, the Rhodesia Herald and other newspapers began publishing lists of men who had volunteered only to be deemed medically unfit by the army doctors.[104]

Black women played a minor role in units such as the Rhodesia Native Regiment, accompanying the black soldiers into the operational area and performing domestic tasks like washing and cooking. Many of these were local East African women who had formed attachments with RNR soldiers. Officers tolerated the presence of these women in the interest of morale, aware that attempting to take them away from the men would probably lead to mutiny.[105]

Donations and funds edit

Southern Rhodesian settlers set up a number of wartime funds, including funds to aid war victims, funds to provide the troops with tobacco and other supplies, funds to assist orphans and widows, funds to buy aeroplanes, and others. These raised about £200,000 in all. Much of this went to the Prince of Wales National Relief Fund in Britain, which was founded when the war started; Southern Rhodesian branches of the fund were promptly organised in several towns and ultimately consolidated into the Rhodesian War Relief Fund. This body donated 25% of its receipts to the Prince of Wales Fund and 75% to local concerns.[47]

The Tobacco Fund, set up in September 1914, was particularly successful. Public donors bought Southern Rhodesian tobacco, cigarettes and pipe tobacco to send to the British forces. This was intended not only to comfort the troops, but also to advertise the prospect of post-war emigration to Rhodesia. The labels on the tobacco tins depicted a map of Africa with the sun shining on Rhodesia, accompanied by the slogan "The World's Great Sunspot". In a similar vein, "Sunspot" was the name given to the Rhodesian cigarettes that British soldiers received. During the war, British and colonial soldiery collectively chewed and smoked 59,955 two-ounce (57 g) tins of donated Southern Rhodesian tobacco, 80,584 two-ounce tins of equivalent pipe tobacco, and 4,004,000 Sunspot cigarettes (in packs of 10). Another similar undertaking saw six tons (roughly 6,100 kg) of local citrus fruits sent to wounded British Army personnel in South Africa and England.[47]

Starting in July 1915, Southern Rhodesians raised funds to buy aeroplanes for the Royal Flying Corps. The colony ultimately bought three aircraft, each of which cost £1,500—they were named Rhodesia Nos. 1, 2 and 3. Residents of the town of Gatooma also set up their own drive, which funded the purchase of two more planes, Gatooma Nos. 1 and 2.[46][47]

The black elite in the towns donated to the settlers' patriotic funds and organisations, and also set up their own. A war fundraising tea organised by black Salisburians in early March 1915 boasted entertainment in the form of a black choir, as well as the presence of Taylor and a junior native commissioner, each of whom gave speeches in English, Sindebele and Shona. Rural black people, by contrast, did not generally understand the concept of donating money to war funds, and misinterpreted encouragement to do so as being threatened with a new tax. When the Matabele chief Gambo began collecting war donations from his people in early 1915, also urging other chiefs to do the same, he took care to thoroughly explain the war fund's purpose and the voluntary nature of contributing, but some villagers still misunderstood and came to believe they would have livestock confiscated if they did not give money. The Company ultimately sent officials around the countryside to clarify the matter.[106]

The Kalanga, a small community in the south-west that provided a disproportionately large number of volunteers for the Rhodesia Native Regiment, also proved conspicuous for their extremely generous financial donations; in June 1915, they collectively donated £183, "a staggering sum", the historian Timothy Stapleton comments, to the Prince of Wales Fund.[106]

Flu pandemic edit

The 1918 flu pandemic, often referred to at the time as "Spanish flu", spread quickly into Southern Rhodesia from South Africa in October 1918. A week after the first case was reported in Salisbury, over 1,000 people were infected. Public buildings in the towns were converted into makeshift hospital wards, appeals were put out for trained nurses to attend the sick, and soup kitchens were set up to feed children whose parents were too ill to look after them. Newspapers in the colony published basic instructions on how to deal with the disease.[107] The mine compounds, where hundreds of black labourers lived and worked together in close proximity, were worst affected. The whole country was ultimately infected, with even the most remote villages reporting deaths.[107] Many members of the Rhodesia Native Regiment were infected, and 76 of them died from the disease having survived the war.[108] By the time the pandemic had ended in Southern Rhodesia around mid-November 1918, thousands had been killed.[107]

End of the war, aftermath and statistics edit

News of the armistice on 11 November 1918 reached Southern Rhodesia the same day, and was announced to the town of Salisbury by the repeated blowing of the klaxon at the Castle Brewery. Hysterical street parties started almost immediately, and in the evening the people let off fireworks and lit a huge bonfire on Salisbury kopje. Bulawayo celebrated with a street party that continued uninterrupted for over 48 hours. Smaller towns marked the armistice with their own celebratory functions and events.[109]

Once the frivolities had ended, minds turned to post-war policy, and particularly how soldiers returning from Europe would be reintegrated into society.[109] The company had already, in 1916, set aside 250,000 acres (100,000 ha) of farmland to be given free of charge to white war veterans.[110] In early 1919 it set up a government department to help returning men find work. Many former soldiers failed to find jobs, and some remained unemployed for years after they returned home. Some of the more seriously wounded from the European theatre never came back at all, instead remaining in England because of the better medical facilities and public benefits. Demobilised Western Front veterans began to arrive back in Rhodesia in January 1919, and continued to do so for nearly a year afterwards. On 30 May 1919, the Southern Rhodesian Legislative Council passed a resolution thanking the territory's veterans.[109]

This council, on behalf of the government and people of Southern Rhodesia, records its grateful thanks to the men of the Territory who took part in the Great War; its deep appreciation of the services they have rendered; and its admiration of their bearing and conduct. It expresses its sympathy with those who have suffered and the relatives of those who have made the supreme sacrifice, and welcomes home those who, having completed their services, are returning.

   The Southern Rhodesian Legislative Council[109]

The Southern Rhodesian tribal chiefs collectively sent their own statement to King George V.[111]

We wish to say that, when the king called upon us for help, we sent our young men, who fought and died beside the English, and we claim that our blood and that of the English are now one.

   The chiefs of Southern Rhodesia[111]

Proportional to white population, Southern Rhodesia had contributed more personnel to the British armed forces in World War I than any of the Empire's dominions or colonies, and more than Britain itself.[112] About 40% of white males in the colony,[113] 5,716 men, put on uniform,[114] with 1,720 doing so as commissioned officers.[115] Black Southern Rhodesians were represented by the 2,507 soldiers who made up the Rhodesia Native Regiment,[n 6] the roughly 350 who joined the British East Africa Transport Corps, British South Africa Police Mobile Column and South African Native Labour Corps,[117] and the few dozen black scouts who served with the 1st and 2nd Rhodesia Regiments in South-West and East Africa.[118] Southern Rhodesians killed in action or on operational duty numbered over 800, counting all races together—more than 700 of the colony's white servicemen died,[114] while the Rhodesia Native Regiment's black soldiers suffered 146 fatalities.[119]

Legacy edit

Accounts of white Southern Rhodesian soldiers' wartime experiences started to be published in the 1920s. The conflict became a key entry in many national histories, though the role played by black troops was often minimised in these accounts.[120] The colony's wartime contributions became a source of great pride for much of the Southern Rhodesian white community,[73] as well as for some black Africans;[121] whites were particularly proud that they had had the highest enlistment rate in the British Empire during the war.[73] A national war memorial, a stone obelisk, 50 feet (15 m) high, was funded by public donations and built in Salisbury in 1919. Soldiers, one black and one white, were depicted in relief on plaques on each side; the inscriptions below read "1914–1918—We fought and died for our King."[122] Five years later, Lieutenant-Colonel J A Methuen organised the erection on a kopje near Umtali of a stone cross, 30 feet (9.1 m) tall, to memorialise the country's fallen black soldiers. This monument remains to this day, as does the bronze plaque at its foot, which reads "To the Glory of God and in Memory of Africans Who Fell. 1914–1918."[123]

 
A Southern Rhodesian tank in Italy during World War II, 1944

Southern Rhodesia's contributions to the Imperial war effort helped it to become regarded by Britain as more mature and deserving of responsible government, which Whitehall granted in 1923.[124] The territory was made a self-governing colony, just short of full dominion status.[n 8] Charged with its own defence, Salisbury introduced the selective conscription of white males in 1926,[91] and reformed the Rhodesia Regiment the following year. The territory's association with the King's Royal Rifle Corps endured in the form of affiliation between the KRRC and the Rhodesia Regiment's new incarnation, which adopted aspects of the KRRC uniform and a similar regimental insignia.[127] The new Rhodesia Regiment was granted the original's World War I battle honours and colours by George V in 1929.[128]

In World War II, Southern Rhodesia again enthusiastically stood behind the UK, symbolically declaring war on Germany in support of Britain before any other colony or dominion.[129] Over 26,000 Southern Rhodesians served in the Second World War,[130] making the colony once more the largest contributor of manpower, proportional to white population, in all of the British Empire and Commonwealth.[112] As in World War I, Southern Rhodesians were distributed in small groups throughout the British Army, Royal Navy and Royal Air Force.[131] Dedicated Rhodesian platoons again served in the KRRC,[127] and the Rhodesian African Rifles, raised in 1940, were in many ways a resurrection of the Rhodesia Native Regiment.[n 9] Military aviation, already associated with the colony following the First World War,[134] became a great Southern Rhodesian tradition during the Second, with the colony providing No. 44, No. 237 and No. 266 Squadrons and other personnel to the Royal Air Force,[135] as well as training in Southern Rhodesia for 8,235 Allied airmen.[136]

By the 1960s, Southern Rhodesians' service on Britain's behalf in the World Wars, particularly the Second, was an integral part of the colony's national psyche.[112][137] The territory had also latterly contributed to British counter-insurgency operations in Malaya,[138] Aden and Cyprus, as well as Operation Vantage in Kuwait.[139] The colonial government's Unilateral Declaration of Independence in 1965 was deliberately made on 11 November, Armistice Day, in an attempt to emphasise the territory's prior war record on Britain's behalf. The proclamation was signed at 11:00 local time, during the customary two-minute silence to remember the fallen.[140]

After the country's reconstitution and recognised independence as Zimbabwe in 1980, Robert Mugabe's administration pulled down many monuments and plaques making reference to the fallen of the First and Second World Wars, perceiving them as reminders of white minority rule and colonialism that went against what the modern state stood for. This view was partly rooted in the association of these memorials with those commemorating the British South Africa Company's dead of the Matabele Wars, as well as those memorialising members of the Rhodesian Security Forces killed during the Bush War of the 1970s.[141] Many Zimbabweans today see their nation's involvement in the World Wars as a consequence of colonial rule that had more to do with the white community than the indigenous black majority, and most have little interest in its contributions to those conflicts.[141]

The country's fallen of the two World Wars today have no official commemoration, either in Zimbabwe or overseas.[142] The national war memorial obelisk still stands, but the relief sculptures and inscriptions have been removed. The stone cross monument near Mutare (as Umtali is now called) is one of the few memorials that remains intact and in its place, atop what is now called Cross Kopje; its meaning has been largely forgotten.[141]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Renamed Zimbabwe in 1980.[3]
  2. ^ Southern Rhodesia referred to Company territories south of the Zambezi, while those to the north were called Northern Rhodesia.[6] The name "Rhodesia" formally covered both north and south, but was often used to refer to the southern territory alone (for example, the names of almost all Southern Rhodesian military units omitted the word "Southern"). Soldiers from Southern Rhodesia generally described themselves simply as Rhodesians.[7]
  3. ^ Section 150 of the South Africa Act 1909, which formed the Union, explicitly provisioned for the accession to it of Company-administered territories as new provinces.[9]
  4. ^ The South African Brigade was split into four battalions: 1st South African Battalion (Cape), 2nd South African Battalion (Natal & Orange Free State), 3rd South African Battalion (Transvaal & Rhodesia) and 4th South African Battalion (Scottish). Most Rhodesian members were in the 3rd Battalion.[33]
  5. ^ Richthofen was killed in action the following day, 21 April 1918.[54] Lewis, who returned to Rhodesia after the war,[53] gained minor celebrity in military circles as the Baron's "last victim", and was invited by the Luftwaffe to attend the dedication of a new German fighter wing named after Richthofen in 1938.[55]
  6. ^ a b Evidence regarding the exact composition of the Rhodesia Native Regiment's enlisted ranks is scanty and inconclusive. The historian Timothy Stapleton, basing his figures on regimental nominal rolls and anecdotal evidence from officers, gives a total of 2,507 rank-and-filers attesting into the RNR. Scholars generally agree that while most of the men were Southern Rhodesian residents, only about a third were originally from the colony. Stapleton estimates that 44.5% of the regiment's enlisted men were Nyasalanders, 29% were Southern Rhodesians, 17.5% were Northern Rhodesians and the rest were from elsewhere. Kalanga soldiers made up 40% of the Southern Rhodesians in the RNR (or around 12% of the whole regiment), a disproportionately large proportion.[116]
  7. ^ Lettow-Vorbeck was still in the field when the armistice was signed in Europe on 11 November 1918.[88] He learned that the war was over three days later, on the road between the Northern Rhodesian towns of Mpika and Kasama, when he received a telegram from the South African Lieutenant-General Jacob van Deventer. The exact spot where this occurred has been marked since 1953 by the Von Lettow-Vorbeck Memorial.[89] As instructed by the telegram, the German marched his undefeated troops the 250 kilometres (160 mi) north to Abercorn and formally surrendered. It took him 11 days to reach Abercorn, so the ceremonial surrender of Germany's forces in East Africa took place on 25 November 1918, a full two weeks after the European war ended.[88]
  8. ^ Responsible government was granted following the 1922 government referendum, which offered voters a choice between joining the Union of South Africa at the termination of the British South Africa Company's charter, or instead becoming a separate self-governing colony. The latter option prevailed with just under 60% of the vote.[125] Company rule endured a few more months in Northern Rhodesia, ending in early 1924 when control transferred to the Colonial Office in London.[126]
  9. ^ Like the RNR, the Rhodesian African Rifles comprised black soldiers and warrant officers led by white officers; it included a number of ex-RNR personnel, and reprised several RNR traditions.[132] It took part in the Burma Campaign,[133] and successfully requested permission to emblazon its regimental colours with the RNR's World War I battle honours in 1952.[132]

References edit

  1. ^ Art Printing Works 1918, p. iii
  2. ^ a b c d McLaughlin 1980, p. 2
  3. ^ McLaughlin 1980, p. 141
  4. ^ Walker 1963, p. 664
  5. ^ Walker 1963, p. 669
  6. ^ Brelsford 1960, p. 619
  7. ^ a b c McLaughlin 1980, p. 84
  8. ^ a b McLaughlin 1980, p. 1
  9. ^ Wood 2005, p. 8
  10. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica 2012
  11. ^ Keppel-Jones 1983, p. 512
  12. ^ a b c McLaughlin 1980, p. 4
  13. ^ Keppel-Jones 1983, p. 578
  14. ^ Keppel-Jones 1983, pp. 590–599
  15. ^ McLaughlin 1980, p. iv
  16. ^ a b c McLaughlin 1980, p. 3
  17. ^ a b McLaughlin 1980, p. 5
  18. ^ a b McLaughlin 1980, p. 8
  19. ^ a b McLaughlin 1980, p. 49
  20. ^ McLaughlin 1980, pp. 147–149
  21. ^ Gale 1973, p. 9
  22. ^ Ferris 1959, pp. 115–117
  23. ^ Tawse Jollie 1971, p. 7
  24. ^ Stapleton 2006, p. 19
  25. ^ McLaughlin 1980, p. 50
  26. ^ a b c McLaughlin 1980, pp. 50–51
  27. ^ McLaughlin 1980, p. 57
  28. ^ a b McLaughlin 1980, p. 55
  29. ^ McLaughlin 1980, pp. 52, 55
  30. ^ a b Hutton 1917, p. 57
  31. ^ a b McLaughlin 1980, pp. 64–65
  32. ^ Farey & Spicer 2008, p. 108
  33. ^ a b Uys 1991, pp. 194–198
  34. ^ Schwarz 2011, p. 246
  35. ^ a b Liddell Hart 1970, p. 324
  36. ^ McLaughlin 1980, p. 62
  37. ^ a b McLaughlin 1980, pp. 116–117
  38. ^ McLaughlin 1980, p. 63
  39. ^ McLaughlin 1980, pp. 63–64
  40. ^ McLaughlin 1980, p. 114
  41. ^ McLaughlin 1980, p. 98
  42. ^ Gale 1974, p. 36
  43. ^ McLaughlin 1980, pp. 70–71
  44. ^ Cormack & Cormack 2001, p. 12
  45. ^ McLaughlin 1980, pp. 71–72; Browne, Arthur Richard Howe. Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Retrieved 8 March 2013.
  46. ^ a b McLaughlin 1980, pp. 71–72
  47. ^ a b c d McLaughlin 1980, pp. 92–93
  48. ^ Thomas, Frank William Henry. Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Retrieved 8 March 2013.
  49. ^ McAdam 1967, pp. 1–2
  50. ^ Van der Byl 1971, p. 155
  51. ^ a b Franks 2000, pp. 26–27
  52. ^ "No. 30590". The London Gazette (Supplement). 22 March 1918. p. 3604.
  53. ^ a b Gibbons 1927, pp. 344–346
  54. ^ Gibbons 1927, pp. 365–366
  55. ^ Nowarra, Brown & Robertson 1964, p. 102
  56. ^ Probert 2006, pp. 33–36
  57. ^ Shores, Franks & Guest 1990, p. 185
  58. ^ Probert 2006, p. 43
  59. ^ Probert 2006, p. 46
  60. ^ Probert 2006, p. 19
  61. ^ McLaughlin 1980, p. 7
  62. ^ a b c Binda 2007, p. 17
  63. ^ McLaughlin 1980, p. 9
  64. ^ a b c McLaughlin 1980, pp. 9–14
  65. ^ Chanock 1977, p. 22
  66. ^ McLaughlin 1980, pp. 13–15
  67. ^ a b McLaughlin 1980, pp. 15–18
  68. ^ a b McLaughlin 1980, pp. 19, 21–22
  69. ^ a b McLaughlin 1980, pp. 23–25, 30
  70. ^ McLaughlin 1980, pp. 30–34
  71. ^ a b McLaughlin 1980, pp. 39–41
  72. ^ a b McLaughlin 1980, p. 46
  73. ^ a b c d Stapleton 2006, pp. 20–22
  74. ^ Stapleton 2006, p. 39
  75. ^ Stapleton 2006, p. 49
  76. ^ a b c Binda 2007, p. 18
  77. ^ a b c d Binda 2007, p. 19
  78. ^ McLaughlin 1980, p. 75
  79. ^ Binda 2007, p. 20
  80. ^ a b c Binda 2007, p. 21
  81. ^ McLaughlin 1980, pp. 76–77
  82. ^ Stapleton 2006, p. 64
  83. ^ Stapleton 2006, pp. 90–91
  84. ^ a b c Binda 2007, p. 22
  85. ^ a b c Binda 2007, p. 23
  86. ^ Stapleton 2006, p. 125
  87. ^ Stapleton 2006, p. 135
  88. ^ a b c Binda 2007, pp. 24–25
  89. ^ Gore-Browne 1954, pp. 84
  90. ^ Stapleton 2006, p. 136
  91. ^ a b c d McLaughlin 1980, pp. 88–92
  92. ^ a b c McLaughlin 1980, pp. 102–106
  93. ^ a b c McLaughlin 1980, pp. 80–85
  94. ^ McLaughlin 1980, pp. 5–6
  95. ^ Stapleton 2006, p. 30
  96. ^ a b c Stapleton 2006, pp. 23–25
  97. ^ McLaughlin 1980, p. 73
  98. ^ Stapleton 2006, p. 40
  99. ^ a b Stapleton 2006, pp. 26–27
  100. ^ Stapleton 2006, p. 155
  101. ^ a b McLaughlin 1980, pp. 96–97
  102. ^ McLaughlin 1980, p. 120
  103. ^ McLaughlin 1980, p. 121
  104. ^ McLaughlin 1980, p. 123
  105. ^ Stapleton 2006, pp. 48–49
  106. ^ a b Stapleton 2006, pp. 27–30
  107. ^ a b c McLaughlin 1980, pp. 106–107
  108. ^ Stapleton 2006, p. 133
  109. ^ a b c d McLaughlin 1980, pp. 138–140
  110. ^ Hodder-Williams 1983, pp. 105–106
  111. ^ a b Binda 2007, p. 25; McLaughlin 1980, p. 79
  112. ^ a b c Moorcraft 1990
  113. ^ Strachan 2003, p. 498
  114. ^ a b McLaughlin 1980, p. 140
  115. ^ McLaughlin 1980, pp. 150–151
  116. ^ Stapleton 2006, pp. 31–40
  117. ^ Stapleton 2006, p. 2
  118. ^ Binda 2007, p. 17; McLaughlin 1980, p. 74
  119. ^ Binda 2007, p. 400
  120. ^ Stapleton 2006, p. 5
  121. ^ Stapleton 2006, p. 143
  122. ^ City of Salisbury 1952, p. 47
  123. ^ Stapleton 2006, pp. 1, 4, 141–142
  124. ^ Stapleton 2006, pp. 142, 150
  125. ^ Willson 1963, p. 115
  126. ^ Gann 1969, pp. 191–192
  127. ^ a b Wake & Deedes 1949, p. xiv; Chant 1988, p. 262
  128. ^ Radford 1994, p. 46
  129. ^ Wood 2005, p. 9
  130. ^ MacDonald & 1976 v. 2, Appendix, p. viii
  131. ^ MacDonald & 1976 v. 1, pp. 8–9
  132. ^ a b Binda 2007, p. 25
  133. ^ Binda 2007, pp. 59–77
  134. ^ House 1976, p. 41
  135. ^ MacDonald & 1976 v. 1, p. 9
  136. ^ Jackson 2006, p. 39; MacDonald & 1976 v. 1, p. 173
  137. ^ McLaughlin 1980, Preface
  138. ^ Binda 2007, pp. 127–140, 404
  139. ^ Corum 2008, p. 172
  140. ^ McLaughlin 1980, p. 141; Wood 2005, pp. 463, 471
  141. ^ a b c Stapleton 2006, pp. 1–5
  142. ^ Stapleton 2006, p. 11

Sources edit

Websites edit

Newspaper and journal articles edit

  • Ferris, N S (1959). "Military Pot-Pourri: A Rhodesian Green Jacket Looks Back". The King's Royal Rifle Corps Chronicle. Winchester: Warren & Son: 111–118. OCLC 756216787. Archived from the original on 18 December 2013.
  • Gore-Browne, Stewart, ed. (1954). "The Chambeshi Memorial". The Northern Rhodesia Journal. II (5). Lusaka: Northern Rhodesia Society: 81–84. ISSN 0549-9674.
  • House, John (1976). "Aviation in Rhodesia". Rhodesia Calls. Salisbury: Rhodesia National Tourist Board: 33–45. OCLC 4079878.
  • McAdam, J (1967). "Pat Judson: First Rhodesian-born Airman" (PDF). Rhodesiana. 16. Salisbury: The Rhodesiana Society: 1–16. ISSN 0556-9605.
  • Moorcraft, Paul (1990). "Rhodesia's War of Independence". History Today. 40 (9). London: History Today Ltd. ISSN 0018-2753.

Bibliography

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  • Brelsford, W V, ed. (1960). Handbook to the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland (First ed.). London: Cassell. OCLC 503844634.
  • Chanock, Martin (1977). Unconsummated Union: Britain, Rhodesia and South Africa, 1900–45 (First ed.). Manchester: Manchester University Press. ISBN 978-0-7190-0634-0.
  • Chant, Christopher (May 1988). The Handbook of British Regiments. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-00241-7.
  • Cormack, Andrew; Cormack, Peter (March 2001). British Air Forces 1914–18 (2) (First ed.). Oxford: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84176-002-5.
  • Corum, James S (2008). "The RAF in Imperial Defence, 1919–1956". In Kennedy, Greg (ed.). Imperial Defence: The Old World Order, 1856–1956. London: Routledge. pp. 152–175. ISBN 978-0-415-35595-7.
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southern, rhodesia, world, when, united, kingdom, declared, germany, start, world, august, 1914, settler, society, southern, rhodesia, then, administered, british, south, africa, company, received, news, with, great, patriotic, enthusiasm, company, administrat. When the United Kingdom declared war on Germany at the start of World War I in August 1914 settler society in Southern Rhodesia n 1 then administered by the British South Africa Company received the news with great patriotic enthusiasm The Company administrator Sir William Milton wired the UK government All Rhodesia ready to do its duty 2 Although it supported Britain the company was concerned about the possible financial implications for its chartered territory should it make direct commitments to the war effort particularly at first so most of the colony s contribution to the war was made by Southern Rhodesians individually not only those who volunteered to fight abroad but also those who remained at home and raised funds to donate food equipment and other supplies The original King s Royal Rifle Corps Rhodesian Platoon pictured at Sheerness England in November 1914 Third and fourth from the right in the second row sit the commanding officer Captain J B Brady and the Marquess of Winchester who informally sponsored the unit The majority of the men pictured here were killed in action and most of the rest were discharged because of serious wounds 1 Starting immediately after the outbreak of war parties of white Southern Rhodesians paid their own way to England to join the British Army Most Southern Rhodesians who served in the war enlisted in this way and fought on the Western Front taking part in many of the major battles with an assortment of British South African and other colonial units most commonly the King s Royal Rifle Corps which recruited hundreds of men from the colony and created homogeneous Rhodesian platoons Troopers from Southern Rhodesia became renowned on the Western Front for their marksmanship a result of their frontier lifestyle Some of the colony s men served in the Royal Flying Corps one of the two predecessors of the Royal Air Force The Rhodesia Regiment the Rhodesia Native Regiment and the British South Africa Police served in the African theatre of the conflict contributing to the South West African and East African campaigns Though it was one of the few combatant territories not to raise fighting men through conscription proportional to white population Southern Rhodesia contributed more manpower to the British war effort than any other dominion or colony and more than Britain itself White troops numbered 5 716 about 40 of white men in the colony with 1 720 of these serving as commissioned officers The Rhodesia Native Regiment enlisted 2 507 black soldiers about 30 black recruits scouted for the Rhodesia Regiment and around 350 served in British and South African units Over 800 Southern Rhodesians of all races died on operational service during the war with many more seriously wounded The territory s contributions during the First World War became a major entry in many histories of the colony and a great source of pride for the white community as well as for some black Rhodesians It played a part in the UK government s decision to grant self government in 1923 and remained prominent in the national consciousness for decades When the colonial government unilaterally declared independence from Britain in 1965 it deliberately did so on Armistice Day 11 November and signed the proclamation at 11 00 local time Since the territory s reconstitution and recognised independence as Zimbabwe in 1980 the modern government has removed many references to the war such as memorial monuments and plaques from public view regarding them as unwelcome vestiges of white minority rule and colonialism The Zimbabwean cultural memory has largely forgotten the First World War Contents 1 Background 2 Outbreak of war 2 1 Announcement and reception 2 2 Rhodesian Reserves 3 Europe 3 1 Western Front 3 2 Salonika 3 3 Aviators 4 Southern Africa 4 1 Maritz Rebellion formation of 1st Rhodesia Regiment 4 2 1st Rhodesia Regiment in South West Africa 5 East Africa 5 1 2nd Rhodesia Regiment 5 2 Rhodesia Native Regiment 6 Home front 6 1 Home service and conscription debate 6 2 Economic impact 6 3 Propaganda and public opinion 6 4 Women 6 5 Donations and funds 6 6 Flu pandemic 7 End of the war aftermath and statistics 8 Legacy 9 Notes 10 References 11 Sources 11 1 Websites 11 2 Newspaper and journal articlesBackground edit nbsp Southern Rhodesia highlighted in red on a map of Africa in 1914 other British possessions in pinkAt the time of World War I also known as the First World War or the Great War Southern Rhodesia n 1 was administered by the British South Africa Company which had controlled it and Northern Rhodesia since acquiring them through diplomacy and conquest during the 1890s The white population in Southern Rhodesia stood at 23 606 in 1911 a minority of 3 4 while Northern Rhodesia had about 3 000 white settlers less than half of 1 5 n 2 With the company s charter due to expire in late 1914 most Southern Rhodesian public attention was focused on this issue before the outbreak of war The settlers were split between those who backed continued administration by the Chartered Company and those who advocated responsible government which would make Southern Rhodesia a self governing colony within the British Empire 8 Still others favoured the integration of Southern Rhodesia into the Union of South Africa which had been formed in 1910 n 3 Following the intervention of the war the charter was renewed for 10 years in early 1915 10 Before 1914 Southern Rhodesia s police force was the British South Africa Police BSAP first raised in 1889 and reconstituted into a more permanent form in 1896 11 This paramilitary mounted infantry force was theoretically also the country s standing army 12 Organised along military lines 13 it served in the First and Second Matabele Wars of the 1890s operated on Britain s side in the Anglo Boer War of 1899 1902 alongside the specially raised Rhodesia Regiment 14 and by 1914 comprised about 1 150 men including officers Reserves existed in the form of the Southern Rhodesia Volunteers an all white amateur force with a paper strength of 2 000 intended for mobilisation against local uprisings Few doubted the Volunteers enthusiasm but they were not extensively trained or equipped though perhaps useful in a Rhodesian bush skirmish most observers agreed they would be no match for professional soldiers in a conventional war In any case the Volunteers enlistment contracts bound them for domestic service only 12 Outbreak of war editAnnouncement and reception edit nbsp Men of the 1st Rhodesia Regiment in Cape Town December 1914When Britain declared war on Germany at 23 00 Greenwich Mean Time on 4 August 1914 the British Empire s dominions and colonies automatically became involved as well Word of this reached the Southern Rhodesian capital Salisbury during the night Early on 5 August the Company administrator Sir William Milton wired Whitehall All Rhodesia united in devoted loyalty to King and Empire and ready to do its duty 2 A few hours later he officially announced to the populace that Southern Rhodesia was at war 2 The Rhodesia Herald and Bulawayo Chronicle newspapers published special editions the same day to spread the news 8 it took about half a week for word to reach the whole country but jingoistic demonstrations began in the major towns almost immediately 2 In the words of the historian Peter McLaughlin the Southern Rhodesian settlers seemed to out British the British in their patriotic zeal 15 so it was to the frustration of many of them that the Company did not immediately commit to any martial action While it sent supportive messages to Whitehall the Company felt it could not raise any kind of expeditionary force without first considering the implications for its administrative operations as a commercial concern it was possible for the company to go bankrupt Who would foot the bill for war expenditure its hierarchy pondered the Company itself the Rhodesian taxpayers or the British government 16 As the local newspapers filled with letters from readers clamouring for Rhodesian troops to be mustered and despatched to Europe post haste 16 the administration limited its initial contribution to posting a section of BSAP troopers to the Victoria Falls Bridge to guard against possible German attack from South West Africa though the Caprivi Strip 12 In early September an indignant letter to the Rhodesia Herald from Colonel Raleigh Grey a major figure in local business politics and military matters accused the Company of bringing a slur on a British country by doing so little 16 Rhodesian Reserves edit A few days after the war began the Chartered Company formed the Rhodesian Reserves an amorphous entity intended to accommodate the many white men who were keen to put on uniform as well as to make a start towards organising what might eventually become an expeditionary force Eminent citizens and elected leaders formed their own platoons each bringing 24 volunteers three or four of these 25 man troops made a company Units representing the Caledonian Society the Lancashire and Yorkshire Society the Legion of Frontiersmen and other local organisations mirrored the Pals battalions in Britain Volunteers could opt to serve overseas within Rhodesia or only locally around 1 000 had volunteered in all by 13 August 17 The Company suggested to the UK government that it might despatch 500 troopers from the Rhodesian Reserves to Europe to act as an all Southern Rhodesian unit on the Western Front in Belgium and France but the War Office in London replied that such an expeditionary force would be more practically deployed in Africa within the South African forces When the Company relayed this idea south the South Africans said they were happy to take the Southern Rhodesians but only if they enlisted independently in existing Union regiments The Company found itself in the unusual position of having a prospective expeditionary force that nobody wanted 18 Unwilling to wait some Southern Rhodesian would be soldiers made their own way to Britain to join the British Army directly as individuals or in groups By the end of October 1914 about 300 were on their way 17 Europe editWestern Front edit nbsp Southern Rhodesian members of King Edward s Horse a British Army cavalry regimentIn terms of fighting manpower Southern Rhodesia s main contribution to World War I was in the trenches of the Western Front 19 As the white Southern Rhodesians in this theatre joined the British Army separately at different times and under their own steam or were already connected to specific units as reservists they were spread across dozens of regiments including the Black Watch the Coldstream Guards the Grenadier Guards the Royal Engineers and the Royal Marines as well as many South African units and others 20 During the war s opening months Southern Rhodesian volunteers who could not afford to travel to England were assisted by a private fund set up by Ernest Lucas Guest a Salisbury lawyer and Anglo Boer War veteran who also organised an accompanying recruitment campaign for European service Guest stopped recruiting at the company s request after it created the 1st Rhodesia Regiment an expeditionary force to South and South West Africa in October 1914 21 A link developed during the war with the King s Royal Rifle Corps KRRC whose Southern Rhodesian contingent numbering a few hundred chiefly in its 2nd and 3rd Battalions was the largest on the Western Front 19 The connection with this particular corps began as the result of a chance conversation aboard the ship that took the first batch of Southern Rhodesians from Cape Town to Southampton in late 1914 The 16th Marquess of Winchester who had links with Rhodesia dating back to the 1890s was also aboard the ship returning from a visit to the colony Encountering Captain John Banks Brady the officer of Irish origin who led the volunteers the Marquess asked where his party was headed Brady enthusiastically replied that they were going to war together in France The Marquess suggested to Brady that since it might be difficult to prevent his men from being split up during the enlistment process it might be a good idea for the Rhodesians to join the KRRC where he could keep an eye on them through his connections with the Winchester based regiment The Southern Rhodesian contingent duly mustered into the KRRC A designated Rhodesian platoon widely referred to thereafter as the Rhodesian Platoon was formed under Brady at the KRRC training camp at Sheerness on the Isle of Sheppey in Kent 22 They are not only intensely British but quite intolerably Rhodesian they exhibit a tendency to collect together and are inclined to vaunt themselves to be puffed up by the mere fact that they are Rhodesians A contemporary South African opinion on Rhodesians abroad 23 As a rule the white Rhodesians overseas combined stridently pro British attitudes with an even stronger pride in Rhodesia 7 Many of them saw participation in the war particularly in distinct Rhodesian formations as a step towards forging a distinctive national identity like those of Australia and the other more mature British dominions and building a case for Southern Rhodesian self government 24 The existence of an explicitly Rhodesian Platoon in the KRRC endeared the regiment to the Southern Rhodesian public and attracted many of the colony s volunteers who arrived in England later in the war in time the KRRC formed further Rhodesian platoons from additional personnel While the average Rhodesian colonial living on the frontier of the Empire was at least casually acquainted with rifles most Englishmen had never held one At Sheerness Brady s Rhodesian Platoon won a reputation for fine sharpshooting and set a regimental record score at the shooting range 25 Once posted to France in December 1914 the Rhodesian Platoon almost immediately began suffering regular heavy casualties Southern Rhodesian volunteers continued to arrive piecemeal in England throughout the conflict so Rhodesian formations on the Western Front received regular reinforcements in small batches but because casualties were usually concentrated in far larger groups it often took a few months for a depleted Southern Rhodesian unit to return to full numerical strength A cycle developed whereby Rhodesian platoons in Belgium and France were abruptly decimated and then gradually built up again only to suffer the same fate on returning to action 26 When the KRRC s Rhodesian platoons took part in British offensives they were easily recognised by a distinctive battle cry that their men shouted as they went over the top 7 Sometimes the British and German positions were so close that troopers on each front line could hear what was said in the opposite trench one group of Southern Rhodesians avoided being understood in this situation by speaking a mixture of Shona and Sindebele two African languages instead of English 27 The cold is frightfully trying It is snowing and freezing hard tonight and it makes me yearn to be back on my farm on the Hunyani A Rhodesian writes home from the First Battle of Ypres late 1914 28 Trench warfare was a dreadful ordeal for soldiers and the Southern Rhodesians coming from the open veld of southern Africa had a particularly difficult time getting used to the cold and the mud 29 Brady reported that some of his men had contracted frostbite within 48 hours of reaching the trenches 28 Despite this the KRRC s Rhodesians acquitted themselves well in the eyes of their superiors Lieutenant Colonel Sir Edward Hutton who wrote a history of the KRRC commented that the Southern Rhodesian contingent earned for itself great reputation for valour and good shooting 30 Southern Rhodesians became especially valuable to the KRRC as designated snipers grenadiers Lewis Gunners and other specialists 31 While discussing a KRRC sniper section Hutton singles its Southern Rhodesian members out for their fine marksmanship commenting that accustomed to big game shooting they particularly excelled in this system of snipers and inflicted continual losses upon the enemy 30 In their 2008 history of sniping Pat Farey and Mark Spicer highlight the prowess of South African and Rhodesian sharpshooters on the Western Front and claim that one group of 24 southern Africans collectively accounted for over 3 000 German casualties and fatalities 32 nbsp South Africans and Rhodesians fight the Germans hand to hand in Delville WoodSo many Southern Rhodesians were withdrawn from the trenches for officer training that in mid 1915 Brady appealed through the Salisbury and Bulawayo presses for more volunteers to replace those who had been commissioned 31 A platoon of Southern Rhodesians with the 2nd Battalion KRRC took part in the big push of 1 July 1916 the first day of the Battle of the Somme charging German positions elsewhere on the line early that morning There were 90 Rhodesians on the eve of the attack and only 10 alive and unwounded afterwards 26 On the Somme battlefield itself Rhodesians were among those at Delville Wood which began on 14 July This was the South African 1st Infantry Brigade s first engagement n 4 and some of the colonials blacked up and imitated Zulu battle cries and war dances 34 Despite suffering casualties of catastrophic proportions about 80 of the brigade s personnel were killed wounded or captured they took the Wood and held it as ordered until they were relieved on 20 July 35 By the time of its withdrawal the South African Brigade originally numbering 3 155 123 officers and 3 032 other ranks had been reduced to 19 officers and 600 men 33 Delville Wood was later described by Sir B H Liddell Hart as the bloodiest battle hell of 1916 35 God knows I never wish to see such horrible sights again a Southern Rhodesian veteran of the battle wrote home at times I wished it would come fast anything to get out of that terrible death trap and murderous place 36 German gas attacks were among the most traumatic experiences for the Southern Rhodesians in Europe One Rhodesian survivor of a gas attack described the sensation as like suffocation or slow drowning 37 The Germans used both disabling agents such as tear gas and the more severe mustard gas and lethal chemicals like chlorine and phosgene Though generally not fatal gas attacks caused extreme physical discomfort and pain often to the point where soldiers lost consciousness Mustard gas in particular caused blistering of the skin vomiting and internal and external bleeding The British Army issued gas masks but according to Brady these did little to help the men Injuries sustained to the eyes lungs and nasal passages in gas attacks were often extremely debilitating and lasting remaining with the men for years after the war 37 In July 1917 a KRRC Rhodesian platoon received lofty praise from a senior British officer who described the colonials as absolutely first class soldiers and great gentlemen every bit as good as soldiers as our old Expeditionary Force 38 Around the same time a platoon of Southern Rhodesians in the KRRC took part in an engagement near Nieuwpoort in Flanders where it and the Northamptonshire Regiment manned positions on the eastern banks of the river Yser After a heavy artillery bombardment German infantry and marines charged the British positions and surrounded the Rhodesian platoon Brutal hand to hand fighting ensued in which most of the Southern Rhodesians were killed and some were taken prisoner The Bulawayo Chronicle ran a eulogy for them soon after comparing their last stand to that of Allan Wilson s Shangani Patrol in 1893 39 Later in 1917 a Rhodesian platoon in the KRRC fought in the Battle of Passchendaele near Ypres in western Flanders 40 The Western Front continued to receive Southern Rhodesian troops right up to the end of the war including veterans of the 2nd Rhodesia Regiment s campaign in East Africa 41 During the conflict s latter stages the British Army sent some of its Southern Rhodesian officers to the Western Front to promote the colony s benefits hoping to encourage emigration there by British servicemen after the war 42 Salonika edit The KRRC s 3rd Battalion including a platoon of 70 Rhodesians was transferred from France to the Salonika front in 1915 On this comparatively quiet front they were slowly whittled down over the course of the war 26 of them remained in January 1917 26 and by the end of the war so few were left that the platoon no longer existed Most of the men had been killed in action while others were prisoners of the Bulgarians 43 Aviators edit nbsp Lieutenant Daniel Pat Judson the first airman born in RhodesiaSome Southern Rhodesians mustered into the Royal Flying Corps RFC which merged with the Royal Naval Air Service in April 1918 to form the Royal Air Force Towards the end of the war the service of airmen from the dominions and colonies was observed by the issuing of shoulder patches denoting the wearer s country of origin from October 1918 Southern Rhodesians received labels marked rhodesia 44 One of the territory s first military aviators was Lieutenant Arthur R H Browne a fighter pilot from Umvuma in the Southern Rhodesian Midlands who was attached to No 13 Squadron RFC He was killed in action in a dogfight on 5 December 1915 45 his aircraft donated by the people of Gatooma in western Mashonaland was Gatooma No 2 46 one of five aeroplanes purchased by Southern Rhodesian public donations 47 From Dryden Farm near the south western border town of Plumtree came Lieutenant Frank W H Thomas an RFC combat pilot who won the Military Cross as well as the French Croix de Guerre with palms before he died on 5 January 1918 from wounds attained on operational service 48 Lieutenant Daniel S Pat Judson born in Bulawayo in 1898 became the first Rhodesia born airman in history when he joined the RFC in April 1916 He was severely wounded while bombing enemy positions in March 1918 but recovered and remained in the unit until April 1919 49 The first flying ace born in Rhodesia was Major George Lloyd nicknamed Zulu 50 who joined No 60 Squadron in April 1917 and won four aerial victories before transferring to No 40 Squadron in July 1917 where he won four more 51 He received the Military Cross in March 1918 for conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty 52 and also won the Air Force Cross later that year 51 Second Lieutenant David Tommy Greswolde Lewis a born and bred Bulawayan was the 80th and final pilot defeated by Manfred von Richthofen the German ace widely known as the Red Baron Richthofen downed Lewis just north east of Villers Bretonneux on 20 April 1918 the Rhodesian s aircraft caught fire in mid air and when it crashed he was thrown from the wreckage The Baron s bullets had hit Lewis compass goggles coat and trouser leg but he was practically unhurt having suffered only minor burns He spent the rest of the war a German prisoner 53 n 5 The Great War airman associated with Southern Rhodesia who ultimately earned the most distinction was Arthur Harris originally from England who joined the Royal Flying Corps in late 1915 after serving as a bugler with the 1st Rhodesia Regiment in South West Africa 56 Harris alternated between Britain and France during the latter part of the war He led No 45 Squadron over the Western Front in 1917 destroying five German aircraft and winning the Air Force Cross and afterwards commanded No 44 Squadron in Britain 57 Intending to return to Southern Rhodesia after the war he wore a rhodesia flash on his uniform during the hostilities 58 but ended up staying with the RAF as a career officer He finished the war a major 59 rose through the ranks during the interwar period and became famous during World War II as Bomber Harris the head of RAF Bomber Command 60 Southern Africa editMaritz Rebellion formation of 1st Rhodesia Regiment edit nbsp The 1st Rhodesia Regiment parades in Bulawayo on its way south 1914Apart from the capture of Schuckmannsburg in the Caprivi Strip by a combined force of BSAP and Northern Rhodesia Police on 21 September 1914 the British South Africa Company s own armed forces and police remained almost totally uninvolved in the war until the following month The South African Prime Minister the former Boer general Louis Botha had told Britain that the Union could both handle its own security during the hostilities and defeat German South West Africa without help so the Imperial garrison had been sent to the Western Front Lieutenant Colonel Manie Maritz an ex Boer commander who now headed a column of Afrikaans speaking Union troops defected to the Germans in mid September hoping to spark an uprising that would overthrow British supremacy in South Africa and restore the old Boer Republics 61 Botha requested the 500 man column that the Chartered Company had raised hoping to reduce the possibility of further defections by interspersing his own forces with firmly pro British Rhodesians The expeditionary force was promptly formalised in Salisbury and named the 1st Rhodesia Regiment after the unit of Southern Rhodesian volunteers that had fought in the Anglo Boer War 18 Apart from a small contingent of Matabele or Ndebele scouts the unit was all white 62 This is the last time I shall see you all together and I now take the opportunity to thank you for the way you have played the game and for the trouble you have taken to get fit for duty and to take the field Remember Rhodesia looks to you Colonel Alfred Edwards addresses the 1st Rhodesia Regiment at Salisbury railway station October 1914 63 After six weeks training in the capital the 1st Rhodesia Regiment travelled south by railway in late October 1914 During its stopover in Bulawayo it paraded in front of about 90 of the town s population Plumtree the last stop before crossing the border provided the soldiers with a lavish parting banquet Notwithstanding these grand farewells the Maritz Rebellion was all but over by the time the Southern Rhodesian contingent reached its destination at Bloemfontein 64 The vast majority of South African troops including most of Boer origin had remained loyal to the Union government and the uprising had been quashed 65 The Rhodesians garrisoned Bloemfontein for about a month then redeployed to Cape Town where they underwent further training for the South West Africa Campaign as part of South Africa s Northern Force which Botha personally commanded 64 1st Rhodesia Regiment in South West Africa edit nbsp A map of the South West Africa Campaign showing South African troop movements in red The main South African force advanced on Windhoek from Walvis Bay an exclave of South Africa about halfway up the South West African coast During late December 1914 Northern Force travelled to the South African exclave of Walvis Bay about halfway up the coast of German South West Africa The 1st Rhodesia Regiment disembarked on 26 December 1914 64 Northern Force made up the northern prong of a pincer movement designed by Botha to encircle the German forces in South West Africa Two smaller South African columns came from the Cape and the Orange Free State the latter coming over the deserts of Bechuanaland The principal target was Windhoek the capital of South West Africa The field of operations was arid and barren in the extreme water was a precious commodity so the South Africans and Southern Rhodesians brought thousands of tons of it with them In the 100 kilometres 62 mi of desert between Walvis Bay and Windhoek temperatures could rise to above 50 C 122 F in the daytime then drop below freezing at night all while desert winds blew sand and dust into every bodily and mechanical orifice Germany based much of its defensive strategy in South West Africa around the assumption that no enemy commander could feasibly attempt to advance across the desert from Walvis Bay to Windhoek but Botha resolved to do exactly that 66 The South African offensive from Walvis Bay began in February 1915 when Northern Force took Swakopmund the nearest German coastal settlement about 20 kilometres 12 mi north without facing major resistance The Germans almost immediately retreated leaving behind explosive booby traps and other improvised weapons The 1st Rhodesia Regiment first engaged the Germans while Northern Force moved east across the desert taking part in a number of minor skirmishes and suffering its first two fatalities in a German ambush To overcome the natural difficulties of the desert terrain Botha used fast moving mounted or mechanised troops rather than regular infantry so the Southern Rhodesian contingent played little part in the main advance on Windhoek The Rhodesians guarded the construction of a railway inland for much of the campaign but participated in Northern Force s victory over the Germans at Trekkopjes losing Lieutenant Hollingsworth killed in action and five enlisted men wounded Windhoek surrendered to Botha in July 1915 effectively ending the South West African front of the war The local German population did not embark on a guerrilla campaign after Windhoek s fall 67 The 1st Rhodesia Regiment was soon posted back to Cape Town where many of the troopers voiced their dissatisfaction at the lack of fighting in South West Africa and requested discharge so they could join the war in Europe Superiors assured the men that they would see action in East Africa if they stayed but failed to convince most of them the 1st Rhodesia Regiment promptly disbanded due to a lack of personnel The majority of the South West Africa veterans boarded ship for England to enlist in the British Army while others mustered into South African units already billed for European service 67 East Africa edit nbsp German East Africa highlighted in dark green on a map of Africa Other German territories in light greenGerman East Africa acquired by Germany during the 1880s covered roughly 900 000 square kilometres 350 000 sq mi and by 1914 was home to about 5 000 white settlers most of whom were of German origin 68 German East African soldiery at the outbreak of war comprised 216 German officers and enlisted men and 2 450 askaris native soldiers police numbered 45 whites and 2 154 askaris 62 Because of the British Royal Navy s domination of the Indian Ocean German East Africa was largely isolated from outside help It therefore fought a war of improvisation judicious resource management and unorthodox strategy During the conflict its military strength grew to a peak of 3 300 whites and anywhere between 15 000 and 30 000 askaris all commanded by Generalmajor Paul von Lettow Vorbeck 68 2nd Rhodesia Regiment edit Based around the overflow of volunteers for the 1st Rhodesia Regiment a core of personnel for a second Southern Rhodesian expeditionary unit was in place by November 1914 This was made into the 2nd Rhodesia Regiment 2RR during December 1914 and January 1915 The 1st Rhodesia Regiment s lack of combat experience thus far influenced those men in Southern Rhodesia who were yet to enlist many Rhodesian colonials were keen to fight on the front lines and some resolved that they might have to travel to Europe to be sure of doing so Aware of this competition with the Western Front for the colony s manpower recruiters for the 2RR took great care to assure potential inductees that they would definitely see combat in Africa if they signed up for the new unit The 2RR ultimately had a paper strength of 500 men the same as the 1st Thirty black scouts recruited in Southern Rhodesia were also attached to the regiment 69 Because it was raised with less urgency the 2RR received better training than the 1st The course lasted eight weeks a fortnight longer than the original regiment s training period and focused heavily on route marching parade drill and in particular marksmanship recruits were trained to shoot accurately at ranges of up to 600 metres 2 000 ft The 2RR left Salisbury on 8 March 1915 moving east to the port of Beira in Portuguese Mozambique from where they sailed to Mombasa in British Kenya on German East Africa s north eastern flank Travelling aboard the SS Umzumbi the battalion disembarked in Kenya less than a week after leaving Salisbury It was immediately sent inland to the operational area around Mount Kilimanjaro within sight of which it set up camp On 20 March the regiment was inspected by General J M Stewart of the Indian Army I had expected to see a regiment that would require some training Stewart said I will pay you the highest compliment by sending you to the front today So began the 2RR s contribution to the East African Campaign 69 The 2RR operated with some success during its first year on the front It usually defeated German units that it encountered but the Germans using proto guerrilla tactics tended to retreat before they could be overrun Though generally outnumbered and outgunned throughout the campaign the Germans had the advantage early on of longer range artillery than the British from July to August 1916 2RR was prevented from moving out of the Kenyan town of Makindu for nearly a month by German bombardment The huge marching distances difficult terrain and uncertainty of surroundings meant that the regiment s men were forced to develop enormous stamina and resilience if they were not to be invalided home 70 Tropical disease killed or rendered ineffective far more 2RR men than the Germans did at times the regiment was reduced to an effective strength of under 100 by the vast myriad of potential ailments including trench fever blackwater fever dysentery pneumonia sleeping sickness and many others The 1 038 personnel who served with 2RR in East Africa collectively went into hospital 2 272 times and there were 10 626 incidences spelling of illness in other words the average 2RR soldier was hospitalised twice and reported sick 10 times 71 In January 1917 only 91 of the regiment s men were considered fit for duty 71 it was no longer an effective fighting force and the white Southern Rhodesian manpower did not exist to continue reinforcing it It was therefore withdrawn from East Africa that month Those men who were healthy enough to return home arrived back in Salisbury on 14 April 1917 receiving a tumultuous welcome but the majority of 2RR remained in medical care overseas for some time afterwards 72 The Company briefly considered sending a revived 2RR to the Western Front but the British Army promptly rejected this idea saying that the unit would be impractical for trench warfare because of its small size The battalion was thereupon dissolved but most of its remaining men went to war in Europe anyway generally with South African units 72 Rhodesia Native Regiment edit nbsp Men of the 1st Rhodesia Native Regiment marching through Salisbury before going to East Africa 1916By late 1915 British forces in the border areas of Northern Rhodesia and Nyasaland on German East Africa s south western flank were severely stretched Disease was a constant curse decimating the ranks Francis Drummond Chaplin the British South Africa Company administrator in Southern Rhodesia offered to provide the British with a column of between 500 and 1 000 askaris and Whitehall accepted this in March 1916 however there was then disagreement regarding who would foot the bill for the organisation of this enterprise After this was resolved in April 1916 the Company agreed to pay conditional on reimbursement by the British Colonial Office recruitment began in May 73 Initial recruitment efforts principally targeted the Matabele who made up about 20 of the colony s black population because they enjoyed a popular reputation among whites for being great warriors the unit was therefore originally called the Matabele Regiment 73 This was changed to the more inclusive Rhodesia Native Regiment RNR on 15 May 1916 as the ranks proved to be more diverse than expected and included large numbers of Mashonas and other ethnicities 62 In particular a disproportionately high number of volunteers came from the Kalanga tribe a numerically diminutive community in the colony s south west 74 The RNR was organised largely along linguistic and cultural lines with companies and platoons of Matabele Mashona Wayao and others White officers attached to the unit were often recruited because they knew an African language or could give orders in Chilapalapa a pidgin of English and several African tongues often referred to by whites of the time as kitchen kaffir The ranks diversity sometimes led to confusion when messages or directives were not properly understood It became common for black troopers accused of disobeying or ignoring commands to claim ignorance of the language in which they had been ordered 75 Commanded by Lieutenant Colonel A J Tomlinson the RNR comprising 426 askaris and about 30 white officers left Salisbury in July 1916 for Beira They continued on to Zomba in Nyasaland where they were to receive further training closer to the field of operations When they arrived the local situation had shifted significantly so the RNR instead went to New Langenberg in German East Africa just north of Lake Nyasa At New Langenberg the regiment went through a short training course and was issued with six machine guns When the unit s training period ended in October 1916 it was divided one company of RNR men went to Buhora about 250 kilometres 160 mi north east while the rest went 250 kilometres 160 mi south to Weidhaven on the north banks of Lake Nyasa from where they moved 160 kilometres 99 mi east to Songea which they were ordered to hold until reinforced Apart from a company of men sent to patrol the road back to Weidhaven the RNR proceeded to garrison Songea 76 The Germans who had left Songea only a few weeks before sent two columns to retake it during early November 1916 250 askaris marched from Likuyu and 180 more with two machine guns set off from Kitanda The latter German column spotted the RNR company that was patrolling the road and at Mabogoro attacked the advance guard which was commanded by Sergeant later Lieutenant Frederick Charles Booth The Rhodesians were caught by surprise and many panicked running about and firing randomly Booth restored discipline and led the defence until reinforcements arrived The Germans then retreated and continued towards Songea During this contact Booth advanced towards enemy fire to rescue a wounded scout who was lying in the open and brought him back alive for this and subsequent actions Booth received the Victoria Cross in June 1917 76 nbsp A gun from the sunken SMS Konigsberg in the field in East Africa in 1916 The RNR captured one of these weapons in November 1916 The German column from Kitanda reached Songea early in the morning on 12 November 1916 and unsuccessfully attempted a frontal assault on the well entrenched Rhodesian positions After the German column from Likuyu arrived in the afternoon the Germans laid siege to Songea for 12 days before retreating towards Likuyu on the 24th The Rhodesians were relieved the following day by a South African unit The RNR then moved back to Litruchi on the other side of Lake Nyasa 76 from where they sailed to the German East African town of Mwaya where they were reunited with the RNR contingent that had gone to Buhora This second column had ambushed a group of Germans who were moving towards Northern Rhodesia with a naval gun salvaged from SMS Konigsberg which had been sunk at Rufiji Delta about a year before after pocketing the Germans the Rhodesians captured both them and the naval gun 77 In Southern Rhodesia Company officials judged the RNR to have been a success so far and so decided in January 1917 to raise a second battalion The unit already in the field was at this time designated 1st Battalion abbreviated to 1RNR while the new formation was called 2nd Battalion or 2RNR 77 Recruitment was soon under way Conscious of the difficulty that had been found in persuading rural Mashonas and Matabele to join the 1st Battalion in 1916 organisers for 2RNR principally targeted black men from other countries in particular migrant workers from Nyasaland and Northern Rhodesia 78 Nyasalanders eventually made up nearly half of the regiment n 6 By the start of March about 1 000 recruits were training in Salisbury Meanwhile 1RNR was instructed to guard the Igali Pass near the border with Northern Rhodesia to prevent a column of Germans from threatening the settlements of Abercorn and Fife When the Germans slipped through the Rhodesians were pulled back to a position between the two towns and instructed to defend either one as circumstances dictated The Germans did not launch an attack however instead setting up camp in their own territory at Galula 77 The Southern Rhodesian commanders planned to destroy the German column by taking advantage of the regional geography the Germans had Lake Rukwa to their back and the rivers Songwe and Saisi on their respective left eastern and right flanks effectively hemming them in if they were attacked The plan was that elements of 1RNR would hold the Saisi while a battalion of the King s African Rifles KAR manned the Songwe the rest of 1RNR would then push the Germans back towards the lake However Tomlinson interpreted his orders as requiring immediate action and attacked before the two flanking lines were in place on the rivers The offensive had some successes at first even though Tomlinson was outnumbered but the 450 Germans armed with three Konigsberg field guns and 14 machine guns soon withdrew to the higher ground at St Moritz Mission 77 The Germans counterattacked over the following week Colonel R E Murray who commanded a column of BSAP men about 10 kilometres 6 2 mi away did not assist Tomlinson and 1RNR took great losses while repulsing the attack 58 RNR men were killed and the Germans captured three Rhodesian machine guns Tomlinson was blamed by most for the debacle but he insisted for years afterwards that he had only been following orders from Murray to hold his ground He expressed incredulity at Murray s failure to reinforce him An enquiry into the matter was avoided when Tomlinson was wounded and invalided home soon after the battle 79 On 5 April 1917 1RNR crossed the Songwe River into German East Africa and advanced south east towards Kitanda It moved up the winding Lupa River crossing it at each turn for 53 days and by mid June was 30 kilometres 19 mi north of its target When it was then ordered to backtrack north to Rungwe it covered the 420 kilometres 260 mi in 16 days 80 Several scholars highlight the distances marched by the RNR and comment that their physical endurance must have been remarkable particularly given the speed at which they moved One can only marvel at the hardiness and fortitude of these men who matter of factly marched distances unthinkable to modern Western soldiers the historian Alexandre Binda writes 80 McLaughlin contrasts the RNR s black troopers with the white soldiers of the 2nd Rhodesia Regiment commenting that the former proved far more resilient to tropical diseases though not immune and amazed white observers by not just adapting to the difficult East African conditions but often marching 50 kilometres 31 mi in a day 81 In June 1917 Sergeant Rita or Lita a black non commissioned officer later described by Tomlinson as a splendid soldier 82 received the highest award ever given to an RNR askari the Distinguished Conduct Medal for conspicuous gallantry in action on many occasions His example and influence with his men is incalculable 83 The 1st Battalion harassed the constantly moving German flying column during August and September 1917 Two Military Medals were won by RNR soldiers during this time Sergeant Northcote rescued a wounded askari under German fire in late August and a few days later Corporal Suga himself lightly injured dragged his wounded commanding officer Lieutenant Booth out of the open and into cover 84 The 2nd Battalion comprising Major Jackson at the head of 585 askaris and 75 whites left Salisbury on 16 September 1917 80 and joined the front on 16 October when it arrived at Mbewa on the north eastern shore of Lake Nyasa intending to ultimately merge with 1RNR 84 After 1RNR spent two months garrisoning Wiedhaven and 2RNR underwent further training the two forces joined on 28 January 1918 becoming known as the 2nd Rhodesia Native Regiment and immediately made their way south in pursuit of Lettow Vorbeck s Germans 85 who were by now down to an effective strength of less than 2 000 84 and moving through Portuguese Mozambique 85 In late May 1918 the two year service contracts signed by the original 500 RNR volunteers expired and the majority of those who had not already been discharged just under 400 men went home While passing through Umtali on their way to Salisbury the soldiers encountered the RNR s original commanding officer Lieutenant Colonel Tomlinson whom they promptly mobbed excitedly chanting nkosi nkosi which roughly means chief in Sindebele 86 In the capital the RNR men were met at the railway station by thousands of people including a number of prominent government military and religious figures Chaplin the territorial administrator gave a speech in which he applauded the troops for upholding the good name of Rhodesia and for having played no insignificant part in depriving the Germans of their power in Africa 87 In Mozambique the RNR encountered Lettow Vorbeck s supply column near Mtarika on 22 May 1918 It wiped it out capturing two German officers two German askaris 34 Portuguese askaris and 252 carriers but as the supply column had been marching between the main German column and its rearguard Lettow Vorbeck was then able to attack the RNR from both sides The contact lasted until darkness fell and the RNR held its position Lettow Vorbeck then moved further south with the RNR following 85 This pursuit continued for the rest of the war with Lettow Vorbeck avoiding contacts so far as was possible and constantly resupplying his men by briefly occupying isolated towns The RNR chased the German column for over 3 600 kilometres 2 200 mi around Mozambique and the eastern districts of Northern Rhodesia but never caught up with him n 7 After Lettow Vorbeck formally surrendered at Abercorn on 25 November 1918 the RNR returned to Salisbury 88 where the men were discharged during 1919 The regiment existed on paper for two more years before it was formally disbanded in February 1921 90 Home front editHome service and conscription debate edit nbsp Jewish members of the Rhodesian Reserves pictured in 1916Southern Rhodesian troops during World War I were all volunteers Particularly during the war s early stages not all male settlers of fighting age were expected to abandon their civilian lives for service abroad Many of them were in vital industries like mining and the Company administration did not grant financial allowances to support the families of married soldiers so at least at first only bachelors in non essential positions were generally considered to have any moral obligation to sign up The 2nd Rhodesia Regiment raised in early 1915 explicitly barred married men from its ranks to preempt the tribulations that might befall their families while they were gone Men of service age who remained at home were pressured by the national and local press to contribute to local security by joining the Southern Rhodesia Volunteers or the Rhodesian Reserves editorials told readers that men who failed to do so were not fulfilling their patriotic duty and warned that conscription might be required if not enough joined up 91 The idea of conscription ran contrary to British political tradition but the sheer scale of the Western Front led to its institution in Britain in January 1916 The Rhodesia Herald and Bulawayo Chronicle newspapers broadcast the news in special editions While some settlers supported the extension of the same system to white Southern Rhodesians it was also opposed in many quarters The British South Africa Company feared that the loss of skilled white workers might jeopardise its mining operations crucial to the colonial economy while the Rhodesian Agricultural Union contended that white farmers had to stay on the land for similar reasons Some mindful of John Chilembwe s anticolonial uprising in Nyasaland in early 1915 felt that it was necessary to keep a core of male settlers in the colony to guard against a repeat of the Mashona and Matabele rebellions of the 1890s 91 By late 1916 most settlers in the colony who were inclined to volunteer had already done so To free up white manpower some suggested the recruitment of older men for local service so more of the younger volunteers could go overseas In 1917 the Chartered Company set up a committee to consider the question of national defence both during the war and thereafter its report released in February 1918 described reliance on volunteers as inefficient and recommended the institution of compulsory service for whites even after the war no mention was made of using black troops in the future The Company published proposals the following month to register all white males aged between 18 and 65 with a view to some form of conscription but this provoked widespread and vocal dissent particularly from farmers In the face of this opposition the administration vacillated until it quietly dropped the idea after the armistice 91 Economic impact edit nbsp Farming on the Pioneer Citrus Estate near Umtali at the time of the warThe British South Africa Company had reservations about devoting all of Southern Rhodesia s resources to the war effort in part because of its desire to keep the colonial economy operating There was indeed tightening of belts in the Rhodesias during the war but not on the same scale as in Britain The retail sector suffered prices for many basic day to day items rose sharply and exports plummeted as much of the white male citizenry went overseas to war but mining the industry on which Rhodesia s economic viability hinged continued to operate successfully despite occasional difficulties in obtaining manpower The Company administration posted record outputs of gold and coal during 1916 and began to supply the Empire with the strategic metal ferrochrome A flurry of new prospecting ventures led to the discovery of another strategic metal tungsten near Essexvale in southern Matabeleland in May 1917 92 Southern Rhodesia s other main economic arm farming performed less strongly during the war partly because the Chartered Company prioritised the strategically important mines at the behest of British officials Southern Rhodesian farmers were optimistic at the outbreak of war surmising that the Empire would become desperate for food and that they would be essentially immune to inflation because they grew their own crops While these conclusions were on the whole accurate logistical complications made it difficult for Rhodesian food to be exported and as in mining there was often a shortage of labour There were a number of drives to increase agricultural yield with the hope of feeding more people in Britain but because Southern Rhodesia was so far away it was difficult for the colony to make much of an impact One of the main culinary contributions the territory made to the British wartime marketplace was Rhodesian butter which first reached England in February 1917 92 The war began to adversely affect the economy in late 1917 The Company threatened petrol rationing in November 1917 and in early 1918 it raised the colonial income tax to help balance the books By the end of the hostilities the company had spent 2 million on the war effort most of which was covered by the Rhodesian taxpayers the Company covered some of the expenditure itself and also received a small amount of financial aid from the UK government 92 Propaganda and public opinion edit nbsp A British propaganda poster urging men to take up the sword of justice to avenge the sinking of the RMS Lusitania by a German U boatMass media on both sides in the conflict tried to motivate their respective populations and justify the war s continuation by creating an image of the enemy so grotesque and savage that surrender became unthinkable Like the major newspapers in Britain the Rhodesia Herald and the Bulawayo Chronicle became key propaganda tools regularly printing stories of German atrocities massacres and other war crimes alongside articles simply entitled War Stories that told of British Army soldiers carrying out deeds of Herculean bravery Anti German sentiment abounded in the territory throughout the conflict and periodically intensified often concurrently with the reporting of particularly unsavoury incidents 93 During the initial peak of Germanophobia which lasted the first few months of the conflict many German and Austrian men of military age who lived in Rhodesia were arrested officially as prisoners of war and sent to internment camps in South Africa Gertrude Page one of the colony s most famous novelists wrote an open letter in response vouching for the loyalty of a young German in her employ and received a number of replies accusing her of being unpatriotic 94 The second period of intensification began following the sinking of the British passenger liner RMS Lusitania by a German U boat on 7 May 1915 The Rhodesia Herald ran an editorial soon after calling on the Company administration to intern all remaining German and Austrian residents and to close their businesses A town assembly in Umtali sent the administrator a resolution asking him to confiscate all property in the colony owned by subjects of Germany and Austria within 48 hours in view of German barbarity Most of Southern Rhodesia s remaining German and Austrian residents were soon sent to the camps in South Africa 93 Further periods of intensified anti German feeling in the Rhodesias followed the execution by the Germans of the British nurse Edith Cavell in Belgium in October 1915 the Crowning Crime the Bulawayo Chronicle called it the escalation of bombing raids by German Zeppelins on British cities during 1917 and the British reportage the same year of the Kadaververwertungsanstalt atrocity story that the Germans supposedly rendered down battlefield corpses from both sides to make products such as nitroglycerine and lubricants 93 A small elite of black urbanites mostly raised and educated at Christian missions existed in Southern Rhodesia by the time of the war and these generally identified themselves strongly with settler society and by extension the war effort 95 although the vast majority of black people in the colony retained their traditional tribal lifestyles of rural subsistence farming 96 and for most of them as McLaughlin comments the war could have been fought between aliens from different planets for all their connection with events in Europe 97 Some felt obliged to fight for their country seeing the travails of Rhodesia and the Empire as their own also 98 but the great bulk of tribal public opinion was detached seeing the conflict as a white man s war that did not concern them Those who favoured the latter line of thinking cared not so much about the conflict itself but more about how its course might affect them specifically For example widespread interest was aroused soon after the outbreak of war when rumours began to fly between the rural black communities that the Company planned to conscript them News of the Maritz Rebellion prompted a fresh rumour among the Matabele that Company officials might confiscate tribal livestock to feed the white troops going south None of this actually occurred 96 The Chartered Company s native commissioners began to fear a possible tribal rebellion during early 1915 Herbert Taylor the chief native commissioner believed that foreign missionaries were secretly encouraging rural black people to emulate the Chilembwe revolt in Nyasaland and telling them falsely that the British were exterminating the natives there There were few actual attempts to topple the administration in Southern Rhodesia but the Company still took precautions Aware that Mashona svikiro spirit mediums had been instrumental in inciting and leading insurgencies against Company rule during the late 1890s the native commissioners enacted new legislation designed to imprison any svikiro who gained significant popularity 96 The only real threat of a black rebellion in Southern Rhodesia during the war occurred in May 1916 immediately after the Company instructed native commissioners in Matabeleland to start recruiting for the Rhodesia Native Regiment Company officials attempted to make clear that the RNR comprised volunteers only and most Matabele chiefs were not unreceptive to the idea 99 some including Chief Ndiweni attempted to encourage enlistment by sending their own sons off to war 100 but rumours spread in some quarters that black men were going to be involuntarily conscripted wholesale into the unit Chief Maduna in Insiza district briefly threatened insurrection issuing rifles to 100 men but he backed down after a few weeks after it became self evident that conscription was not happening 99 Some attempted to dissuade potential RNR recruits from signing up including a black man in Bulawayo who was fined 4 in July 1915 for spreading a false rumour around the city that the British East Africa Transport Corps black Southern Rhodesian drivers had had their throats cut by the Germans Matthew Zwimba founder of the syncretist Church of the White Bird in Mashonaland received six months hard labour the following year for advising black men not to join the RNR on the grounds that the British had he said committed crimes against God in 1913 101 The colony s small Afrikaner community was split on the issue of war Some supported the United Kingdom out of loyalty to Rhodesia but others were still bitter about the Anglo Boer War and showed little interest in fighting the Germans In the rural areas where Afrikaner nationalism was strongest the Germans were perceived by some Boer farmers as potential liberators from British domination Southern Rhodesian Afrikaners were often accused of undermining the British war effort While some leaders of the community publicly came out in support of the war and offered to provide troops others put pressure on Afrikaans speakers not to volunteer When recruitment for the Rhodesia Native Regiment began in 1916 there were reports of potential black recruits being urged not to join up by their Afrikaans speaking employers 101 Women edit As is common in frontier societies the Southern Rhodesian settler community was mostly male at the time of the First World War white females were outnumbered by males almost two to one Because white women were so marriageable and cheap black labour was easily available to handle domestic duties most female settlers did not work and spent most of their days supervising the household and family The average white woman in the colony continued to live this kind of life during the war in marked contrast to her British counterpart who in many cases went to replace the male factory workers and farm labourers who went to war In Rhodesia little of this sort occurred there were no munitions factories and the idea of women working down the country s mines was not considered practical Some white farmers wives took over management of the land in their husbands absence but this was quite unusual 102 The contribution to the war made by Southern Rhodesia s white female population generally comprised organising and running donation drives comforts committees and other similar enterprises They sent the troops comforts parcels which contained balaclavas mittens and scarves that they had knitted as well as newspapers soap food including cakes and sweets and minor luxuries These packages did much to raise the morale of the men particularly those who were in German captivity Women were also largely responsible for handling mail between Rhodesian soldiers and their relatives and friends back home After the armistice they organised financial assistance for those discharged Southern Rhodesian men in England who could not afford to come home and arranged visits for those convalescing in English hospitals 103 As in Britain some Southern Rhodesian women during the war presented men not wearing military uniform with white feathers symbolising cowardice This campaign often went awry as many of the men presented with the feathers were not in fact shirking from service In 1916 hoping to save them further harassment the Rhodesia Herald and other newspapers began publishing lists of men who had volunteered only to be deemed medically unfit by the army doctors 104 Black women played a minor role in units such as the Rhodesia Native Regiment accompanying the black soldiers into the operational area and performing domestic tasks like washing and cooking Many of these were local East African women who had formed attachments with RNR soldiers Officers tolerated the presence of these women in the interest of morale aware that attempting to take them away from the men would probably lead to mutiny 105 Donations and funds edit Southern Rhodesian settlers set up a number of wartime funds including funds to aid war victims funds to provide the troops with tobacco and other supplies funds to assist orphans and widows funds to buy aeroplanes and others These raised about 200 000 in all Much of this went to the Prince of Wales National Relief Fund in Britain which was founded when the war started Southern Rhodesian branches of the fund were promptly organised in several towns and ultimately consolidated into the Rhodesian War Relief Fund This body donated 25 of its receipts to the Prince of Wales Fund and 75 to local concerns 47 The Tobacco Fund set up in September 1914 was particularly successful Public donors bought Southern Rhodesian tobacco cigarettes and pipe tobacco to send to the British forces This was intended not only to comfort the troops but also to advertise the prospect of post war emigration to Rhodesia The labels on the tobacco tins depicted a map of Africa with the sun shining on Rhodesia accompanied by the slogan The World s Great Sunspot In a similar vein Sunspot was the name given to the Rhodesian cigarettes that British soldiers received During the war British and colonial soldiery collectively chewed and smoked 59 955 two ounce 57 g tins of donated Southern Rhodesian tobacco 80 584 two ounce tins of equivalent pipe tobacco and 4 004 000 Sunspot cigarettes in packs of 10 Another similar undertaking saw six tons roughly 6 100 kg of local citrus fruits sent to wounded British Army personnel in South Africa and England 47 Starting in July 1915 Southern Rhodesians raised funds to buy aeroplanes for the Royal Flying Corps The colony ultimately bought three aircraft each of which cost 1 500 they were named Rhodesia Nos 1 2 and 3 Residents of the town of Gatooma also set up their own drive which funded the purchase of two more planes Gatooma Nos 1 and 2 46 47 The black elite in the towns donated to the settlers patriotic funds and organisations and also set up their own A war fundraising tea organised by black Salisburians in early March 1915 boasted entertainment in the form of a black choir as well as the presence of Taylor and a junior native commissioner each of whom gave speeches in English Sindebele and Shona Rural black people by contrast did not generally understand the concept of donating money to war funds and misinterpreted encouragement to do so as being threatened with a new tax When the Matabele chief Gambo began collecting war donations from his people in early 1915 also urging other chiefs to do the same he took care to thoroughly explain the war fund s purpose and the voluntary nature of contributing but some villagers still misunderstood and came to believe they would have livestock confiscated if they did not give money The Company ultimately sent officials around the countryside to clarify the matter 106 The Kalanga a small community in the south west that provided a disproportionately large number of volunteers for the Rhodesia Native Regiment also proved conspicuous for their extremely generous financial donations in June 1915 they collectively donated 183 a staggering sum the historian Timothy Stapleton comments to the Prince of Wales Fund 106 Flu pandemic edit The 1918 flu pandemic often referred to at the time as Spanish flu spread quickly into Southern Rhodesia from South Africa in October 1918 A week after the first case was reported in Salisbury over 1 000 people were infected Public buildings in the towns were converted into makeshift hospital wards appeals were put out for trained nurses to attend the sick and soup kitchens were set up to feed children whose parents were too ill to look after them Newspapers in the colony published basic instructions on how to deal with the disease 107 The mine compounds where hundreds of black labourers lived and worked together in close proximity were worst affected The whole country was ultimately infected with even the most remote villages reporting deaths 107 Many members of the Rhodesia Native Regiment were infected and 76 of them died from the disease having survived the war 108 By the time the pandemic had ended in Southern Rhodesia around mid November 1918 thousands had been killed 107 End of the war aftermath and statistics editNews of the armistice on 11 November 1918 reached Southern Rhodesia the same day and was announced to the town of Salisbury by the repeated blowing of the klaxon at the Castle Brewery Hysterical street parties started almost immediately and in the evening the people let off fireworks and lit a huge bonfire on Salisbury kopje Bulawayo celebrated with a street party that continued uninterrupted for over 48 hours Smaller towns marked the armistice with their own celebratory functions and events 109 Once the frivolities had ended minds turned to post war policy and particularly how soldiers returning from Europe would be reintegrated into society 109 The company had already in 1916 set aside 250 000 acres 100 000 ha of farmland to be given free of charge to white war veterans 110 In early 1919 it set up a government department to help returning men find work Many former soldiers failed to find jobs and some remained unemployed for years after they returned home Some of the more seriously wounded from the European theatre never came back at all instead remaining in England because of the better medical facilities and public benefits Demobilised Western Front veterans began to arrive back in Rhodesia in January 1919 and continued to do so for nearly a year afterwards On 30 May 1919 the Southern Rhodesian Legislative Council passed a resolution thanking the territory s veterans 109 This council on behalf of the government and people of Southern Rhodesia records its grateful thanks to the men of the Territory who took part in the Great War its deep appreciation of the services they have rendered and its admiration of their bearing and conduct It expresses its sympathy with those who have suffered and the relatives of those who have made the supreme sacrifice and welcomes home those who having completed their services are returning The Southern Rhodesian Legislative Council 109 The Southern Rhodesian tribal chiefs collectively sent their own statement to King George V 111 We wish to say that when the king called upon us for help we sent our young men who fought and died beside the English and we claim that our blood and that of the English are now one The chiefs of Southern Rhodesia 111 Proportional to white population Southern Rhodesia had contributed more personnel to the British armed forces in World War I than any of the Empire s dominions or colonies and more than Britain itself 112 About 40 of white males in the colony 113 5 716 men put on uniform 114 with 1 720 doing so as commissioned officers 115 Black Southern Rhodesians were represented by the 2 507 soldiers who made up the Rhodesia Native Regiment n 6 the roughly 350 who joined the British East Africa Transport Corps British South Africa Police Mobile Column and South African Native Labour Corps 117 and the few dozen black scouts who served with the 1st and 2nd Rhodesia Regiments in South West and East Africa 118 Southern Rhodesians killed in action or on operational duty numbered over 800 counting all races together more than 700 of the colony s white servicemen died 114 while the Rhodesia Native Regiment s black soldiers suffered 146 fatalities 119 Legacy editAccounts of white Southern Rhodesian soldiers wartime experiences started to be published in the 1920s The conflict became a key entry in many national histories though the role played by black troops was often minimised in these accounts 120 The colony s wartime contributions became a source of great pride for much of the Southern Rhodesian white community 73 as well as for some black Africans 121 whites were particularly proud that they had had the highest enlistment rate in the British Empire during the war 73 A national war memorial a stone obelisk 50 feet 15 m high was funded by public donations and built in Salisbury in 1919 Soldiers one black and one white were depicted in relief on plaques on each side the inscriptions below read 1914 1918 We fought and died for our King 122 Five years later Lieutenant Colonel J A Methuen organised the erection on a kopje near Umtali of a stone cross 30 feet 9 1 m tall to memorialise the country s fallen black soldiers This monument remains to this day as does the bronze plaque at its foot which reads To the Glory of God and in Memory of Africans Who Fell 1914 1918 123 nbsp A Southern Rhodesian tank in Italy during World War II 1944Southern Rhodesia s contributions to the Imperial war effort helped it to become regarded by Britain as more mature and deserving of responsible government which Whitehall granted in 1923 124 The territory was made a self governing colony just short of full dominion status n 8 Charged with its own defence Salisbury introduced the selective conscription of white males in 1926 91 and reformed the Rhodesia Regiment the following year The territory s association with the King s Royal Rifle Corps endured in the form of affiliation between the KRRC and the Rhodesia Regiment s new incarnation which adopted aspects of the KRRC uniform and a similar regimental insignia 127 The new Rhodesia Regiment was granted the original s World War I battle honours and colours by George V in 1929 128 In World War II Southern Rhodesia again enthusiastically stood behind the UK symbolically declaring war on Germany in support of Britain before any other colony or dominion 129 Over 26 000 Southern Rhodesians served in the Second World War 130 making the colony once more the largest contributor of manpower proportional to white population in all of the British Empire and Commonwealth 112 As in World War I Southern Rhodesians were distributed in small groups throughout the British Army Royal Navy and Royal Air Force 131 Dedicated Rhodesian platoons again served in the KRRC 127 and the Rhodesian African Rifles raised in 1940 were in many ways a resurrection of the Rhodesia Native Regiment n 9 Military aviation already associated with the colony following the First World War 134 became a great Southern Rhodesian tradition during the Second with the colony providing No 44 No 237 and No 266 Squadrons and other personnel to the Royal Air Force 135 as well as training in Southern Rhodesia for 8 235 Allied airmen 136 By the 1960s Southern Rhodesians service on Britain s behalf in the World Wars particularly the Second was an integral part of the colony s national psyche 112 137 The territory had also latterly contributed to British counter insurgency operations in Malaya 138 Aden and Cyprus as well as Operation Vantage in Kuwait 139 The colonial government s Unilateral Declaration of Independence in 1965 was deliberately made on 11 November Armistice Day in an attempt to emphasise the territory s prior war record on Britain s behalf The proclamation was signed at 11 00 local time during the customary two minute silence to remember the fallen 140 After the country s reconstitution and recognised independence as Zimbabwe in 1980 Robert Mugabe s administration pulled down many monuments and plaques making reference to the fallen of the First and Second World Wars perceiving them as reminders of white minority rule and colonialism that went against what the modern state stood for This view was partly rooted in the association of these memorials with those commemorating the British South Africa Company s dead of the Matabele Wars as well as those memorialising members of the Rhodesian Security Forces killed during the Bush War of the 1970s 141 Many Zimbabweans today see their nation s involvement in the World Wars as a consequence of colonial rule that had more to do with the white community than the indigenous black majority and most have little interest in its contributions to those conflicts 141 The country s fallen of the two World Wars today have no official commemoration either in Zimbabwe or overseas 142 The national war memorial obelisk still stands but the relief sculptures and inscriptions have been removed The stone cross monument near Mutare as Umtali is now called is one of the few memorials that remains intact and in its place atop what is now called Cross Kopje its meaning has been largely forgotten 141 Notes edit a b Renamed Zimbabwe in 1980 3 Southern Rhodesia referred to Company territories south of the Zambezi while those to the north were called Northern Rhodesia 6 The name Rhodesia formally covered both north and south but was often used to refer to the southern territory alone for example the names of almost all Southern Rhodesian military units omitted the word Southern Soldiers from Southern Rhodesia generally described themselves simply as Rhodesians 7 Section 150 of the South Africa Act 1909 which formed the Union explicitly provisioned for the accession to it of Company administered territories as new provinces 9 The South African Brigade was split into four battalions 1st South African Battalion Cape 2nd South African Battalion Natal amp Orange Free State 3rd South African Battalion Transvaal amp Rhodesia and 4th South African Battalion Scottish Most Rhodesian members were in the 3rd Battalion 33 Richthofen was killed in action the following day 21 April 1918 54 Lewis who returned to Rhodesia after the war 53 gained minor celebrity in military circles as the Baron s last victim and was invited by the Luftwaffe to attend the dedication of a new German fighter wing named after Richthofen in 1938 55 a b Evidence regarding the exact composition of the Rhodesia Native Regiment s enlisted ranks is scanty and inconclusive The historian Timothy Stapleton basing his figures on regimental nominal rolls and anecdotal evidence from officers gives a total of 2 507 rank and filers attesting into the RNR Scholars generally agree that while most of the men were Southern Rhodesian residents only about a third were originally from the colony Stapleton estimates that 44 5 of the regiment s enlisted men were Nyasalanders 29 were Southern Rhodesians 17 5 were Northern Rhodesians and the rest were from elsewhere Kalanga soldiers made up 40 of the Southern Rhodesians in the RNR or around 12 of the whole regiment a disproportionately large proportion 116 Lettow Vorbeck was still in the field when the armistice was signed in Europe on 11 November 1918 88 He learned that the war was over three days later on the road between the Northern Rhodesian towns of Mpika and Kasama when he received a telegram from the South African Lieutenant General Jacob van Deventer The exact spot where this occurred has been marked since 1953 by the Von Lettow Vorbeck Memorial 89 As instructed by the telegram the German marched his undefeated troops the 250 kilometres 160 mi north to Abercorn and formally surrendered It took him 11 days to reach Abercorn so the ceremonial surrender of Germany s forces in East Africa took place on 25 November 1918 a full two weeks after the European war ended 88 Responsible government was granted following the 1922 government referendum which offered voters a choice between joining the Union of South Africa at the termination of the British South Africa Company s charter or instead becoming a separate self governing colony The latter option prevailed with just under 60 of the vote 125 Company rule endured a few more months in Northern Rhodesia ending in early 1924 when control transferred to the Colonial Office in London 126 Like the RNR the Rhodesian African Rifles comprised black soldiers and warrant officers led by white officers it included a number of ex RNR personnel and reprised several RNR traditions 132 It took part in the Burma Campaign 133 and successfully requested permission to emblazon its regimental colours with the RNR s World War I battle honours in 1952 132 References edit Art Printing Works 1918 p iii a b c d McLaughlin 1980 p 2 McLaughlin 1980 p 141 Walker 1963 p 664 Walker 1963 p 669 Brelsford 1960 p 619 a b c McLaughlin 1980 p 84 a b McLaughlin 1980 p 1 Wood 2005 p 8 Encyclopaedia Britannica 2012 Keppel Jones 1983 p 512 a b c McLaughlin 1980 p 4 Keppel Jones 1983 p 578 Keppel Jones 1983 pp 590 599 McLaughlin 1980 p iv a b c McLaughlin 1980 p 3 a b McLaughlin 1980 p 5 a b McLaughlin 1980 p 8 a b McLaughlin 1980 p 49 McLaughlin 1980 pp 147 149 Gale 1973 p 9 Ferris 1959 pp 115 117 Tawse Jollie 1971 p 7 Stapleton 2006 p 19 McLaughlin 1980 p 50 a b c McLaughlin 1980 pp 50 51 McLaughlin 1980 p 57 a b McLaughlin 1980 p 55 McLaughlin 1980 pp 52 55 a b Hutton 1917 p 57 a b McLaughlin 1980 pp 64 65 Farey amp Spicer 2008 p 108 a b Uys 1991 pp 194 198 Schwarz 2011 p 246 a b Liddell Hart 1970 p 324 McLaughlin 1980 p 62 a b McLaughlin 1980 pp 116 117 McLaughlin 1980 p 63 McLaughlin 1980 pp 63 64 McLaughlin 1980 p 114 McLaughlin 1980 p 98 Gale 1974 p 36 McLaughlin 1980 pp 70 71 Cormack amp Cormack 2001 p 12 McLaughlin 1980 pp 71 72 Browne Arthur Richard Howe Commonwealth War Graves Commission Retrieved 8 March 2013 a b McLaughlin 1980 pp 71 72 a b c d McLaughlin 1980 pp 92 93 Thomas Frank William Henry Commonwealth War Graves Commission Retrieved 8 March 2013 McAdam 1967 pp 1 2 Van der Byl 1971 p 155 a b Franks 2000 pp 26 27 No 30590 The London Gazette Supplement 22 March 1918 p 3604 a b Gibbons 1927 pp 344 346 Gibbons 1927 pp 365 366 Nowarra Brown amp Robertson 1964 p 102 Probert 2006 pp 33 36 Shores Franks amp Guest 1990 p 185 Probert 2006 p 43 Probert 2006 p 46 Probert 2006 p 19 McLaughlin 1980 p 7 a b c Binda 2007 p 17 McLaughlin 1980 p 9 a b c McLaughlin 1980 pp 9 14 Chanock 1977 p 22 McLaughlin 1980 pp 13 15 a b McLaughlin 1980 pp 15 18 a b McLaughlin 1980 pp 19 21 22 a b McLaughlin 1980 pp 23 25 30 McLaughlin 1980 pp 30 34 a b McLaughlin 1980 pp 39 41 a b McLaughlin 1980 p 46 a b c d Stapleton 2006 pp 20 22 Stapleton 2006 p 39 Stapleton 2006 p 49 a b c Binda 2007 p 18 a b c d Binda 2007 p 19 McLaughlin 1980 p 75 Binda 2007 p 20 a b c Binda 2007 p 21 McLaughlin 1980 pp 76 77 Stapleton 2006 p 64 Stapleton 2006 pp 90 91 a b c Binda 2007 p 22 a b c Binda 2007 p 23 Stapleton 2006 p 125 Stapleton 2006 p 135 a b c Binda 2007 pp 24 25 Gore Browne 1954 pp 84 Stapleton 2006 p 136 a b c d McLaughlin 1980 pp 88 92 a b c McLaughlin 1980 pp 102 106 a b c McLaughlin 1980 pp 80 85 McLaughlin 1980 pp 5 6 Stapleton 2006 p 30 a b c Stapleton 2006 pp 23 25 McLaughlin 1980 p 73 Stapleton 2006 p 40 a b Stapleton 2006 pp 26 27 Stapleton 2006 p 155 a b McLaughlin 1980 pp 96 97 McLaughlin 1980 p 120 McLaughlin 1980 p 121 McLaughlin 1980 p 123 Stapleton 2006 pp 48 49 a b Stapleton 2006 pp 27 30 a b c McLaughlin 1980 pp 106 107 Stapleton 2006 p 133 a b c d McLaughlin 1980 pp 138 140 Hodder Williams 1983 pp 105 106 a b Binda 2007 p 25 McLaughlin 1980 p 79 a b c Moorcraft 1990 Strachan 2003 p 498 a b McLaughlin 1980 p 140 McLaughlin 1980 pp 150 151 Stapleton 2006 pp 31 40 Stapleton 2006 p 2 Binda 2007 p 17 McLaughlin 1980 p 74 Binda 2007 p 400 Stapleton 2006 p 5 Stapleton 2006 p 143 City of Salisbury 1952 p 47 Stapleton 2006 pp 1 4 141 142 Stapleton 2006 pp 142 150 Willson 1963 p 115 Gann 1969 pp 191 192 a b Wake amp Deedes 1949 p xiv Chant 1988 p 262 Radford 1994 p 46 Wood 2005 p 9 MacDonald amp 1976 v 2 Appendix p viii MacDonald amp 1976 v 1 pp 8 9 a b Binda 2007 p 25 Binda 2007 pp 59 77 House 1976 p 41 MacDonald amp 1976 v 1 p 9 Jackson 2006 p 39 MacDonald amp 1976 v 1 p 173 McLaughlin 1980 Preface Binda 2007 pp 127 140 404 Corum 2008 p 172 McLaughlin 1980 p 141 Wood 2005 pp 463 471 a b c Stapleton 2006 pp 1 5 Stapleton 2006 p 11Sources editWebsites edit British South Africa Company BSAC BSACO or BSA Company Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Chicago Illinois Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc Retrieved 17 January 2013 Newspaper and journal articles edit Ferris N S 1959 Military Pot Pourri A Rhodesian Green Jacket Looks Back The King s Royal Rifle Corps Chronicle Winchester Warren amp Son 111 118 OCLC 756216787 Archived from the original on 18 December 2013 Gore Browne Stewart ed 1954 The Chambeshi Memorial The Northern Rhodesia Journal II 5 Lusaka Northern Rhodesia Society 81 84 ISSN 0549 9674 House John 1976 Aviation in Rhodesia Rhodesia Calls Salisbury Rhodesia National Tourist Board 33 45 OCLC 4079878 McAdam J 1967 Pat Judson First Rhodesian born Airman PDF Rhodesiana 16 Salisbury The Rhodesiana Society 1 16 ISSN 0556 9605 Moorcraft Paul 1990 Rhodesia s War of Independence History Today 40 9 London History Today Ltd ISSN 0018 2753 Bibliography Binda Alexandre November 2007 Heppenstall David ed Masodja The History of the Rhodesian African Rifles and its forerunner the Rhodesian Native Regiment Johannesburg 30 South Publishers ISBN 978 1 920143 03 9 Brelsford W V ed 1960 Handbook to the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland First ed London Cassell OCLC 503844634 Chanock Martin 1977 Unconsummated Union Britain Rhodesia and South Africa 1900 45 First ed Manchester Manchester University Press ISBN 978 0 7190 0634 0 Chant Christopher May 1988 The Handbook of British Regiments London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 00241 7 Cormack Andrew Cormack Peter March 2001 British Air Forces 1914 18 2 First ed Oxford Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 84176 002 5 Corum James S 2008 The RAF in Imperial Defence 1919 1956 In Kennedy Greg ed Imperial Defence The Old World Order 1856 1956 London Routledge pp 152 175 ISBN 978 0 415 35595 7 Farey Pat Spicer Mark 2008 Sniping An Illustrated History First ed Minneapolis Zenith Press ISBN 978 0 7603 3717 2 Franks Norman April 2000 Nieuport Aces of World War I Oxford Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 85532 961 4 Gale William Daniel 1973 The Years Between 1923 1973 Half a Century of Responsible Government in Rhodesia Salisbury H C P Andersen OCLC 224687202 Gale William Daniel 1974 History of Coghlan Welsh amp Guest Salisbury Coghlan Welsh amp Guest OCLC 4465148 Gann Lewis H 1969 1964 A History of Northern Rhodesia Early Days to 1953 New York Humanities Press OCLC 46853 Gibbons Floyd 1927 The Red Knight of Germany The Story of Baron von Richthofen Germany s Great War Bird Garden City New York Garden City Publishing ISBN 978 0 405 12167 8 Hodder Williams Richard 1983 White Farmers in Rhodesia 1890 1965 a History of the Marandellas District London Macmillan Publishers ISBN 978 0 333 27237 4 Hutton Edward ed 1917 1915 A Brief History of the King s Royal Rifle Corps 1755 to 1915 Second ed Winchester Warren amp Son OCLC 558551241 Jackson Ashley 2006 The British Empire and the Second World War First ed London amp New York Continuum International Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 8264 4049 5 Keppel Jones Arthur 1983 Rhodes and Rhodesia The White Conquest of Zimbabwe 1884 1902 Montreal Quebec and Kingston Ontario McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 978 0 7735 0534 6 Liddell Hart Basil H 1970 1930 History of the First World War Fourth ed London Cassell ISBN 0 304 93653 7 MacDonald J F 1976 1947 The War History of Southern Rhodesia 1939 1945 Volume 1 Bulawayo Books of Rhodesia ISBN 978 0 86920 138 1 MacDonald J F 1976 1950 The War History of Southern Rhodesia 1939 1945 Volume 2 Bulawayo Books of Rhodesia ISBN 978 0 86920 140 4 McLaughlin Peter 1980 Ragtime Soldiers the Rhodesian Experience in the First World War Bulawayo Books of Zimbabwe ISBN 0 86920 232 4 Nowarra Heinz J Brown Kimbrough S Robertson Bruce 1964 1959 Von Richthofen and the Flying Circus Third ed Letchworth Harleyford Publishing OCLC 495260263 Probert Henry August 2006 Bomber Harris His Life and Times London Greenhill Books ISBN 978 1 85367 691 8 Radford M P 1994 Service Before Self the History Badges and Insignia of the Security Forces of the Rhodesias and Nyasaland 1890 1980 Wellington Somerset Mark Radford ISBN 978 0 9524472 0 7 Schwarz Bill 2011 The White Man s World First ed Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 929691 0 Shores Christopher Franks Norman Guest Russell October 1990 Above the Trenches A Complete Record of the Fighter Aces and Units of the British Empire Air Forces 1915 1920 London Grub Street ISBN 978 0 948817 19 9 Stapleton Timothy 2006 No Insignificant Part The Rhodesia Native Regiment in the East Africa Campaign of the First World War Waterloo Ontario Wilfrid Laurier University Press ISBN 978 0 88920 498 0 Strachan Hew February 2003 The First World War Volume I To Arms Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 160834 6 Tawse Jollie Ethel 1971 1924 The Real Rhodesia Bulawayo Books of Rhodesia OCLC 772131 Uys Ian 1991 Rollcall The Delville Wood Story Germiston Uys Publishers ISBN 978 0 9583173 1 3 Van der Byl Piet 1971 From Playgrounds to Battlefields Volume 1 Cape Town Howard Timmins ISBN 978 0 86978 002 2 Wake Hereward Deedes William F 1949 Swift and Bold the Story of the King s Royal Rifle Corps in the Second World War 1939 1945 Aldershot Gale amp Polden OCLC 558551278 Walker Eric A ed 1963 The Cambridge History of the British Empire Volume Four Second ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press OCLC 560778129 Willson F M G ed 1963 Source Book of Parliamentary Elections and Referenda in Southern Rhodesia 1898 1962 Salisbury Department of Government University College of Rhodesia and Nyasaland OCLC 219295658 Wood J R T June 2005 So Far And No Further Rhodesia s Bid For Independence During the Retreat From Empire 1959 1965 Victoria British Columbia Trafford Publishing ISBN 978 1 4120 4952 8 Rhodesia and the War 1914 1917 A Comprehensive Illustrated Record of Rhodesia s Part in the Great War Salisbury Art Printing Works 1918 OCLC 38773295 The City of Salisbury Official Guide Cape Town R Beerman Publishers 1952 OCLC 2884679 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Southern Rhodesia in World War I amp oldid 1181213214, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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