Oxford Insight History 9 Ch6 Australians at War
Oxford Insight History 9 Ch6 Australians at War
Oxford Insight History 9 Ch6 Australians at War
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Source6 .1 Historians use a variety of primary and secondary sources when
conducting historical inquiries. By examining artefacts such as propaganda
posters, war medals and photographs taken on the battleþelds, they can
gain a more complete understanding of the heroic sacriþces and day-to-day
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AUSTRALIANS AT WAR
(WORLD WARS I AND II)
In this chapter, we investigate key aspects of World War I (1914–1918) and World War II
(1939–1945), providing a particular focus on how Australians experienced these wars. We will
also investigate the impacts of these wars, both in Australia and around the world.
World War I became known as a ‘total war’ because, for the þrst time, nations around
the world committed not only their armed forces to the war effort but also their industries,
resources and people from all sectors of society. World War II took þghting to new levels and
remains one of the deþning events of the 20th century. It played out across Europe, the Paciþc,
the Middle East, Africa and Asia.
WHAT WERE THE CAUSES, SCOPE AND NATURE OF WORLD WAR II? 6.3
SECTION
In this section you will:
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» outline the main causes of World War II » outline and sequence the changing scope and nature of
» explain why Australians enlisted to þght warfare from trenches in World War I to the Holocaust
and the use of the atomic bomb to end World War II
» locate and sequence the places where Australians fought
PL » investigate the signiþcant experiences of Australians in
World War II
CHECKPOINT 6.3
DETAILED STUDY: WHAT WERE THE ORIGINS, NATURE AND IMPACT OF
THE HOLOCAUST? 6.4
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SECTION
In this section you will:
» investigate the origins, nature and impact of the Holocaust
CHECKPOINT 6.4
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December 1915
Troops are evacuated
from Gallipoli after eight months Oct
T I M E L I N E
of fighting. Austra
conscri
E
It is n
1914
PL 1915 1916 191
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SA
25 April 1915
ANZAC troops land at Gallipoli.
28 June 1914
Archduke Franz Ferdinand July–November 1916
(heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne) The Battle of the Somme,
and his wife are assassinated, a major British offensive, tries to break
triggering the ‘July Crisis’. the stalemate on the Western Front.
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the official end of World War I.
It is narrowly defeated.
1917 1918
PL 1919 1920
1918–1919
Spanish influenza kills millions worldwide
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April 1917
The USA enters the war
against Germany.
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REVIEW 6.1
1 In what year did Australia join World War I against Germany?
2 What was Australia’s reason for joining the conÿict?
3 When was Anzac Day þrst held in Australia? How long was this
after ANZAC troops landed in Gallipoli?
4 How many times did Australia hold referendums on conscription
during World War I? What were the results of these referendums?
5 How long after the Armistice did World War I ofþcially end?
July 1940
Setember 1939 Germany launches an air
Britain declares war on Germany assault on Britain known
following the German army’s as the Battle of Britain.
1933 invasion of Poland. Australia also
Adolf Hitler, the leader of declares war on Germany.
the Nazi Party in Germany, Apr
T I M E L I N E
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Siege
1933 1938
PL 1939 1940 1941
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May–June 1940
Germany invades Denmark,
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Source 6.9 T
stronghold a
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Siege of Tobruk.
1941 1942
PL 1943 1944 1945
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December 1941
Japan attacks the February 1943
US naval base in Germany surrenders at the March–June 1944
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REVIEW 6.2
1 How many months did Germany’s bombing campaign on Britain
last for?
2 Where were many Australian soldiers captured and taken as
prisoners of war?
uction 3 When did the USA enter the war and why?
4 What was Kristallnacht and when did it take place?
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today, the causes of World War I remain hotly contested by historians. In this section we
will consider the background and events leading up to the outbreak of World War I. We will
then look at some of the different explanations that have been offered for its causes.
PL
Europe in the lead-up to World War I
At the start of 1901, the countries of Europe (see Source 6.8) appeared peaceful and
prosperous. Queen Victoria had occupied the British throne for over 60 years and many of
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her children and other relatives had married into royal houses all over Europe. As a result,
many of the royal families of Europe were closely related. In the lead-up to World War I,
many thought it was unlikely that these close relations would become involved in an armed
conflict at all – let alone fight on opposing sides.
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The Industrial Revolution had transformed societies across Western Europe. New
production methods and tecÚologies affected almost every sector of society and industry.
Governments had made improvements in health care, sanitation and relief for the poor.
STRANGE BUT TRUE Roads, canals and railways made transport easier and more accessible, and literacy rates
were rising.
Tsar Nicholas II
of Russia, Kaiser
Wilhelm of Germany
and Britain’s King
George V were all
þrst cousins and
the grandsons of
Britain’s Queen
Victoria. Victoria
died in 1901. Kaiser
Wilhelm II always
said that if she had
still been alive in
1914, she would
never have allowed
her grandsons to go
Source6 .11 Tsar Nicholas II of Russia, King George V of Britain and Kaiser Wilhelm of Germany (from left
to war. tor ight)
Vienna
LEGEND
Countries and their associated territories Budapest
Norway
ROMANIA
BOSNIA-
Belgrade Bucharest
Sweden HERZEGOVINA
Sarajevo
Great Britain North SERBIA
Black
Sea
BULGARIA
Sea MONTENEGRO Sea
Denmark Sofia
lti Cetinje
c
Ba Adriatic
The Russian Empire
E
Netherlands Sea Constantinople
ATLANTIC Tirane
Belgium Germany ITALY ALBANIA (Istanbul)
OCEAN
France
PL THE OTTOMAN
Switzerland Austria–Hungary EMPIRE
Aegean
Portugal Romania GREECE
Black Sea Sea
Spain Bulgaria
Corsica Italy Athens
Sardinia Albania
The Ottoman
Mediterr Empire
an
ea
n
M
Morocco
Tunisia Sea N
N
Source 6.12 Europe before World War I (inset box shows the Source 6.13 Detail of the Balkan states in 1914
location of the Balkan states)
6.1 WHAT WERE THE CAUSES, SCOPE AND NATURE OF WORLD WAR I? 273
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Triple Entente, made up of Britain, France and Russia (entente is a French word meaning
an ‘understanding’ or alliance.) Each participating nation promised to provide military
support if one of its members was attacked. In addition to the key European countries
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shown in Source 6.15, many other countries, colonies and territories around the world were
attached to one or other of the alliances. Japan, for example, had signed a treaty with Britain
in 1902 making it a member of the Triple Entente. In addition to Japan, all British colonies
(such as India) and dominions (such as Australia and New Zealand) automatically became
part of the Triple Entente. This meant that they could
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LEGEND all be drawn into conflict if war broke out.
Triple Alliance
The same fears that had led the major European
Triple Entente
powers to set up alliances ended up dragging them
Neutral countries
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Source6 .16
29 October 1914 The Ottoman Empire (Turkey) enters the war on the side of Germany
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23 May 1915 Italy enters the war on the side of the Triple Entente (breaking the Triple Alliance)
INTERPRET 6.1
1 Is it possible to identify a clear
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perspective on the causes of World War I
in either of these sources?
2 Explain how these sources could be used
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to support the argument that World War
I was caused by the alliance system.
3 What would be the weakness of relying
on these sources to explain the causes
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of World War I?
6.1 WHAT WERE THE CAUSES, SCOPE AND NATURE OF WORLD WAR I? 275
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World War I, and
create a list of In the early 20th century, modern battleships and submarines were also important
territories for weapons of war. Despite claims by European powers that they were not preparing for
each country.
Which country
had the most
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war, most were training armies and building up their stores of ships and weapons. Some
historians argue that tension between the European powers was made worse by the build-
up of military forces. A more specific and important aspect of the arms race was the
colonies?
decision of the German government to dramatically increase the size of its navy. Britain
saw this as a major threat.
APPLY 6.1
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• The alliance system – Although the system of alliances was meant to maintain a ‘balance
1 Listwha tmos t of power’ and help to keep the peace, it backfired. The alliances, in fact, expanded the
historians regard war and turned a limited, local conflict into a wider European and world war.
as the causes of • Military plans – Prior to World War I, all major European powers had military plans
SA
World War I.
in place in case war broke out. These plans had strict timetables for what is known as
Which one
mobilisation (the process of preparing armed forces and resources and getting them
would you argue
contributed most in position to fight). These plans put pressure on the politicians and diplomats from all
to the outbreak countries during the July Crisis. None of them could afford to let another country get a
of the war? What head start in mobilising. The British historian AJP Taylor referred to this situation as ‘war
evidence supports by timetable’.
yourv iewpoint?
APPLY 6.2
1 Was Germany to blame for causing World War I? Make up your own mind by conducting
your own research and taking part in discussions in class and at home. Present your
evidence and arguments either through a class debate that puts Germany ‘on trial’, or
write a 150–200 word persuasive text arguing the case for Germany’s guilt or innocence.
REVIEW 6.3
1 What was the ‘July Crisis’ and how did it lead to the outbreak of World War I?
2 Explain the meaning of the term ‘balance of power’. How was it meant to prevent a war?
3 List the three members of the Triple Entente.
4 List the three members of the Triple Alliance.
5 What was the Schlieffen Plan and how did it bring Britain into the war?
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Australian recruitment
the war progressed, hatred of the enemy also became a motivation for enlistment. Propaganda poster from 1915 (AWM
stories (often exaggerated) of German atrocities were used in recruiting campaigns. ARTV00021)
I wasn’t eighteen. I was working on the lathe, next to another chap … I said to INTERPRET 6.2
him ‘why don’t you enlist?’ I said, ‘I’ll enlist if you do’. I went right up to Victoria 1 Read Sources 6.19–
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Barracks and enlisted. We left the factory and I had to get my father’s signature. 6.21 and identify
Well, I forged that. the different
Stan D’Altera, in A Thomson, Anzac Memories, Oxford University Press, p. 27
motivations and
attitudes of the
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Source6 .20
writers.
I couldn’t help myself. Mum was a widow and she needed me to help run the 2 Create a
farm. But I read what Andrew Fisher said and I went, ‘Fisher’s message to England conversation
was that Australia would stand behind her to the last man and the last shilling.’ between the
Unnamed soldier, in P Adam-Smith, The Anzacs,P enguin,p .1 7
unnamed soldier
in Source 6.20
Source6 .21
and his brother
I have joined the Australian Army it’s not bad money here, 5/- [5 shillings] a day who has been left
and clothes and food … nearly as good as cabinet making and not half as hard. to run the farm.
You may [think] it funny [my] turning up such a good job, but … this [employer] Your conversation
had only about three days work left for us … so I [thought] I would join the army. should include
three arguments
Corporal RE Antill in a letter to his parents, 1914, defencemagazine
‘for’ and ‘against’
enlisting in 1914.
REVIEW 6.4
1 Describe the attitude of most Australians to war before 1914. Why might they have held
this attitude?
2 How many men did Australia initially promise Britain before the end of 1914? How many
had actually enlisted by then?
3 Explain the techniques used by the government to encourage men to enlist.
6.1 WHAT WERE THE CAUSES, SCOPE AND NATURE OF WORLD WAR I? 277
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capable of firing up to 600 rounds of ammunition
per minute in short bursts. Facing one World War I
PL machine-gunner was similar to facing 250 soldiers
with rifles. Despite their increased fire power, these
new guns often overheated and were heavy and
difficult to move through the mud. Nonetheless,
they were devastating when used against oncoming
troops.
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Heavy artillery guns could fire large shells over
a long distance, usually projecting them through
the air in an arc in order to hit a target from above.
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used in aerial combats, known as dogfights. Huge airships
called zeppelins, named for their inventor Count Ferdinand
von Zeppelin, were used by the Germans in the first air raid
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over England in January 1915. Made of a cylindrical metal
frame covered with fabric and filled with gasbags, a zeppelin
was able to fly higher than conventional aircraft and drift
almost silently over its targets. The zeppelins’ ability to hit
their targets accurately was poor though, and they were also
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vulnerable to strong winds that could blow them off course.
Towards the end of the war, zeppelins were largely replaced by Source 6.25 German airmen attach a 100-kilogram
bomb to the underside of a Gotha bomber.
multi-engine bomber planes, such as the Gotha GV. Britain
responded with its equivalent, the Handley Page Type O
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bomber.
Communications
Advances in communication allowed faster contact between
commanding field officers behind the front line and soldiers
at the front line. The development of telephone and wireless
(radio) systems allowed instant front-line reports and quick
decisions. However, phone lines, which had to be laid in each
new location, were easily damaged by the artillery, and the
wireless radios were heavy and difficult to move. Despite the
increasing use of these new tecÚologies, soldiers still acted
as runners to relay information. Motorbike couriers, carrier
Source6 .26 Dogs were sometimes used to carry messages
pigeons and even dogs were used at times. to and from the front. This one brings news to a soldier in
thet renches.
REVIEW 6.5
1 Identify three ways in which World War I was different from preceding wars.
2 Did new developments in technology actually extend the war?
3 What were the advantages and disadvantages of new developments in communications?
6.1 WHAT WERE THE CAUSES, SCOPE AND NATURE OF WORLD WAR I? 279
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the initial movement of the German army, which marched through Belgium and deep into
France, the war on the Western Front became a stalemate. The stalemate was primarily due
to the fact that from 1914 to 1918, the weapons and tecÚology available to the armies in
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the form of artillery, machine guns and barbed wire gave the advantage to the defender.
(It was not until World War II that this changed.) On the Western Front, the consequence
of this was that the British and French could not drive the Germans out of France and the
Germans could not advance any further.
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LEGEND
Neutral states
Allies
Allied offensives, year
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14
Battle front
ATL A N TI C
FINLAND Major battle
OCEAN SWEDEN
NORWAY Central Powers
GREAT Petrograd Occupied by the
EA
NORTH 18
BRITAIN Central Powers
S
SEA
TIC
DENMARK 14
Central Powers
Moscow
BAL
Isonzo 1915 16
16 Russian Front
IA
PORTUGAL 18 Sarajevo
N
MONTENEGRO 15 ROMANIA
SE
16 BLACK SEA 16
SERBIA
A
16
SPAIN 15 16
Rome BULGARIA 15
18 15
ITALY
Source 6.27 The OTTOMAN PERSIA
countries involved in Gallipoli 1915 EMPIRE 15
GREECE
World War I and the 16
sites and years of major ALBANIA 18
ALGERIA 18
battles. The Allies (France) 17
included Britain, France, M E D I TE R R AN E AN SE A 15
Russia and their member 17 KUWAIT
countries. The Central Beersheba 1917
Powers were Germany, Suez Canal
0 500 1000 km
LIBYA
Austria-Hungary and (Italy) EGYPT ARABIA
their allies.
AMSTERDAM
GREAT
BRITAIN NORTH SEA NETHERLANDS
ROTTERDAM
r
ve
Do
Rhi
ne
Ostend
of Nieuport
Dunkirk
Calais BELGIUM Cologne
Ypres GERMANY
it
ra
Riv
Boulogne
er
Loos
Mons Koblenz
Douai
Arras Frankfurt
Vimy Ridge
Bapaume Mainz
Amiens Peronne
Mezieres LUXEMBOURG
Rouen Soissons
Reims
Se
ine Verdun
Marn
e St Mihiel
E
PARIS River Nancy Strasbourg
Riv
er FRANCE
LEGEND PL
Trenches line Epinal
Source 6.28 The Western Front in 1915,
Points of attack with gains
where German and Allied forces faced
German occupied
each other across a line of trenches
Belfort
0 50 100 km SWITZERLAND that stretched from the Belgian coast
to Switzerland.
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Source 6.29 British soldiers waiting
in a French trench on the Western
Front during World War I. Note the
camouÿ aged periscope at the centre
of the photograph.
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INTERPRET 6.3
1 Using the scale on Source 6.28,
work out approximately how
long the line of trenches was in
1915.
2 List the information you gain
about trenches from examining
Source 6.29.
REVIEW 6.6
1 Locate and name the three main ‘theatres of war’ in World War I on Source 6.27.
2 In which area did Australian troops þrst þght: Gallipoli or France?
3 What style of warfare is most closely identiþed with the Western Front?
4 Did available weapons and technology advantage the attacker or defender in World War I?
5 Where was the initial advance in World War I? Who was it by? Where did it stop?
6 Explain the meaning of the term ‘stalemate’.
6.1 WHAT WERE THE CAUSES, SCOPE AND NATURE OF WORLD WAR I? 281
ir
Ba
Territory gained Mai Tepe
ri
the narrow passage of water known as
Sa
Battleship
the Dardanelles and bombard the Turkish
capital of Constantinople (modern-day
Istanbul). It was hoped that this would force
Turkey out of the war and open the way for
0 10 km
Britain and France to move supplies, via the
Chanak
Kilid Bahr Plateau Black Sea, to the Russian army fighting the
Germans on the Eastern (Russian) Front
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AEGEAN SEA (see Source 6.27). Although the idea was a
good one, the planning for the campaign
was poor.
Cape Helles
Indian and ANZAC troops landed on the Gallipoli peninsula, while the French made a
diversionary landing at Kum Kale to distract the Turkish forces (see Source 6.30).
Source 6.31 A
photograph taken in
1916 of Mustafa Kemal
Ataturk
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Source6 .32 Anzac Cove following the landing of Australian and New Zealand troops on 25 April 1915
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Source6 .33
STRANGE BUT TRUE
Off at one this morning & about dawn we heard a terrific bombardment … our
battalion packed on three or four barges & a destroyer towed us towards the The þrst name
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shore as far as she could … then cast us adrift. That position was scarcely safe for suggested for the
combined corps (a
bullets were flying all round hitting the boat, but we had only one casualty. Some
grouping of two or
of us waded neck high to shore … The whole trouble was we had no artillery
more divisions) of
on land & the warships with their field guns could not reach the enemy’s guns Australian and New
… our losses from their shrapnel was severe … The country is brutal … besides Zealand forces was
being hilly & broken, the ground is covered with scrub from 4 to 6ft high & the Australasian
you cannot see an enemy if he does not wish it … One other trouble is that Army Corps, but this
the snipers [expert marksmen], seem to be numerous & deadly. One of the was rejected by New
consequences of this is that the losses in Officers is out of proportion to the men Zealand. ANZAC
(Australian and New
… Our battalion must have lost close on half its strength. We could not stand
Zealand Army Corps)
many days like this.
was eventually
An account of the þrst landing at Anzac Cove from adopted instead.
Acting Sergeant Adrian Wilmot Delamore of the Auckland Infantry Battalion
INTERPRET 6.4
1 List the elements mentioned in Source 6.33 that you can identify in Source 6.32.
2 After studying Source 6.32, describe the difþculties you think you would face trying to
transport weapons and supplies for the battle at Anzac Cove on 25 April 1915.
3 Use Source 6.33 to list the problems the original ANZACs faced when landing at Anzac Cove.
6.1 WHAT WERE THE CAUSES, SCOPE AND NATURE OF WORLD WAR I? 283
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place in Gallipoli. After the ANZAC troops landed in Anzac Cove in
May 1915, the Turks launched a major counter-offensive to drive
off the invaders. During this action, the now legendary Albert Jacka
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became the first Australian to receive a Victoria Cross during World
War I for single-handedly defending and holding the position
of a trench against enemy fire. The Victoria Cross is the highest
Commonwealth military award for acts of bravery in wartime.
In August 1915, the ANZACs launched two famous
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diversionary attacks. The Australians captured Lone Pine in
fighting so fierce that seven Victoria Crosses were awarded to
soldiers involved in the attack. At the Nek, a charge by Light
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Source6 .35
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which ever part of the skin where they operated. They lived and
bred mainly in the seams of the inner garments. The best control
means available was to wear the clothing inside out and then
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there were no seams next to the skin for the pest to hide away
in and breed. This I did with my flannel shirt, but I simply could
Source6 .36 Australian soldiers resting in a trench
not come at wearing my trousers inside out, even though many at Gallipoli.
of the other men did. It simply looked too awful.
STRANGE BUT TRUE
An extract from a letter that Lieutenant Frank Boyes wrote about conditions at Gallipoli
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To hide the fact
they were leaving,
INTERPRET 6.5 the ANZACs rigged
up riÿes to þre at
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1 Do you think that Source 6.35 is a reliable source of evidence for an investigation of living
random. They did
conditions at Gallipoli? Give reasons for your opinion.
this by attaching tins
2 What features can you identify in Source 6.36 that support the description provided in to the riÿe triggers
Source 6.35? with string. When the
3 What evidence is there in either source that the ANZACs weren’t really prepared for tins þlled with water,
conditions at Gallipoli? dripping from other
4 Using these two sources as evidence, describe conditions for the ANZACs at Gallipoli. tins strung up above,
5 Would you require any further information to make your description more complete? their weight pulled
the triggers down
and the riÿes þred.
Withdrawal
By December 1915, the decision was made to withdraw all ANZAC troops from the Gallipoli
Peninsula. For the Australian forces, the campaign had cost 8709 lives, with a further 19 000
wounded. Their enemy, the Turks, had been just as brave in the defence of their homeland,
with a total of around 80 000 Turks dying in the fighting at Anzac Cove and against British
troops at Cape Helles. The last Australians were evacuated on 19 and 20 December. Because
of its efficiency, their silent withdrawal is usually remembered as the most successful part of
the Gallipoli campaign.
6.1 WHAT WERE THE CAUSES, SCOPE AND NATURE OF WORLD WAR I? 285
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than it is to Australians and New Zealanders.
Those heroes that shed their blood and lost their lives … You are now lying in the
soil of a friendly country. Therefore rest in peace. There is no difference between
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the JoÚnies [the Australians] and the Mehmets [the Turks] to us where they lie
side by side now here in this country of ours … you, the mothers, who sent their
sons from faraway countries wipe away your tears; your sons are now lying in
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our bosom and are in peace. After having lost their lives on this land they have
become our sons as well.
A tribute, written by Mustafa Kemal Atatürk (the þrst president of Turkey) in 1934,
to the ANZACs killed at Gallipoli
INTERPRET 6.6
1 At whom is the tribute aimed?
2 How might the tribute be a comfort to Australians and New Zealanders who had lost
loved ones at Gallipoli?
3 What do you think the tribute says about Mustafa Kemal Atatürk as a person?
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the trenches. More frightening still was the
possibility that the artillery attack had failed
to destroy the enemy’s fortifications. As PL
attacking soldiers made their way across no
man’s land, the enemy could emerge from
deep bunkers to fire on them with machine
guns.
Generally, these types of attacks on
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enemy trenches failed to achieve their goals.
Confusion, smoke, noise and death quickly
turned complex military plans into chaos. If
attackers reached enemy lines, close combat
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6.1 WHAT WERE THE CAUSES, SCOPE AND NATURE OF WORLD WAR I? 287
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the course of the war, 2562 Australian nurses joined the AIF as members of the medical units.
Out of this number, 2139 served overseas in the Middle East and on the Western Front.
Twenty-five women lost their lives while serving overseas and 388 received military honours.
PL
Life in the trenches
STRANGE BUT TRUE Life in the trenches along the Western Front could vary, but for most soldiers conditions
were appalling. In most cases, trenches were two metres deep by two metres wide, and
The winter of 1916 during the winter months, rainfall turned low-lying trenches into mud pits. In some cases,
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was one of the the water reached waist height, leading to a condition called trench foot, which caused
harshest on the
soldiers’ feet to rot. During the summer months, rates, lice and flies infested the trenches.
Western Front. The
cold was so intense To avoid snipers (marksmen trained to ‘pick off’ enemy soldiers from concealed
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that water was locations), soldiers spent most of the daylight hours under the trench line – most attacks
carried to the troops took place at dusk or in the early morning when visibility was poor. Soldiers were often
as blocks of ice. bored during the day, and caught brief moments of sleep when they could.
Water that had been
boiled to drink would Life in the trenches was a
develop a crust of ice lice-infested, miserable existence.
after only a minute Often standing ankle-deep in mud
or two. and slime, soldiers suffered trench
foot and other illnesses.
Many soldiers
suffered greatly from
the trauma of battle,
and shell-shocked
troops were
Source6 .39 An artist’s frequently regarded
impression of life in
the trenches on the
as cowardly.
WesternF ront
Source6 .40
Source6 .42
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1918 shows members of a British Tunnelling
been blown to bits. Somebody got the tent up, and when I Company attached to the Australian Corps making
got to the delirious pneumonia patient, he was crouched a dugout in the slimy mud beneath an artillery
observation post near Messines, in Belgium.
on the ground at the back of the stretcher. He took no
PL
notice of me when I asked him to return to bed, so I
leaned across the stretcher and put one arm around and
tried to lift him in. I had my right arm under a leg, which
I thought was his, but when I lifted I found to my horror
that it was a loose leg with a boot and a puttee on it. It was
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one of the orderly’s legs which had been blown off and had
landed on the patient’s bed. The next day they found the
trunk about 20 yards away.
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INTERPRET 6.7
1 What makes Sources 6.40 and 6.42 reliable sources of evidence for a historian trying to
understand conditions in the trenches of the Western Front? What limitations are there
for a historian researching conditions across the entire Western Front?
2 Explain how Sources 6.41 and 6.43 help you understand the conditions in the trenches of
the Western Front.
REVIEW 6.8
1 Identify similarities between the Gallipoli campaign and the Western Front.
2 List the problems associated with living and working in the trenches of the Western
Front.
3 Describe the conditions Australian nurses on the Western Front could þnd themselves
workingu nder.
6.1 WHAT WERE THE CAUSES, SCOPE AND NATURE OF WORLD WAR I? 289
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7 Describe the conditions the ANZACs experienced during the campaign on the Gallipoli
peninsula. (10 marks)
8 Identify the reasons so many Victoria Crosses were awarded to Australians at Gallipoli.
(5 marks)
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» Explain the outcome of the Gallipoli campaign
9 Outline the outcome of the Gallipoli campaign for both Australia and Turkey. (10 marks)
10 ‘ Their silent withdrawal is usually remembered as the most successful part of the
Gallipoli campaign’. Discuss the accuracy of this statement, making reference to
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Australia’s involvement in the Gallipoli campaign. (15 marks)
» Investigate the signiþcant experiences of Australians in World War I
11 Describe the conditions Australians found themselves þghting in on the Western Front.
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RICH TASKS
Gallipoli – the power of þlm
The Australian þlm Gallipoli (1981) is described on the Australian War Memorial website as
a ‘powerful depiction of personal struggles and experience of Gallipoli in 1915.’ It credits
the þlm for bringing ‘this important national story to an international audience.’ It then goes
on to claim that ‘the climax of the movie occurs on the ANZAC battleþeld at Gallipoli and
depicts the futile attack at the Battle of the Nek on 7 August 1915.’
1 In groups, conduct research on the following topics:
a the life and career of Private Wilfred Harper of the 10th Light Horse
b the recruitment campaign in Australia in 1914–1915
c the landing at Gallipoli
d the Battle of the Nek
e the making of the þlm Gallipoli.
E
their actions during this battle. information about
these skills, refer
PL to ‘The historian’s
toolkit’.
CHECKPOINT
SA
6.1 WHAT WERE THE CAUSES, SCOPE AND NATURE OF WORLD WAR I? 291
E
Source 6.46). Many of these men were the fittest and most able of the male population.
Enlisted and served
overseas: 3 31 781 As a percentage of total troops sent to war, Australia’s losses were the highest of any of the
Commonwealth nations (see Source 6.47). A summary of the numbers of those who served
PL
Dead: 6 1 720
and of the numbers of deaths and other casualties makes it clear that Australia made a
Wounded: 1 55 000 major sacrifice for the Allied war effort.
(all services)
Prisoners of war: 4044 Source6 .47 A comparison of British Commonwealth casualties, World War I
(397 died while captive)
Country Total soldiers sent to Total casualties % of casualities
M
Source:A ustralianW ar war (captured, missing,
Memorialw ebsite wounded or killed)
Statisticsf rom Australian Campaigns in the Great War, Lt. The Hon. Staniforth Smith
E
Anti-British sentiment among the Irish Catholic community: There was strong anti-British feeling among
the Irish Catholic community in Australia. The þrst referendum was held not long after the Easter Rebellion
in Ireland, when Irish nationalists staged an armed uprising as part of their long campaign for independence
from Britain. PL
The Labor Party split over the issue: Some elements of the party agreed with Hughes. Others, of Irish Source6 .50 Part of the
background and with strong links to the trade union movement, opposed conscription. Many trade unionists ballot paper leading to
opposed conscription because they feared that if even more able-bodied Australians were taken into the 1916 conscription
referendum
the army, then the country would have to rely on non-union labour at lower wages. This suspicion was
strengthened by the arrival of a party of immigrants from Malta in 1916.
Perception of unfair burden: Many working-class Australians felt that they had contributed the most in STRANGE BUT TRUE
M
terms of enlisting soldiers, and that they were also being exploited at home, as wages fell and the cost of
living rose. There was a perception that middle and upper-class people were less affected by the war. Some Billy Hughes was
were even seen to be proþting from lucrative government war contracts. hit by an egg while
Impact on supply of workers: Some farmers and other employers with skilled workers opposed conscription speaking to a noisy
crowd in Warwick,
SA
E
factory work in significant numbers. They did, however, move out of their traditional roles,
taking up jobs in banks and offices that had previously been male occupations. By the end of
PL
the war, the percentage of women working outside the home had risen by 13 per cent.
When the war was over, there was an expectation that women who had moved into
traditional male roles would go back to the home, making way for returned soldiers. Most
women were willing to do this. However, there were roles such as secretaries, typists and
telephonists that continued to be regarded as women’s work.
M
Source 6.51 An Wartime propaganda
advertisement for
Aspro that appeared Wartime propaganda was aimed at encouraging people to support the war effort by enlisting
during World War I
to serve or by working on the home front. Another key objective of propaganda was to
SA
generate negative feelings and emotions towards the enemy, which in Australia meant
STRANGE BUT TRUE fuelling anti-German sentiments in the general public. During World War I, Germans and
Turks were demonised in the Australian press, in posters and in day-to-day life. Even soldiers
Before the war, a with German names who enlisted in the Australian army sometimes faced hostility and
processed meat suspicion, and many German–Australians changed their names to more English-sounding
commonly known ones to avoid discrimination. Anti-German sentiment also led many towns across Australia
as German sausage
with German-sounding names to change their names to more English-sounding ones. For
was popular. In South
example, in New South Wales, Germantown was renamed Holbrook, and Mount Bismarck
Australia it was
known as ‘Fritz’, but was renamed Mount Kitchener after Lord Kitchener (the British Field Marshal).
during the war its
name was changed
APPLY 6.5
to the more English-
sounding ‘Devon’. 1 Use your research skills to locate a further example of Australian propaganda from World
War I.
a Analyse it by identifying its origin, purpose, audience and techniques.
b What techniques are used in order to achieve its goal?
c How effective do you think it would have been at achieving this goal?
E
Source 6.52 A pro-conscription poster from 1917 encouraging Australians to enlist Source6 .53 An anti-conscription
cartoon printed in 1917 produced
PL by the No Conscription Council
Campaign Committee
INTERPRET 6.8
1 Identify the perspectives on the conscription debate being promoted by both of these
sources.
M
2 Select one of these sources and outline the argument it is presenting and the types of
techniques it is using to promote its point of view and achieve its aim.
3 Explain which source you think would have been the most effective at achieving its aim.
What features or elements do you think would have made it more effective than the other
SA
source?
E
his AIF uniform. Grant At 11 a.m. on 11 November 1918, fighting stopped on the Western Front, and World War I
fought on the Western
Front during the war. officially ended with the signing of the Armistice (an agreement between opposing forces to
He was rejected when
cease fighting and pursue a course of peace).
he þrst tried to enlist in
1916, then was accepted
in 1917. Grant became
a prisoner of war after
capture at Bullecourt,
PL
The following year, the Paris Peace Conference was held at the Palace of Versailles, just
outside Paris. The Conference brought together the leaders of the Allies to set the terms of
peace for the defeated Central Powers. Representatives of the German government signed a
France, and returned to
Australiai n1 919. treaty – known as the Treaty of Versailles – in which Germany admitted fault for causing
the war and agreed to pay reparations (money and goods to compensate for damage and
M
loss of lives during the war). As part of the terms of the Treaty, Germany also lost some of
its territories and was forced to limit the size of its army.
There were two key results of the Treaty of Versailles for Australia. Australia had
independent representation at the conference, separate from Britain, and was granted a
SA
mandate over New Guinea by the League of Nations – an organisation that was formed
at the Paris Peace Conference with representatives from many world powers. The League’s
primary mission was to maintain world peace and prevent future wars. The Australian Prime
Minister Billy Hughes insisted on Australian control over New Guinea because he didn’t want
it to be granted to Japan, who had been a favoured candidate for the role. As it turned out,
New Guinea proved to be vital for Australian security during the Pacific part of World War II.
REVIEW 6.9
1 How many Australians lost their lives þghting in World War I?
2 Outline some of the ways in which the Commonwealth government expanded its powers
during World War I.
3 What was the result of the two conscription referendums held in 1916 and 1917?
4 Explain why some Australian companies were able to expand during World War I.
5 To what extent did the number of Australian women working outside the home increase
during World War I?
6 Explain what Trial Bay Gaol, Berrima Gaol and Holsworthy Army Barracks had in
common during World War I.
7 What were the key results for Australia from the Treaty of Versailles and Paris Peace
Conference?
E
7 What type of people were considered ‘enemy aliens’ in Australia during World War I? » Empathetic
Explain what happened to them. (5 marks) understanding
8 Explain the role of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders in World War I. Discuss
PL » Research
whether the war changed attitudes towards (and treatment of) Indigenous Australians. » Explanation and
(5 marks) communication.
TOTAL MARKS [ /50]
For more information
about these skills,
RICH TASKS refer to ‘The historian’s
M
The conscription debate toolkit’.
1 Divide the class into two groups. One will represent the pro-conscription group, the
CHECKPOINT
other the anti-conscription group.
SA
2 Each group is responsible for designing a campaign to support their point of view. The
campaign should include speeches, posters and newspaper articles based on historical
research. Roles should be allocated to enable a strong case to be established. Both
sides should have an equal opportunity to make their case.
3 A vote should be held within the class, with ballot papers based on Source 6.50.
4 As a class, discuss the results of your vote.
The ‘other soldiers’
This activity explores the role of women and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders during
World War I.
1 As a class, discuss how much you know about the role of women and Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islanders during World War I.
2 Make a decision about whether you wish to conduct research on a woman or an
Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander in World War I. Use an appropriate search engine to
start your research of either ‘Australian women in World War I’ or ‘Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islanders in World War I’. Try to þnd a speciþc woman or Aboriginal or Torres
Strait Islander to research. Create a folio of information using as many different sources
as you can þnd, that outlines this individual’s wartime experiences, as well as their life
after the war, if appropriate.
3 As a class, discuss your þndings, and then answer question 1 again.
E
that time, and in the decades following, many historians and commentators blamed the
actions of the allied ‘peacemakers’ at the end of World War I for what was to come. In
particular, the strict terms of the Treaty of Versailles with which Germany was required to
PL
comply are seen by many as the main cause of World War II. In reality, the causes of World
War II were more complex than that, with many short- and long-term factors contributing
to the outbreak of conflict in 1939.
‘War guilt clause’ blamed Germany for starting World War I. Germany forced to pay massive reparations. An STRANGE BUT TRUE
initial amount of over US$33 billion was set by a Reparations Commission in 1921.
The German army was limited to 100 000 men, the German air force was disbanded, and the production of
Germany’s World
weapons and munitions in German factories was strictly controlled. War I debts, as set
out in the Treaty
Territories controlled by Germany were given to the neighbouring nations of France, Denmark, Belgium,
Poland, as well as the newly formed country of Czechoslovakia. Italy was also given two small areas (see
of Versailles, were
Source 6.61). þnally cleared in
2010, with þnal
German colonies in Africa and across the Paciþc were divided between the Allies, including Australia which
claimed German New Guinea and Nauru.
payments made
by the German
Japan was permitted to keep Chinese territory it had seized from Germany. Japan also wanted to include a government, in
‘racial equality’ clause to ensure its equality with the other powers but was unsuccessful.
October of that year –
The League of Nations was established with the aim of preventing another war by settling disputes between 92 years after World
nations using sanctions. War I.
E
money Germany was required to pay in reparations to the Allies caused serious economic
difficulties for the German government and people. During the 1920s, inflation rose During his time as
at a staggering rate, unemployment rates soared and the German standard of living fell
PL a German army
dramatically. Across Europe, political movements such as fascism and communism were message runner on
the Western Front,
becoming more and more popular because they offered people the hope of a way out of
Hitler’s superiors
these troubled times.
thought he lacked
Out of this social and economic climate Adolf Hitler came to power. In July 1921, leadership skills,
Hitler became the chairman of the Nationalist Socialist German Workers’ Party so he was never
M
(Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei) – a political party that was established in 1920 promoted beyond the
with extreme views and fought against the rise of communism in Germany. (The term rank of corporal (a
‘Nazi’ is the abbreviation of the word Nationalsozialistische.) Hitler was a very talented and low-ranking ofþcer).
SA
6.3 WHAT WERE THE CAUSES, SCOPE AND NATURE OF WORLD WAR II? 299
E
groups. These included the private army of the Nazi Party, known as stormtroopers or
Brownshirts who were gaining popularity (see Source 6.58). At the 1932 elections, the Nazi
Party became the largest single party in the Reichstag (German legislative assembly), and in
PL
1933, Hitler was sworn in as Chancellor of Germany. After the death of Germany’s President
Hindenburg in 1934, Hitler combined the role of Chancellor and President, making himself
Führer (supreme leader) of Germany.
During the years of Nazi rule in Germany (a period commonly referred to as the Third
Reich), there was little or no personal freedom. People were encouraged to report on friends,
M
neighbours and even family members suspected of disloyalty to the regime. Propaganda was
used to convince citizens of the beliefs of the regime and to silence critics. Punishments were
severe and often involved torture and internment in concentration camps. Jews were the
SA
primary targets of Nazi persecution. Writers, artists, playwrights, university professors and
others traditionally associated with free thinking were also targets of Nazi persecution.
E
PL
M
Source6 .59 A 1932 Nazi Party poster, Germany Awake! It features Source6 .60 A 1934 Nazi Party poster, Yes! Fuhrer we follow you!
SA
the swastika and the eagle, both symbols of the Third Reich.
INTERPRET 6.9
1 What is your reaction to the two posters presented here? Can you isolate some of the
reasons why you may have reacted to them in this way? What are the origins of your
views?
2 Identify the dominant symbols used in Sources 6.59 and 6.60. What message are they
trying to convey?
3 Conduct some to locate an image of the current German coat of arms. Which of the
symbols presented here has been retained to represent the modern nation of Germany?
4 Source 6.59 was released in 1932, and Source 6.60 in 1934. What had changed in
Germany over those two years? Is this change obvious when you compare both sources?
Under Hitler’s command, the Nazi government violated the terms of the Treaty of
Versailles. Germany built up its army, created a modern air force and built new modern
warships and submarines. Between 1936 and 1939, German troops also recaptured
territories lost in World War I. They even added new territories by threatening to go to war
(see Source 6.62).
6.3 WHAT WERE THE CAUSES, SCOPE AND NATURE OF WORLD WAR II? 301
Finland
Norway
Estonia
Sweden
Latvia
Irish Free State Great Denmark Lithuania
Britain
East
Prussia USSR
Netherlands
N
Belgium Germany Poland
Czech
oslov
France akia
0 600 km
E
Switzerland Austria
Hungary
Romania
Portugal PL Italy
Yugoslavia
Spain Bulgaria
Albania
Greece Turkey
M
Disputed areas
Africa
SWEDEN
DENMARK Baltic
Sea
Danzig
GERMANY
North
Sea Polish corridor
NETHERLANDS Warsaw
Berlin
N Y
Amsterdam
POLAND
A SUDETENLAND
M
Rhi
Brussels
ne
BELGIUM
Riv
Prague CZ
er
EC
G
FRANCE BOHEMIA HO
MORAVIA SLO
VAK I A
Riv
Germany 1933 er SLOVAKIA
be
nu
Da
Bratislava
Rhineland BAVARIA
remilitarised 1936 Munich Vienna
Budapest
Annexed 1938
AUSTRIA
HUNGARY
Annexed 1939
Bern
SWITZERLAND 0 150 300
ITALY YUGOSLAVIA kilometres
E
weakened from the outset, after the world’s strongest democracy, the United States,
refused to become a member.
PL
• The aggression of Germany and Japan – The aggression of these powers against
neighbouring countries began in the 1930s and went unchecked. The lack of action on
the part of Britain, France and the United States only encouraged Germany and Japan to
continue on this course.
• The policy of appeasement – The policy of inaction towards Hitler adopted by the British
M
and French assumed that the aggressive attitude of the dictator would pass if his initial
demands were met. This was also the policy adopted in the face of Japanese aggression in
Asia, when Japan invaded China in the 1930s.
SA
EXTEND 6.9
1 Conduct research on the causes of World War II, investigating the signiþcance of:
• German resentment over the terms of the Treaty of Versailles
• theG reatD epression inE urope and Japan
• the failures and successes of the League of Nations
• Germany’s andJ apan’sm ilitary aggression
• thep olicyofa ppeasement.
Each point should be supported with speciþc examples from your research.
2 Rankt he þve causes listed above from most important to least important. Explain your
rankings and support your decisions with speciþc examples.
REVIEW 6.10
1 Explain why the German people resented the Treaty of Versailles.
2 Identify the party and leader who came to power in Germany in the 1930s.
3 Outline the reasons why Britain and France tried to appease Hitler in the early 1930s.
4 Which event triggered the outbreak of World War II?
6.3 WHAT WERE THE CAUSES, SCOPE AND NATURE OF WORLD WAR II? 303
E
Source 6.63 shows the countries and other territories controlled by Germany and its allies in
Europe and North Africa at the height of its power in 1942. Source 6.64 outlines the major
events, battles and campaigns during the course of the war in Europe.
PL LEGEND
Axis power
Country collaborating
with Axis power
M
0 500 1000 km Conquered territory
AT LAN T I C Neutral country
FINLAND
OCEAN SWEDEN Allied power
NORWAY
SA
NORTH
SE A
SEA
TIC
DENMARK RUSSIA
IRELAND
B AL
BRITAIN
NETHERLANDS Hamburg
London Kursk
Normandy Beaches Berlin
BELGIUM Stalingrad
Dresden
LUXEMBOURG UKRAINE
GREATER
OCCUPIED FRANCE GERMANY
C A SE A
SP
SWITZERLAND
HUNGARY
IAN
PORTUGAL ROMANIA
SERBIA BLACK SEA
SPAIN CORSICA MONTENEGRO BULGARIA
ITALY ALBANIA IRAN
SARDINIA TURKEY
Spanish Morocco
GREECE
Source 6.63 The extent of territories controlled by Axis and Allied forces, at the height of Axis power in mid-1942
September 1939– British warships and German U-boats þght for control of Atlantic Ocean routes. Both sides
May 1945 attempt to prevent enemy merchant ships with war supplies from reaching their destinations.
September 1939– There are no major land battles in the seven months after the declaration of war in 1939, a period
April 1940 known as the ‘Phoney War’.
June 1940 Italy enters the war on Germany’s side and captures territories in south-eastern France.
June 1940– Italian forces attack and take control of British territories in Africa until counter-attacks allow
November 1941 Allied forces to regain control.
May–June 1940 Germany attacks and invades Denmark and Norway, the Low Countries (Belgium, the
Netherlands and Luxembourg), and France. In their invasion of France, the Germans’ Blitzkrieg
tactics forced France and its allies to evacuate troops from Dunkirk.
July 1940–May 1941 After invading France, Germany turns its attention to defeating Britain. Their plan is for the
Luftwaffe (German air force) to destroy British planes and air þelds, ahead of the German navy’s
invasion ÿeet. Instead, they face stiff resistance from the British and are forced to change tactics.
The Germans start a bombing campaign, known as the Blitz. London and Britain’s industrial
cities suffer heavy and continuous bombing over nine months. By mid-1941, Germany focuses on
their invasion of Russia, and the threat to Britain has passed.
September 1940– Italy attempts to invade Egypt from its territories in neighbouring Libya. Allied troops, including
January 1941 Australians, vastly outnumber the Italians who are forced to withdraw back to Libya. The Allies also
capture the Libyan port of Tobruk. Soldiers under the German General Rommel in turn force the
E
Allies to retreat, but the Allies hold on to Tobruk.
October 1940– Italian troops attempt to invade Greece but retreat from Greek and Allied defenders. Hitler
May 1941 orders ground and air assaults which succeed in forcing Allied troops, including Australians, to
June–July 1941
withdraw.
PL
Allied forces, including Australian troops, successfully invade Syria and Lebanon. These
territories had been controlled by the pro-German Vichy French government and had been used
by the Germans as a base in the eastern Mediterranean.
April 1941– Rommel lays siege to Tobruk, to take back control of this strategically important port. Allied
June 1942 soldiers, including Australians, known as the ‘Rats of Tobruk’ hold on until November, when
M
reinforcements arrive. Rommel eventually recaptures Tobruk in a counter-attack in June 1942.
June 1941 Hitler turns his attention to the Soviet Union and launches a massive attack known as Operation
Barbarossa. Germany is now involved in a war on two fronts, on the western and the eastern
fronts.
Hitler asks for a plan to complete the ‘Final Solution’ – the destruction of the Jewish population
SA
1942–1945 The Allies carry out major bombing campaigns on German air þelds and industrial cities,
including civilian populations in Hamburg, 1943, and Dresden, 1945 (see Source 6.66). They target
Berlin in February 1945.
August 1942– German forces advance into the Soviet Union, but Soviet troops succeed in their defence of
February 1943 Stalingrad. The German surrender at the Battle of Stalingrad marks the start of German retreat
from the east, although Nazi forces still occupy a great area of the USSR (see Source 6.69).
July 1942 Allied and German forces þght each other to a standstill in the First Battle of El Alamein. Despite
heavy losses, the Allies succeed in halting Germany’s advance into Egypt and threatened control
of the Suez Canal.
October– The Second Battle of El Alamein ends in a decisive Allied victory. Rommel’s army retreats and
November 1942 eventually withdraws from North Africa.
July–August 1943 The Battle of Kursk, a great tank battle between German and Soviet troops, ends in German
defeat.
June–August 1944 The Allied invasion of western Europe begins on 6 June 1944, known as ‘D-Day’, with the
landing of 160 000 Allied troops on the beaches of Normandy, northern France. Allied forces and
resistance þghters attack the Germans and force them to retreat. France is liberated from their
German invaders in August 1944.
September 1944 Allied ground troops invade Germany from the west.
April–May 1945 Soviet troops encircle Berlin and launch a þnal assault. They seize Berlin after a week of street
þghting. Hitler commits suicide on 30 April 1945, and Germany ofþcially surrenders on 7 May
1945.
6.3 WHAT WERE THE CAUSES, SCOPE AND NATURE OF WORLD WAR II? 305
E
groups. Conduct
research on the
controversy over PL
the bombing of Source6 .65 German bombers during the Battle of Britain, 1940
Dresden and, as
a class, discuss
the Allies’ APPLY 6.7
motives and the
1 Explore Bomb Sight, a website with an interactive map showing locations across London
impact of the
M
where bombs fell during the Blitz. Find statistics for different areas, read the recollections
bombing.
of Londoners and view images from the Imperial War Museum. Use these sources of
evidence to write a 300-word report or diary entry from the perspective of a person living
in London during that period of history.
SA
Source 6.66 The city of Dresden, in Source 6.67 Soldiers of the 11th Battery of Australian artillery in the Palestine Hills,
ruins after the Allied bombing February 1941
PL
M
SA
APPLY 6.8
1 Describe the types of warfare, and the different conditions soldiers faced in the European
and North African theatres of war. Reference different sources of evidence in your
response, such as the images in this unit and other relevant material from the text and
your own research.
2 Ona b lankma p of thew orld, indicate the locations and dates of battles or campaigns
involving Australian forces in Europe and North Africa. Use the information in the text and
your own research to complete this activity.
3 Choose one of the battles or campaigns outlined in Source 6.64. Investigate and report
on your selected event in detail, including maps and relevant written and photographic
sourcest hatd escribe:
• then atureo ft hew arfare
• the course and result of the battle or campaign, including key individuals and events
• whyt heb attleo r campaign was a signiþcant event.
6.3 WHAT WERE THE CAUSES, SCOPE AND NATURE OF WORLD WAR II? 307
Alaska
Soviet Union (USA)
Paramushir
Mongolia
Manchuria
JAPAN
KOREA
Tokyo
Nagasaki
CHINA Nanking
Hiroshima
Midway
HONG KONG Iwo Jima
Okinawa
E
Honolulu
BURMA Pearl Harbor
Hainan
Mariana Islands Hawaii
SIAM FRENCH PL
INDO-CHINA Guam
PHILIPPINES PACIFIC
Marshall Islands
Truk (Chuuk) OCEAN
MALAYA Sandakan
Singapore Gilbert Islands
DUTCH EAST INDIES Rabaul
M
Kokoda SOLOMON ISLANDS
Port Moresby
Darwin Guadalcanal
Milne Bay Espirito Santo
INDIAN Fiji
SA
CORAL
OCEAN SEA NOUMEA
AUSTRALIA
Brisbane
LEGEND
Source 6.70 The
extent of territories Japanese occupied land Allies
controlled by the
Japanese Empire in
Asia and the Paciþc in Japanese extent July 1942 0 1000 2000 km
1942
APPLY 6.9
The Paciþc War represented a direct threat to Australia. In a major research presentation:
1 Create a timeline of the war in the Paciþc. Highlight the entries where Australians were
involved.
2 Locate the areas of Australian involvement on a map.
3 Select one of the battles involving Australia, and research it in depth, explaining:
a what was at stake
b Australia’s involvement
c the involvement of other nations
d the outcome
e the signiþcance of the outcome.
December 1941 The Japanese attack the US naval base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, on 7 December 1941,
hoping to destroy the USA’s Paciþc ÿeet. The USA declares war on Japan and Germany
declares war on the USA, drawing it into the European war. Australia also declares war
on Japan. Soon after the attack on Pearl Harbor, Japan also begins attacks on the Malay
peninsula and invades Hong Kong, the Philippines, Guam and other islands in the Paciþc.
February 1942 The Fall of Singapore to the Japanese follows battles in Malaya (now Malaysia) between
the Japanese army and Allied forces. The vast majority of Allied soldiers cannot escape
the island and are taken prisoner, including thousands of Australian soldiers. One third of
Source6 .72 Australian
them do not survive the Japanese prisoner of war (POW) camps.
soldiers on the Kokoda
February 1942– Japanese air raids target Darwin and towns in the Northern Territory, Queensland and Traili n1 942
November 1943 Western Australia. In May 1942, Japanese midget submarines carry out an attack in
Sydney Harbour before being sunk.
March 1942 Japanese forces establish bases on mainland New Guinea, with plans to advance to Port
Moresby – a location from which bombing raids could be launched against northern
Australia. By this time, Japanese forces have also defeated Allied forces and occupied the
Dutch East Indies (Indonesia).
May 1942 The Battle of the Coral Sea is fought off the north-east coast of Queensland and south
of New Guinea. The US and Australian navies prevail, which stops the Japanese from
launching a sea-based assault on Port Moresby.
June 1942 In the Battle of Midway, Japanese naval forces attempt to capture the strategically
E
important Midway Islands (near the Hawaiian islands). US code-breakers intercept Source6 .73 The bombing of
Darwin in February 1942
Japanese communications of an ambush, which leads to a historic victory by the US navy
in which four Japanese aircraft carriers and over 200 aircraft are destroyed. It is said to
be a turning point in the Paciþc war.
PL
July– As the Japanese navy was halted at the Battle of the Coral Sea, Japan’s only option to
November 1942 seize Port Moresby is an overland assault along the Kokoda Trail. Australian troops stall
their advance until reinforcements arrive.
August– Members of the AIF and CMF (Citizen Military Forces) hold off a Japanese attack at the
September Battle of Milne Bay, New Guinea. It is the þrst decisive defeat of Japan in the Paciþc war,
M
1942 and the Australians are the þrst army to halt Japan’s relentless drive through the Paciþc.
August 1942– The US and Allied forces, including support from the Royal Australian Navy, launch Source6 .74 US Torpedo
February 1943 a surprise attack on the Japanese in the Solomon Islands, including the island of Squadron 6 preparing to
Guadalcanal. Both sides suffer severe casualties in the land, sea and air battles, but launch an attack against
eventually Japan is forced to withdraw from the islands. four Japanese carriers on
SA
August 1945 US planes drop atomic bombs on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki with
devastating effect. The Japanese Emperor Hirohito broadcasts his surrender speech on
Japanese radio on 15 August 1945.
REVIEW 6.11
1 Identify the two main geographic regions where World War II was fought.
2 List the regions mentioned in the text in which Australian troops fought during World
War II.
3 Why was the Battle for Singapore important for Australia?
4 Explain why the Battle of Midway and the Battle of the Coral Sea were signiþ cant for
Australia. Source6 .75 The mushroom
5 What was the strategy of seizing key Japanese-held islands in the Paciþc called? cloud over Hiroshima on
6A ugust1 945
6 What singlee vent put ane nd to World War II?
6.3 WHAT WERE THE CAUSES, SCOPE AND NATURE OF WORLD WAR II? 309
E
were constructed to keep their soldiers safe, deep underground. Unlike the trenches of World
War I, huge artillery posts and hundreds of machine guns would stand behind bulletproof
metal plates, lines of barbed wire and tank traps – all designed to keep French troops safe.
PL
The only problem was that the German generals also saw the effectiveness of the
Maginot Line. When they invaded France, German forces came through the Ardennes, a
thickly forested region in Belgium to the north of the Maginot Line – effectively bypassing
it. The French had failed to realise that weapons in 1939 were no longer the same as they
had been in 1914–1918 during World War I. Aircraft and tanks by that time were faster and
M
more powerful, with much longer ranges. Regardless of how strong reinforcements along
the Maginot Line were, there would be no repeat of the World War I stalemate because the
weapons available in World War II now favoured the attacker.
SA
E
PL
Panzers (German tanks) were used as the
majo
ma jjor st
strike
ik force on thhe grrou o nd.
d LLatetr
te
M
moode
dels
ls wer
e e eq
e ui
u pped
ppped witth a 755mm gun un,, Motorised vehicles, including trucks,
maki
ma king
ki n theem poowe
ng werfrfr ul
u bat
a tlt e ta
t nks.
nkks.
s armoured personnel carriers and
motorcycles, moved infantry into
battle zones.
SA
REVIEW 6.12
1 Explain why the Maginot Line was not an effective defence for France in World War II.
2 What does Blitzkrieg mean? Which countries were the victims of German Blitzkrieg tactics
in 1939 and 1940?
3 Explain why code breaking was signiþcant:
a duringW orldW ar II
b afterW orldW arI I.
6.3 WHAT WERE THE CAUSES, SCOPE AND NATURE OF WORLD WAR II? 311
E
to a series of
Anti-Semitism (hostility or prejudice against Jews) has its origins in the ancient world,
attacks directed
and was widespread throughout Europe in the Middle Ages. At least a decade before he
against Jewish
people and became Chancellor of Germany, Hitler had outlined the development of his anti-Semitic
PL
businesses ideology, and even proposed some of his policies for dealing with ‘the Jewish problem’ in
in Germany his manifesto (a book declaring political principles and policies) titled Mein Kampf (‘My
and Austria Struggle’).
in November As well as violence against Jews, the government denied all Jews German citizenship and
1938. Conduct
sought to remove them from all positions in the government, the universities and the army.
M
research on
Businesses owned by Jews were given to non-Jewish Germans and laws limited the number
the events of
Kristallnacht of Jewish students allowed in public schools.
and discuss Soon after the invasion of Poland in 1939, ghettos were set up in Nazi-occupied cities
SA
the German in Poland, Hungary and the Soviet Union. These ghettos were bricked off or encircled with
government’s barbed wire to stop people from escaping. Over the course of the war, many Jewish people
involvement in were rounded up and forced to leave their homes and move into these ghettos. Conditions
and response to
inside the ghettos were extremely brutal. Approximately 800 000 people died in the ghettos
these incidents.
from malnutrition, disease and forced labour. Others were murdered outright in shootings.
Concentration camps
For a large part of World War II, the Nazi government used a network of concentration
camps to contain Jews and other ‘undesirables’. The exact number of concentration camps
is not known. However, it is generally accepted that there were between 2000 and 8000
camps. Some were forced labour camps, where inmates were forced to do hard physical
labour, such as mining and road building. Others functioned as extermination camps where,
after a period of time, prisoners were murdered.
Source 6.78 The Nazis
used badges to identify One of the largest concentration camps was Auschwitz–Birkenau. It was both a labour
different types of and an extermination camp. Here, inmates considered unsuitable for forced labour were
prisoners. These red
triangle badges from gassed and their bodies were burnt in giant ovens known as crematoria (see Source 6.83).
Auschwitz–Birkenau Over the course of World War II, more than one million Jews were murdered at Auschwitz–
were used to identify
political prisoners. Birkenau camp alone.
E
PL
Source6 .79 Nazi soldiers clearing the Warsaw ghetto after an uprising in 1943
INTERPRET 6.10
M
1 Outline the way these sources could be used as evidence to support an argument that
the Nazis persecuted people.
2 Why do you think Nazi’s forced Jews to wear Star of David badges? What effect do you
think this would have had on Jews as well as on non-Jews who saw the badges?
SA
There is a considerable amount of evidence about the treatment of Jews during the Holocaust.
The Nazis took many photographs in the ghettos, and at concentration and extermination
camps. When the camps were liberated by the Allies in May 1945, many more photographs
were taken and eye-witness accounts were recorded by soldiers who were shocked at what
they found. Many Holocaust survivors later recorded their experiences and feelings.
Source6 .81
When people came to gas chamber, they had a soldier going around and said,
‘Women here, men here. Undress. Take shower.’ They told them, ‘You’re going to
a camp. Going to work. Tie shoes together. And make sure your children tie their
shoes together. Because when you come out, you don’t so much spend time look
for your shoes and your clothes.’ All a lie. They were not thinking about it that
they will be dead in another fifteen minutes.
Holocaust survivor Sigmund Boraks, in an interview in 2000
6.3 WHAT WERE THE CAUSES, SCOPE AND NATURE OF WORLD WAR II? 313
E
averaged a weight of 75 kilograms each before
entering camp (11 months before this photo was
taken). The average weight by then had dropped
to3 1k ilograms. PL
INTERPRET 6.11
1 Sources are used to provide evidence to support historical arguments. Explain the extent
to which each of these sources could be used to support the argument that the Nazis
engaged in the systematic mistreatment and murder of Jews in concentration camps
M
during World War II.
2 A small but vocal group of people around the world today continue to deny the existence of
the Holocaust. Use evidence from the sources provided to compose a letter to one or more
of these Holocaust deniers, explaining why their views are historically inaccurate and
SA
REVIEW 6.13
1 Deþne the word ‘anti-Semitism’.
2 Iny ouro wn words, deþne ‘genocide’.
3 Whatw as the Holocaust?
4 Name some of the groups who were victims of the Holocaust.
5 Explain what concentration camps were and why they were set up during World War II.
An ultimatum to Japan
After the end of the war in Europe, the Allies turned their attention to forcing Japan’s
E
surrender in the Pacific. At the Potsdam Conference in July 1945 – a meeting held in
the German city of Potsdam to negotiate terms for the end of World War II – the Allied
leaders issued the Potsdam Declaration – an ultimatum threatening that if Japan did not
PL
unconditionally surrender it would face ‘prompt and utter destruction’.
In addition to the ultimatum outlined in the Potsdam Declaration, US troops had been
planning an offensive codenamed ‘Operation Downfall’ towards the end of the war. The
offensive outlined the US Army’s plan to recapture Pacific islands that had been taken by
the Japanese, then push back towards Japanese home islands (the islands the Allies had
M
decided would remain as Japanese territory after the war). The battles for the islands of
Iwo Jima and Okinawa were particularly fierce. The Battle of Okinawa was the bloodiest
battle in the Pacific, with 50 000 American soldiers injured and 12 000 killed. An estimated
SA
95 000 Japanese soldiers were killed, including many who committed suicide rather than
surrendering. Estimates of the number of civilians killed vary from 42 000 to 150 000.
The USA also carried out a major firebombing campaign of Japanese cities in late 1944,
which devastated 67 cities and killed as many as 500 000 Japanese civilians. Firebombing
was a tecÚique introduced during World War II that involved dropping large quantities of
small bombs specifically designed to start fires on the ground. Despite this, Japan rejected
the terms of the Potsdam Declaration and the Japanese military refused to surrender. US
President Truman authorised the atomic bombing of Hiroshima on 6 August 1945, and
Nagasaki on 9 August 1945. Truman stated that his hope was that these bombings would
ultimately save lives on both sides.
6.3 WHAT WERE THE CAUSES, SCOPE AND NATURE OF WORLD WAR II? 315
E
Source6 .84
Of more than 200 doctors in Hiroshima before the attack, over 90 per cent
PL
were casualties and only about 30 physicians were able to perform their normal
duties a month after the raid. Out of 1780 nurses, 1654 were killed or injured …
[Hospitals] within 3000 feet of ground zero were totally destroyed … Effective
medical help had to be sent in from the outside, and arrived only after a
considerable delay. Firefighting and rescue units were equally stripped of men and
M
equipment … 30 hours elapsed before any organized rescue parties were observed
Extractf rom US Strategic Bombing Survey: The Effects of the Atomic Bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki
SA
Source6 .85 A severely burned teenage Hiroshima atomic bomb victim lays wounded
INTERPRET 6.12
SA
1 Outline the way Sources 6.85 and 6.86 support or contradict the information contained in
Source 6.84.
2 Explain how Sources 6.85 and 6.86 help you understand the reactions of the Americans
who dropped the bombs and of the Japanese who were the victims.
3 How does Source 6.84 help you understand:
a thed evastatingi mpacto fa tomicb ombs?
b ther easonsw hyc asualtyr atesw eres oh igh?
EXTEND 6.12
1 Conduct researcho nt he short- and long-term physical effects of the atomic bombs on
the people of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
REVIEW 6.14
1 Whatw ast heM anhattanP roject?
2 Explain the implications of Japan’s rejection of the Potsdam Declaration.
3 Which battle is recognised as the bloodiest of the Paciþc War?
4 Explain why the United States dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
6.3 WHAT WERE THE CAUSES, SCOPE AND NATURE OF WORLD WAR II? 317
E
New Guinea. offered higher wages. It took three months to fill the 6th Division of the AIF, a contrast to
the three weeks it took to raise 20 000 men at the start of World War I.
PL
The fall of France in 1940 changed Australia’s perception of the war. Recruitment
rates surged and three new divisions of the AIF were formed. After the Fall of Singapore,
when Australia felt directly under threat for the first time, Australia’s perception of the
war again changed. The whole population mobilised to support the war effort. Women
were encouraged to enter the workforce, industry was regulated, and coastal defences were
extended and reinforced.
M
SA
Source6 .88
Fellow Australians,
It is my melancholy duty to
inform you officially, that in
consequence of a persistence
by Germany in her invasion
of Poland, Great Britain has
declared war upon her and
that, as a result, Australia is
also at war. No harder task can
fall to the lot of a democratic
leader than to make such an
announcement.
Excerpt from a speech made by Prime Minister
Robert Menzies, 3 September 1939, in a radio
broadcast to the nation only a few hours after
E
Britain declared war on Germany Source6 .90 Soldiers of
Source6 .89 the Second AIF leaving
Australia to serve in
Men and women of Australia, we are at war with Japan. That has happened
PL the war, January 1940.
Their helmets show their
because, in the first instance, Japanese naval and air forces launched an enlistment numbers and
unprovoked attack on British and United States territory; because our vital the cases on their chests
hold their gas masks.
interests are imperiled and because the rights of free people in the whole Pacific (AWM 011141).
are assailed. As a result, the Australian Government this afternoon took the
necessary steps which will mean that a state of war exists between Australia
M
and Japan. Tomorrow, in common with the United Kingdom, the United States
of America and the Netherlands East Indies governments, the Australian
Government will formally and solemnly declare the state of War it has striven so
sincerely and strenuously to avoid.
SA
Excerpt from an address to the nation by Prime Minister John Curtin, in a radio broadcast, 8 December 1941
INTERPRET 6.13
1 Explain the differences between the two declarations of war by Australian Prime
Ministers during World War II.
2 What justiþcation for war does Menzies give in Source 6.88?
3 What justiþcation for war does Curtin give in Source 6.89?
4 How could you use these sources in a historical investigation of whether Australia
needed to be involved in World War II?
REVIEW 6.15
1 How many soldiers did Australia have available for overseas service when war was
declared in 1939?
2 How many soldiers did Menzies initially promise Britain?
3 Whatw as theC MF?
4 What nickname was given those serving in the CMF? Why?
5 Which two events changed Australians’ perception about the seriousness of the war?
6.3 WHAT WERE THE CAUSES, SCOPE AND NATURE OF WORLD WAR II? 319
E
statistics for with 15 000 captured in Malaya and Singapore alone. By 1945, over 8000 POWs had
Australian died. The significantly higher rate of deaths among POWs captured by the Japanese can be
prisoners of war
attributed to Japan’s attitude towards prisoners.
captured by the
Germans and
Italians with
PL
Japanese military culture, shaped by traditional values, meant that the Japanese regarded
prisoners poorly. Japan refused to follow the terms of the Geneva Convention, an
those captured international agreement on the treatment of captured civilians and military personnel.
by the Japanese. Changi, in Singapore, was the main prison camp holding the Allied POWs. From here,
Calculate the Japanese commanders sent working parties to other locations where POWs were used
M
percentage
as forced labourers, most notably on the Burma–Thailand railway. Along with British,
of deaths of
Dutch and American prisoners, 13 000 Australian POWs were used as forced labour to
Australian
prisoners in each build a railway line from Thailand to Burma to supply the Japanese campaign. About 2800
SA
Source6 .91
After capture I was taken to Changi Camp, where I was with approximately
12 000 men, employed … clearing the bombed area, also well sinking. Work was
from 6 to 6, food was half a cup of cooked rice per man per day …
From Changi was I marched with 500 men to Duckatinor Hills. Here we were
employed clearing after bombing runs, building roads and hill levelling. Food
supplies were as at Changi.
Whilst working at the river camp I witnessed a … guard (known as the Black
Snake) bash Gnr Jack Francis with a heavy stick many times and finally brutally
kicked him in the stomach and about the head. Francis died a few days later.
I was severely beaten by the Black Snake with a heavy bamboo … He knocked
me down several times, then kicked me. I vomited frequently following the
bashing … was unfit to work and generally was much knocked about. I was finally
… operated upon by Col. Dunlop for a damaged bladder and internal injury.
Extract from an afþdavit (sworn statement) by former Gnr Reginald Melbourne to the
Australian War Crimes Registry
INTERPRET 6.14
1 Read the caption for Source 6.93. Explain how it helps you understand why this is a
M
valid source for the study of the conditions Australian prisoners of war endured under
Japanese control.
2 Discuss whether Source 6.92 supports your impressions of conditions for Australian
SA
EXTEND 6.13
1 Source 6.91 mentions an operation performed by Colonel Dunlop. This is a reference
to Edward ‘Weary’ Dunlop. Conduct research on his life and career, and explain his
signiþcance in Australian history.
REVIEW 6.16
1 Explain the major differences between conditions in European and Japanese prisoner of
war camps for Australians.
2 Whatw as the Geneva Convention? Which country refused to follow it?
3 Describet he conditions Australian prisoners of war had to endure in Japanese camps.
6.3 WHAT WERE THE CAUSES, SCOPE AND NATURE OF WORLD WAR II? 321
Source 6.94 The Kokoda campaign 1942 – key events and battles
E
23 July A small Australian platoon slows the Japanese advance across the Kumusi River, before
falling back to Kokoda.
29 July The Japanese attack Kokoda, defended by 80 men who suffer heavy casualties in hand-to-
hand þghting. On the next morning, they retreat along the trail.
PL
8 August Australians suffer heavy casualties attempting to retake Kokoda. There is a two-week break
in the þghting, when survivors from the defence of Kokoda meet with reserves from Port
Moresby and prepare to defend the trail at Isurava.
26–31 The Battle of Isurava is a victory for Japanese forces with the Maroubra Force outnumbered
August and suffering heavy casualties on the þrst day. The battle lasts four days, before the
Australians are forced to retreat further, mounting small-scale actions along the way.
M
However, the Japanese do not succeed in their aim of destroying the Australian force. The
þrst substantial reinforcements from the AIF begin to arrive, providing a vital boost for the
depleted Maroubra Force.
September Australians retreat after actions at Efogi (also known as Mission Ridge–Brigade Hill) and
SA
Ioribaiwa Ridge. During September, after being defeated by the Allies at Guadalcanal,
Japanese commanders in Tokyo decide to withdraw their Kokoda campaign. Japanese
forces retreat to Templeton’s crossing.
October The Australians defeat the Japanese in a series of attacks at Templeton’s Crossing, Eora region.
E
Source6 .96 A wounded soldier being carried to safety Source6 .97 Australians
ploda longt het rail
Source 6.98
PL
You are trying to survive, shirt torn, arse out of your pants, whiskers a mile long,
hungry and a continuous line of stretchers with wounded carried by ‘Fuzzy-
Wuzzies’ doing a marvellous job. Some days you carry your boots because there’s
no skin on your feet
M
Private Laurie Howson, 39th Battalion, diary entry
INTERPRET 6.15
SA
1 Explain what these sources reveal about conditions for soldiers along the Kokoda Trail.
2 ‘Fuzzy-Wuzzies’ are shown in Source 6.96 and mentioned in Source 6.98. Compare both
sources to infer what the term ‘Fuzzy-Wuzzies’ refers to.
REVIEW 6.17
1 Where was the Kokoda Trail?
2 What was ‘Maroubra Force’? What did it achieve?
3 Explain why the Kokoda campaign is such a signiþcant moment in Australian history.
6.3 WHAT WERE THE CAUSES, SCOPE AND NATURE OF WORLD WAR II? 323
E
involved in traditional men’s roles, as signallers, truck and ambulance drivers, intelligence
Source 6.99 Recruitment
poster to attract women officers, wireless telegraphers or aircraft ground staff. Women were still not permitted to
into the services during take on combat roles or serve outside Australia. The exception to this was nurses, who served
World War II (AWM
ARTV01049).
PL
in most areas where Australian troops were sent. A contingent of AWAS was also posted to
New Guinea near the end of the war.
Many women joined the Women’s Land Army, a civilian organisation, where they
replaced male farm workers who had left to serve in the armed forces.
M
EXTEND 6.14
1 Conduct research to identify the number of women in permanent full-time roles in the
Australian Defence Force now, and the percentage of the entire force that this represents. How
does this compare with the number of Australian women who served during World War II?
SA
Source6 .100 Members of an Australian Women’s Army Service anti-aircraft gun Source6 .101 Signallers of the Australian
crew( AWM1 36831) Women’s Army Service (AWM 137466)
E
The Northern
Territory Special
At the start of the war, the AIF officially only accepted Aborigines who were of ‘substantially
Reconnaissance
European descent’ while the RAAF accepted Aborigines from the outset. Due to the early
Unit were 51
PL
shortage of recruits, many recruiters may have simply accepted Aboriginal volunteers
into the AIF despite official restrictions. After the bombing of Darwin, the restrictions on
Aborigines joining the AIF were relaxed.
Aboriginal and þve
white Australians
who patrolled the
It is estimated that around 3000 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander soldiers served in northern Australian
the Australian armed forces. However, it is impossible to know precisely, as the number who coast. In the event of
M
a Japanese invasion,
enlisted under another nationality was probably much higher than official figures. A small
they were to conduct
number of Torres Strait Islanders were also recruited into the United States army.
a guerrilla campaign
Other Indigenous Australians were using traditional
also employed by the army in a variety
SA
Aboriginal weapons.
of roles. They worked on farms and in The Aborigines were
butcheries, built roads and airfields, and not formally enlisted
were construction workers, truck drivers in the army, and
and general labourers. They also filled received goods such
as tobacco rather
more specialised roles, such as salvaging
than monetary pay.
downed aircraft and organising munitions
In 1992, they were
stockpiles. Many Aboriginal women were þnally awarded back-
also involved in these roles, as well as pay and medals.
joining organisations such as the Australian
Source6 .103 Aboriginal soldiers on parade in
Women’s Army Service. 1940 (AWM P02140.004)
REVIEW 6.18
1 Why did the role of women in the armed services change from World War I to World War II?
2 How did women’s roles differ between World War I and World War II?
3 Among women who joined the armed forces during World War II, which group were
permitted to serve outside Australia?
4 What was the Australian government’s purpose in forming the women’s auxiliary services?
5 Whyi si t difþcult for historians to estimate the number of Indigenous Australians who
enlisted in the armed forces during World War II?
6 When and why were restrictions against Aborigines enlisting in the AIF relaxed?
6.3 WHAT WERE THE CAUSES, SCOPE AND NATURE OF WORLD WAR II? 325
E
battles that took place in each of them. (10 marks)
8 Label a blank world map to identify the major sites where Australians fought in World
War II. (10 marks) PL
9 List the major battles Australians were involved in during World War II. Place these
battles on a timeline in correct chronological order. (10 marks)
» Outline and sequence the changing scope and nature of warfare from trenches in World
War I to the Holocaust and the use of the atomic bomb to end World War II
10 Look at the map below. Explain how the Maginot Line provides evidence that France was
M
preparing for a war that was similar to World War I. (5 marks)
SA
BELGIUM
GERMANY
The
Ardennnes
LUXEMBOURG
FRANCE
LEGEND
The Maginot Line
Weak fortifications 0 50 100 km
Strong fortifications
E
20 Describe the role of women in Australia’s armed services during World War II, including
where they served and the main types of jobs that they were involved in. (15 marks)
For more
21 How were Aborigines restricted from joining the armed services during World War II,
PL information about
and how did many get around this restriction? (5 marks)
these skills, refer
22 What roles did Indigenous men and women have in the armed forces during to ‘The historian’s
WorldW arI I?( 10m arks) toolkit’.
TOTAL MARKS [ /200]
RICH TASKS
M
Understanding the Holocaust
CHECKPOINT
There are a large number of sites available to increase your understanding of the Holocaust
and its legacy. Select one of these sites for a virtual site study and outline:
SA
1 any additional information you were able to learn about the Holocaust
2 how the site helps you understand the legacy of the Holocaust.
Using weapons of mass destruction – the atomic bomb
The atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki sparked a debate about both the necessity
and morality of using a weapon capable of causing so much destruction. This task asks you
to investigate the debate and draw your own conclusions based on research.
1 Startb yþ nding websites that provide arguments for and against dropping the bombs.
Once you have made up your own mind, you may like to cast your own vote on a site such
as www.debate.org.
2 Conduct research on the arguments for both sides of the debate. Create a summary of
the main arguments and the evidence used to support them. Exclude any arguments that
are based only on opinion and fail to produce evidence (one example is the press release
outlining President Truman’s justiþcation). A good starting point outlining the argument
against the bombings can be found at the website of Roger Hollander.
3 Consider the emotional impact of sources such as those shown in Sources 6.85 and 6.86.
Discuss whether the impact of the bombs is a necessary part of the debate about whether
they should have been dropped.
4 Explain your own position. Do you think the dropping of atomic bombs was justiþed?
Outline the evidence you are using to support your argument.
5 Come together as a class and discuss your opinions and evidence.
6 Conduct a poll to discover what the overall opinion of the class is.
6.3 WHAT WERE THE CAUSES, SCOPE AND NATURE OF WORLD WAR II? 327
E
in Depth Study 6.
PL
WHY STUDY THE HOLOCAUST?
In the previous unit, we learned that the Holocaust was the consequence of
the Nazi Party’s ‘Final Solution’ – a systematic plan to exterminate all Jews
M
in Europe. Although Jews were not the only victims of the Nazi Party’s racial
policies, they were a prime target of Nazi hatred and violence. Hostility towards
the Jews was central to Nazi ideology and was also the main theme of Hitler’s
manifesto Mein Kampf (‘My Struggle’).
SA
REVIEW 6.19
1 In your own words, explain what is meant by the term ‘Final Solution’.
2 Why is it important for important events such as the Holocaust to be remembered?
3 Describe some of the important historical and legal developments that came about as a
result of the Holocaust.
E
Then they came for the trade unionists,
and I didn’t speak out because I wasn’t a trade unionist.
Government policies set aside funds for the identification, isolation and extermination of
Jews, and laws were passed to ensure that these policies were carried out.
6.4 DETAILED STUDY: WHAT WERE THE ORIGINS, NATURE AND IMPACT OF THE HOLOCAUST? 329
E
PL
M
Source 6.106 Nazi storm troopers outside a Jewish business, Source 6.107 Pedestrians glance at the broken windows of a
directing people to shop elsewhere, 1933 Jewish-owned shop in Berlin after the attacks of Kristallnacht,
November 1938
SA
INTERPRET 6.17
1 Explain how these sources provide evidence of
a systematic policy of persecution against Jews
brought about by the Nazi Party.
2 Is there any evidence to suggest that these photos
may have been staged or set up by the Nazis? If so,
what may they have stood to gain by doing so?
REVIEW 6.20
1 What was the purpose of Jewish ghettos in Nazi Germany?
2 Explain what made the Holocaust different from earlier anti-Jewish hostility in Europe.
3 Identify the steps that were taken to persecute Jews in Germany and in German-occupied
territories before the outbreak of World War II.
4 What was Kristallnacht? How did the authorities react to these attacks?
Forced-labour camps
The Nazi government used concentration camps to contain Jews and other ‘undesirables’.
Some were forced-labour camps, where inmates were compelled to do hard physical
work, such as mining and road building, under harsh conditions. Many camps, such as
Buchenwald and Bergen–Belsen, were places where inmates were simply worked to death
(see Source 6.82). With a heavy work load and starvation rations, many of these people fell
victim to malnutrition and disease. As soon as they were unable to work, they were left to
die or were put to death.
Extermination camps
E
In addition to forced labour camps, the
Nazis set up camps for the sole purpose of PL
killing people and disposing of their bodies.
These camps were known as extermination
(or death) camps. One of the largest
extermination camps was called Auschwitz–
Birkenau. This camp was actually made up
M
of a series of smaller camps and served as
both a labour camp and an extermination
camp.
When inmates first arrived at Auschwitz–
SA
6.4 DETAILED STUDY: WHAT WERE THE ORIGINS, NATURE AND IMPACT OF THE HOLOCAUST? 331
E
PL
Source6 .110 Mug shots show boys imprisoned at the Auschwitz–Birkenau Source6 .112 Eyeglasses conþscated from prisoners
M
concentration camp, Poland. The boys wear striped uniforms, like at Auschwitz extermination camp. The glasses were
criminals. recycled and issued to members of the German army.
INTERPRET 6.18
SA
E
1000
Jewish death camp
Jewish death toll during World War II Country border, 1937
N O RT H LATVIA
SEA DENMARK
in Source 6.114. Conduct research to 120 BALTIC
SEA LITHUANIA
4 565 000
compare that þgure to that given by at PL 106 000 GERMANY
least three other sources. How close are NETHERLANDS 125 000
Chelmno Treblinka WESTERN
BELGIUM 24 000 POLAND Sobibor USSR
they? What does this research tell you 700 Majdanek Belzec
AT L A N T I C LUXEMBOURG
about the reliability of wartime statistics? OCEAN CZECHOSLOVAKIA Auschwitz
277 000
70 000
2 What reasons might there be for these FRANCE AUSTRIA
HUNGARY
inconsistencies? 83 000 300 000 264 000
YUGOSLAVIA ROMANIA
M
BL ACK
60 000 SEA
ITALY
Contested history – the 7500
REVIEW 6.21
1 Explain the difference between a forced-labour camp and an extermination camp.
2 Describe the role of the Einsatzgruppen in the Soviet Union and Poland in 1941.
3 What þgure is generally accepted as the death toll of European Jews during the Holocaust?
6.4 DETAILED STUDY: WHAT WERE THE ORIGINS, NATURE AND IMPACT OF THE HOLOCAUST? 333
E
mounting. To ensure that those guilty of
crimes against humanity and of waging wars
PL of aggression be brought to justice, a series
of military trials were set up in the German
city of Nuremberg. At these trials, a new
legal definition was introduced – genocide –
in order to clearly describe the deliberate and
systematic extermination of a race of people.
M
Source6 .115 Defendants in the dock at the Palace of Justice, during proceedings The Nuremberg trials established and
against leading Nazi þgures for war crimes at the International Military Tribunal, re-defined many principles of international
Nuremberg, Germany, 1945. They include (in the front row, left to right): Hermann
Göring, Rudolf Hess, Joachim von Ribbentrop and Wilhelm Keitel. law. The Nuremberg principles included the
following:
SA
• It is not a defence to say ‘I was only following orders’. Each individual is responsible for
his or her own actions and moral decisions.
• Murder, extermination, enslavement, deportation and other inhumane acts done against
any civilian population are a crime against humanity.
The other important difference between the trials at Nuremberg and the way in which other
wars had concluded was that the winners did not summarily punish their defeated enemies.
The Nazi leaders were given a public trial and the chance to put forward a defence, like any
other people charged with a crime.
E
Jewish refugee ships
Despite numerous disagreements between governments around the world, ships filled with
PL
European Jews seeking a new life continued to arrive off the coast of Palestine. Many were
unseaworthy and were overloaded with illegal immigrants from Europe. The most famous of
these ships was the SS Exodus, which was transporting 4550 survivors of the Nazi death camps
when it was intercepted, rammed and boarded by the British Royal Navy (see Source 6.117).
At the port of Haifa, the passengers were forced to disembark and were immediately placed
M
on board ships returning to Europe. When the passengers refused to disembark in France, the
British government sent them back to Lubeck, Germany. From there, they returned in locked
trains to the old Nazi concentration camps. Public opinion around the world condemned
Britain for these actions. Despite this setback, approximately 40 000 Jews entered Palestine
SA
6.4 DETAILED STUDY: WHAT WERE THE ORIGINS, NATURE AND IMPACT OF THE HOLOCAUST? 335
LEGEND LEBANON
Arab state
Jewish State
Acre SYRIA
UN Zone
Haifa
E
Mediterranean
Sea
Tel Aviv PL
Jaffa
(joint rule)
Jerusalem
Bethlehem
Gaza Dead Sea
Beersheba
M
Source 6.117 This photo taken at Haifa port on July 18, 1947 shows the crowded upper deck
NEGEV of the illegal immigration ship SS Exodus. The image shows Jewish refugees from war-torn
Europe before being forced onto a British navy ship and transported back to Europe.
KINGDOM
OF JORDAN
SA
INTERPRET 6.19
SINAI
1 Explain how these sources contribute to your understanding of the situation
EGYPT
in the Middle East today.
2 Examine Source 6.116. What potential difþculties can you see in implementing
0 20 40 km
this division of Palestine?
3 Outline the ways in which sources such as 6.117 could have inÿuenced public
Source 6.116 The UN Partition Plan attitudes towards Jewish refugees and the creation of Israel after the war.
REVIEW 6.22
1 List three short-term and three long-term impacts of the Holocaust.
2 Explain the implications of the Nuremberg war crimes trials.
3 Why was the state of Israel created?
4 Explain the signiþcance of the SS Exodus and the experiences of the passengers on board.
5 What, in your view, lessons can be learned as a result of the Holocaust?
E
Investigating the claims of Holocaust deniers communication.
Examine the evidence and make your own historical judgement about the claims of
Holocaust deniers.
PL For more
information about
1 Source 6.118 shows an aerial
these skills, refer
photograph of the Birkenau part
to ‘The historian’s
of the vast Auschwitz–Birkenau
toolkit’.
concentration camp, taken by
the US Air Force late in the
M
war. The area at the top left
of the photograph shows the
CHECKPOINT
remains of the crematorium.
David Irving – arguably the most
SA
6.4 DETAILED STUDY: WHAT WERE THE ORIGINS, NATURE AND IMPACT OF THE HOLOCAUST? 337
E
this number served in Europe, North Africa, the Middle East and the Pacific. The bombing
1 Comparet he of Pearl Harbor in 1941 and the Fall of Singapore in 1942 brought about an escalation of
þgures given Australia’s wartime involvement and an increase in the number of soldiers sent overseas.
PL
here with those
given for World Source6 .119 A summary of the numbers who served, along with numbers of prisoners of war, deaths and
casualties during World War II
War I (see Source
6.46). List the Numbers involved
conclusions you
Total population 7 million
feel you can
M
draw from the Australians who served in the armed forces 993 000
comparison. Australians who served overseas 550 000
Wounded 23 477
Conscription
In World War II, conscription into Australia’s armed forces was revived to create a militia
for home service only. In 1942, the issue of conscription for service overseas arose under
Prime Minister JoÚ Curtin. Although there was debate among the members of his Labor
party, a form of conscription for overseas service was introduced in 1943 with a majority
vote in the party. The area in which conscripts could serve was extended to islands held by
the Japanese south of the equator. There was little opposition in the Australian community.
Because of the real threat of Japanese invasion, the issue of conscription was much less
divisive than it had been during World War I.
Wartime controls
One of the first steps taken by the Australian government in September 1939 was
the passing of the National Security Act. This Act introduced laws that gave the federal
government greater powers to respond to the threat of war. It allowed newspapers and the
media to be censored, and legalised the detention of so-called ‘enemy aliens’ – for example,
Censorship
During the war years, the Australian government believed that strict censorship was
necessary to maintain national security and boost public morale. The Department of
Information censored mail and monitored phone calls to ensure that military information
relating to troop movements and locations was not communicated to the enemy.
All forms of media, such as newspapers and radio broadcasts, were subject to controls
that limited what they could report. For example, when Japanese forces bombed Darwin in
1942, the extent of damage, the scale of the attack and the loss of life were downplayed in
newspapers and on radio. Similarly, when Australian and US soldiers brawled in the so-called
‘Battle of Brisbane’ on 26 November 1942, the death of one Australian and the injury to
others was censored because the event was seen as threatening American–Australian relations.
Wartime propaganda
Source6 .120 Mail
Closely related to censorship was propaganda. Throughout the war, newspapers, radio, posters being censored
by Department of
and other forms of mass communication (such as the short newsreels shown before feature Information staff
E
films in cinemas) encouraged people to think and act in particular ways. This was viewed as a during World War II
(AWM1 39316)
tecÚique for maintaining morale. The way in which the bombing of Darwin and the ‘Battle
of Brisbane’ were reported might be described as propaganda as the news was reported in such
PL
a way as to slant popular opinion in a particular direction. Posters encouraged people to enlist
in the armed forces, or reminded them that their everyday efforts were an important part
of war. Some posters used prejudicial stereotypes of the Germans or Japanese to ensure that
Australians remained supportive of the war (see Sources 6.121 and 6.122).
M
EXTEND 6.16
1 As a class, discuss the effect the Internet would have had on propaganda and
censorship in Australia during World War II if it had been around then. Do you think
SA
INTERPRET 6.20
EXTEND 6.17
1 Use the National Archives to conduct research on a speciþc internment camp in Australia
during World War II. Find out where the internees were from, and their experiences while
living in that particular camp.
E
Under The were employed in factories, shops or in family businesses. Women were expected to resign
Directorate from their employment once they had children.
of Manpower With so many servicemen deployed overseas, the role of women in Australia changed to
PL
regulations, women
meet the needs of the armed forces and the war economy. As we saw in Section 6.3 under
could be deployed
‘Women in the Australian armed forces’, from the late 1940s women were encouraged to
in occupations that
suited their skills. enlist in the women’s auxiliary services. Even if women did not enlist in the auxiliary forces,
For example, a it was argued that increasing women’s employment would allow more men to enter military
woman trained as service. Women were employed in a variety of new roles, such as truck and taxi-drivers
M
a ÿorist could be and tram conductors (see Source 6.123).
compelled to work As the war progressed, Australian women
in a factory because worked increasingly in war industries, such
of her skills with
SA
E
Source 6.124 An Australian government poster
during World War II encouraging women to
enter the workforce (AWM ARTV01064)
PL
APPLY 6.13
M
1 Conduct research on an aspect of government control over life during World War II. Possible
topics include: rationing, blackouts, recycling, censorship, evacuation drills and conscription.
In an explanation text of 250 words, analyse the impact that this aspect of government control
had on daily life.
SA
2 Create aW orldW ar II recruitment poster designed to boost the number of men enlisting in
the Australian armed forces. Consider the types of techniques, both visual and verbal, that
were used during World War II, such as:
• the use of racial stereotypes to tap into the fears about foreign invaders held by many
Australians
• the use of national symbols (such as the Australian ÿag) to arouse feelings of pride and
nationalism
• the use of techniques to generate positive and negative emotions in Australians, such
as references to family pride, honour or cowardice.
a Complete your poster by hand or on computer, making sure to include one or more of
these techniques.
b Explain which of the techniques used in your poster were more or less successful.
c Explain why it is unacceptable to use racist stereotypes in modern Australian society.
d As a class, vote to decide on the poster that is the most successful in achieving its goal.
REVIEW 6.23
1 Why was conscription introduced in Australia in World War II?
2 List the ways in which the government controlled and monitored daily life in Australia
during World War II.
3 Lists ome oft he rolesw omenh ad to take on during World War II.
E
4 In your notebook, rule up a page with the heading ‘The changing roles of women’, and
create three lists: Pre-World War II, World War II and Post-World War II. Add examples
to each list that will help explain the way World War II contributed to changing roles for
PL
women in Australia. (15 marks)
5 What were ‘enemy aliens’? Outline the way Australia dealt with ‘enemy aliens’ during
WorldW arI I. (10 marks)
TOTAL MARKS [ /50]
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RICH TASK
Women and World War II – exploring continuity and change
1 Sources 6.125 to 6.128 are covers taken from the women’s magazine The Australian
SA
Women’s Weekly.
a Examine the covers in chronological order and note the aspects of life they are
displaying.
b Comment on what these primary sources tell you about the impact of World War II on
the social expectations of women in Australia.
c What limitations are there in drawing historical conclusions based only on these
sources?
d Using these sources, along with others from your own research, argue whether
the changes in women’s lives during the 1940s in Australia reÿect continuity and/or
change.
e Did life for Australian women change in the 1940s as a result of World War II? As a
class, discuss your conclusions.
For more
E
information about
these skills, refer
PL to ‘The historian’s
toolkit’.
Source6 .125 Cover A (26 September 1942) Source6 .126 Cover B (3 November 1945)
M
CHECKPOINT
SA
Source6 .127 Cover C (10 February 1940) Source6 .128 Cover D (13 May 1950)
E
After World War I
At the end of World War I, around a quarter of a million Australian servicemen were
PL
returned home. This process is known as repatriation. The returned soldiers, known as
diggers, had been away from home for up to four years, and many were injured, sick or
had suffered psychologically. To add to the difficulties, in 1919, ships carrying returning
soldiers were quarantined when they arrived in Australia to prevent the spread of Spanish
Influenza. This flu became a global pandemic that ravaged populations around the world,
with estimates of 20 million to 30 million deaths worldwide.
M
Ex-soldiers were also returning to a changed society. Women had taken on roles that
were traditionally men’s, and tecÚological advances during the war meant there were fewer
jobs for unskilled labourers. Initially, most diggers found employment, but the difficult
SA
economic conditions of the 1920s saw the unemployment rate in Australia increase to over
5 per cent during the decade.
At first, patriotic funds raised money to help diggers with their immediate financial
needs. However, it became clear this was inadequate for the number of diggers who
needed assistance to adjust back into peacetime life. In 1917, the government set up the
Repatriation Department which provided health care, compensation, housing, and job
training, and looked after the families of servicemen who had been killed.
Source6 .129
Some [employers] respected their wartime promises about returned heroes … But the
requirements of business usually came first, and employers were loath [reluctant] to
demote or replace men and women who had proved to be good workers during the war.
E
Extract from Alistair Thomson, ANZAC Memories, Oxford University Press, Melbourne, 1994, p. 114
Source6 .132
PL
[H]idden in homes all over Australia were men who had gone to World War I and
who were never the same again. For most the disabilities were physical, but there
were plenty who were by turn remote or morose or who shouted all the time. For
the worst affected, family life became punctuated by sudden rages, drinking bouts
and black depressions, but even for the most stable, there was always a shadow
M
Extractf romJ anetM cCalman, Journeyings, Melbourne University Press, 1993, pp. 80–81
SA
INTERPRET 6.21
1 After reading Sources 6.129 to 6.132, how likely do you think it would have been for World
War I veterans to re-enlist for service in World War II?
2 Closely examine Source 6.133. Outline the difþculties the returned soldier shown would
have had adjusting to peacetime life and working in factories such as the one shown.
3 Explain how Source 6.129 provides evidence for the argument that support for war
veterans was not automatically granted.
4 How do these sources support or challenge the suggestion that readjusting to civilian life
was difþcult for many soldiers after World War I?
E
PL
M
SA
Source6 .134 A returned serviceman from the Royal Australian Navy is reunited with his British bride in
Australia (AWM 080984)
Around twice as many servicemen and women had served overseas as they did in World
War I. There were roughly half as many deaths compared to World War I, and much lower
numbers wounded. However, unlike World War I, over 20 000 returning servicemen had
been prisoners of war.
The Australian government supported World War II veterans with medical care, war
gratuities and pensions, war service home loans, training and education grants, and
assistance with finding employment.
As in the period after World War I, returning soldiers came home to a society where
women had expanded their roles and responsibilities during the war. As explored in Section
6.5, ‘Impact of World War II on Australian women’, some women happily returned to their
traditional roles, while some women retained their jobs. There is also evidence that some
women were pressured to resign in favour of men who had families to support.
Source6 .135
A few days ago my brother came home. Home, after three and a half years as a INTERPRET 6.22
prisoner of war in Malaya. I had pictured a dramatic meeting; but all he said was
1 Use the evidence
‘how are you?’ It sounds casual, conventional; but what is there to say at such a
from this chapter,
moment? I recall what Tom had said to me a little earlier, ‘You never heard a man including Sources
sing or laugh on the Thailand railway turnout. It was a ghost town.’ 6.135 and 6.136, to
Extractf rom Australian Women’s Weekly, 27 October 1945, p. 10 write a paragraph
Source6 .136 about the
difþculties former
The former Japanese prisoner J T Haig found the family circle difficult to fit prisoners of war
into; his mother had died while he was away, and he hankered restlessly after would have faced
the company of his own kind, his fellow ex-prisoners. One of those prisoners … after returning to
returned with badly impaired vision and to a wife who felt she no longer loved civilian life. What
him: she had become withdrawn from him after hearing nothing in three years, difþculties would
their families have
except that he was almost certainly dead. Their marital problem was finally
faced? How do
overcome, but the damage to his sight was permanent.
these sources help
E
A summary of interviews of World War II veterans from We Were There, John Barrett, Viking, you to understand
Melbourne, 1987, pp. 379–387
their difþculties?
Indigenous Australians
PL
It is estimated that 1000 Indigenous Australians enlisted during World War I and 3000
in World War II, where they fought together with non-Indigenous Australians without
M
the racism they experienced in Australia. On their return, however, they came back to a
segregated society, where they were not permitted to enter a public bar, own property or
vote. One ex-soldier, Tommy Lyons who had served at Tobruk in 1917, said on his return,
SA
‘In the army you had your mates and you were treated as equal, but back here you were
treated like dogs.’
APPLY 6.14
1 Explain the different perspectives of the returned soldier looking for a job to support his
family and the woman who was forced to resign to give him a job. Which perspective do
you think would have been most accepted in Australia in the late 1940s? Do you think this
attitude has changed today?
2 Conduct research into the treatment of Indigenous returned soldiers in the community and
by the government after World War II. Compare this to the treatment of non-Indigenous
servicemen after the war.
REVIEW 6.24
1 List the potential problems faced by veterans returning from both wars.
2 Explain why the government had to set up a Repatriation Department in 1917. Explain
what its role was.
3 What were ‘bride ships’? Explain why they were necessary.
E
relationship with the USA was an important step in establishing an independent Australia
and continues to have an important bearing on Australian foreign policy decisions.
PL Social and economic
changes
One million American service personnel
came to Australia during the war, and their
M
presence had a significant cultural impact.
For some Australian women, these men
would become boyfriends or husbands. The
influence of American cinema, language
SA
E
The League of Nations, which had been set up after World War I to prevent armed conflict from all corners of
Europe as part of the
and promote peace, had clearly failed. Even while World War II was still in progress, plans ‘Populate or perish’
were underway to create a new international body that would be more successful. The
PL campaign.
United Nations (UN) officially came into existence in 1945, with 51 nations as founding
members. Australia’s Minister for External Affairs, Herbert ‘Doc’ Evatt, played a key role in
drafting the Charter of the United Nations. Evatt argued that larger powers, such as the USA
and the Soviet Union, should not dominate the system; and that smaller nations, such as
Australia, had an important role to play. Evatt went on to become one of the first Presidents
M
of the General Assembly.
APPLY 6.15
SA
1 The Charter of the United Nations outlines the role of the UN as an international
organisation to prevent war, with provisions to aid refugees, support post-war
reconstruction and protect human rights. Other agencies of the UN include the:
• WorldH ealthOr ganization • International Court of Justice
EXTEND 6.18
• World Bank • United Nations Education, Scientiþc
• International Atomic Energy and Cultural Organization. 1 One way of
Commission looking at the
Select one of these organisations and investigate its role and signiþcance in today’s world. importance
of Australia’s
increasing
REVIEW 6.25 political links
to the United
1 Which event made Australia realise it could no longer rely on Britain for its defence? States is to
2 Who was given broader command of Australian forces in the Paciþc during World War II? examine post-
Who made that decision? war treaties
3 How was Australian society inÿuenced by American culture during World War II? such as ANZUS.
4 Explain how the Australian economy changed as a result of World War II. Find out who
5 Outline the way the Commonwealth government became more powerful as a result of was involved in
World Wars I and II. ANZUS, when it
was introduced
6 What was the purpose of the ‘Populate or perish’ campaign?
and what it
7 Which Australian politician played a key role in drafting the UN Charter?
guaranteed.
E
PL
Source6 .139
Australian soldiers
M
returning from
World War I as
invalids in 1917
(AWM CO1035)
SA
Source6 .140
Australian soldiers
and the Royal Navy
seamen who were
bringing them to
Australia after
World War II (AWM
125099)
For more
information about
these skills, refer
to ‘The historian’s
toolkit’.
Impact on returned Impact on returned
E
soldiers after WWI soldiers after WWII
3 Outline the speciþc difþculties Indigenous Australian soldiers faced when returning to
civilian life. (5 marks)
PL
» Analyse the changing relationship of Australia with other countries after World War II
4 Outline the key decisions Prime Minister Curtin made to ensure the security of Australia
during World War II, and the consequences for Australia’s relationships with other
countries. (10 marks)
5 Explain how the adoption of the ‘populate or perish’ migration program started to change
M
Australia and its relationship with other countries. (5 marks)
6 What evidence is there of Australia’s international standing at the time of the foundation
CHECKPOINT
oft heU nited Nations?( 5 marks)
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RICH TASK
Returning home – the challenges
1 Soldiers returning from World War I faced a number of challenges. In groups, select
one of the following events. Find out what the incident was about, the role that returned
soldiers played in it, and the viewpoints of opposing groups.
• The Red Flag riots in Brisbane (1919)
• MayD ayþ ghts in the Domain in Sydney and Brisbane (1921)
• TheF remantleW harf Riot( 1919)
• MelbourneP oliceS trike( 1923)
• Anti-conscription protest in Melbourne (15 December 1917)
2 Prime Minister William Hughes said Australia offered returning soldiers a ‘land þt
for heroes’ at the Paris Peace Conference in 1919. Write a letter to Hughes from a
disillusioned former soldier who has been involved in one of the protests/riots you
researched, asking him where ‘the land þt for heroes’ was.
3 As a class, discuss the way in which different perspectives can affect the way a source is
used and interpreted.
E
nation could recognise the efforts of the Australian forces and remember their sacrifices.
Today, we continue this tradition with two official commemoration days – Anzac Day and
Remembrance Day.
Anzac Day
PL
In 1916, 25 April was chosen as a day of commemoration (a day to remember and show
APPLY 6.16
respect) for the ANZACs. Fittingly, this day became known as Anzac Day. Ceremonies and
M
1 Youm ayb e marches were held all around Australia, and a march was also held in London, England,
familiar with some where the ANZAC troops were hailed by local newspapers as ‘The Knights of Gallipoli’. By
of these aspects 1927, Anzac Day had become a public holiday in Australia, with marches and dawn services
and symbols of
held around the country every year. Many Australians also travel to Gallipoli to be present
SA
commemoration
at the dawn service at Anzac Cove. Anzac Day ceremonies traditionally conclude with the
ceremonies in
Australia. Conduct words from Laurence Binyon’s poem ‘For the Fallen’ (see Source 6.141).
research on
Source6 .141
the origins and
signiþcance of They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old;
someoft hese: Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.
• slouchh at At the going down of the sun and in the morning
• TheLa st Post We will remember them.
• one-minute Laurence Binyon, ‘Fort heF allen’
silence
• riderless horse
• redp oppies Remembrance Day (Armistice Day)
• wattle Anzac Day is the main day for war commemoration in Australia and New Zealand.
• rosemary However, Remembrance Day, 11 November, is a more general recognition of the sacrifices
• ÿameof made in war. This date marks the day and the hour when the Armistice (ceasefire) was
remembrance.
signed, bringing an end to World War I. In many countries, people pause for one minute at
2 How many of the
11 a.m. on Remembrance Day to remember those who gave their lives in war.
aspects of the
commemoration
ceremonies are
unique to Australia?
E
living Gallipoli veteran.
were they evident much earlier? He died on 16 May
2002 at the age of 103.
The ANZAC legend has not remained static. It was expected that as the last of the World Campbell enlisted in
PL
War I diggers died (see Source 6.142), the significance of Gallipoli would begin to fade.
There was some decline in interest in Anzac Day in the decades after World War II, but since
the 1980s there has been a resurgence of interest in the ANZAC legend and the Gallipoli
the AIF at age 16, after
lying about his age to
meet the minimum
age requirement of
18 years. On the day
story. The reasons for this are complex, possibly related to the attention paid to the declining of his funeral, ÿ ags
numbers of World War I veterans, films such as Gallipoli, and the pilgrimage of Gallipoli were ÿown at half
mast around Australia
survivors in 1990 to mark the 75th anniversary of the campaign. and overseas, to pay
M
respect to this þnal
linkt oG allipoli.
Perspectives on the ANZAC legend
SA
Perspectives on the ANZAC legend have changed over the decades, and there are as many
views or perspectives on the idea of Anzac as there are Australians. Some have suggested
that other war engagements are more deserving of national commemoration. The battles at
Pozières and Villers-Bretonneux in World War I, Tobruk and Kokoda in World War II, and
the Battle of Long Tan in the Vietnam War have all been suggested as possible replacements
for Gallipoli. Others have argued that the focus on Anzac Day glorifies war and that other
aspects of the national story, good and bad, should be recognised alongside (or instead of)
the Gallipoli landing.
1 As a class, discuss the arguments for and against the idea that ‘Australia became a nation 1 What evidence
on the shores of Gallipoli’. is there to
show that
2 What evidence is there to show that political leaders and ordinary Australians see a need
governments in
for Anzac Day?
Australia see a
3 Locate some articles and opinion pieces that have appeared in Australian newspapers
need for Anzac
about Anzac Day. Examine the contrasting perspectives on Anzac Day and its role in
Day?
Australia’s sense of national identity contained in these articles.
Source6 .143
The legend of Anzac was born on 25 April 1915, and was reaffirmed in eight
months’ fighting on Gallipoli. Although there was no military victory, the
Australians displayed great courage, endurance, initiative, discipline, and
mateship. Such qualities came to be seen as the Anzac spirit.
Many saw the Anzac spirit as having been born of egalitarianism and mutual
support. According to the stereotype, the Anzac rejected unnecessary restrictions,
possessed a sardonic sense of humour, was contemptuous of danger, and proved
himself the equal of anyone on the battlefield.
Extract from the Australian War Memorial website
Source6 .144
The qualities of egalitarianism, initiative and resourcefulness underpinned
INTERPRET 6.23 much of the immediate post-war … portrayals of the ‘digger’ … However,
1 Doa nyo ft hese the personal post-war struggles of returned soldiers … ill-health, permanent
perspectives on incapacity, alcoholism, unemployment and severe depression … were conditions
E
Anzac Day reÿect that characterised some of the lives of returned … men … Many men and their
primary sources? families would endure the mental and physical debilities … silently and stoically
Do you think this … they, perhaps unconsciously, supported the emerging ‘digger’ stereotype. It was
PL
is signiþcant? ironic that the ceremonial tradition of the Anzac legend, through its powerful
2 Categorise these and symbolic celebration of the ‘digger’ and Empire loyalty, effectively muted
sources into pro-
the voices of dissent and veiled the many individual sufferings and unpleasant
and anti-Anzac
memories of returned … soldiers and their families.
Day perspectives.
What evidence Extract from Dale Blair, Dinkum Diggers, Melbourne University Press, 2001, p. 194
M
is used to Source6 .145
support these
We suggest that Australians might look to alternative national traditions that
perspectives?
gave pride of place to equality of opportunity and the pursuit of social justice: the
3 Categorise these
SA
sources into ideals of a living wage and decent working conditions, the long struggle for sexual
ofþcial and non- and racial equality. In the myth of Anzac, military achievements are exalted above
ofþcial. Identify civilian ones; events overseas are given priority over Australian developments;
any links between slow and patient nation-building is eclipsed by the bloody drama of battle; action
these categories is exalted above contemplation.
and their
The key premise of the Anzac legend is that nations and men are made in war. It is
perspectives.
an idea that had currency a hundred years ago. Is it not now time for Australia to
Discuss your
þndings as a cast it aside?
class. Extractf rom What’s wrong with Anzac?, Marilyn Lake and Henry Reynolds, 2010. p. 167
REVIEW 6.26
1 Whenw asA nzac Day þrst commemorated? When did it become a public holiday?
2 How long did it take Australian newspapers to publish news of the Australian landing at
Anzac Cove on 25 April 1915? How did they report it?
3 Who was the last living veteran of the Gallipoli campaign?
4 Which battles are sometimes suggested as alternatives to Gallipoli as battles that could
bec ommemorated?
E
» Empathetic
understanding
RICH TASKS PL » Research
An alternative national identity? » Explanation and
communication.
1 Conduct research on the Australasian Antarctic Expedition (1911–1914) led by Douglas
Mawson. During your research look for evidence that would support this ofþcial
statement by the Australian government: ‘The AAE has joined the ranks of those For more information
about these skills,
expeditions that are legendary for the sheer tenacity of spirit, physical endurance, loyalty
refer to ‘The
M
and accomplishment that was achieved under profoundly difþcult circumstances.’
historian’s toolkit’.
2 Analyse the characteristics of Mawson’s expedition that could contribute to Australia’s
CHECKPOINT
sense of national identity.
3 In a 500-word reÿective piece of writing, consider the following questions.
SA