Jim Crow Downunder? African American Encounters with White Australia, 1942––1945

Author:

Brawley Sean,Dixon Chris

Abstract

Between 1941 and 1945, as the U.S. military machine sent millions of Americans——and American culture——around the world, several thousand African Americans spent time in Australia. Armed with little knowledge of Australian racial values and practices, black Americans encoutered a nation whose long-standing commitment to the principle of "White Australia" appeared to rest comfortably with the segregative policies commonly associated with the American South. Nonetheless, while African Americans did encounter racism and discrimination——practices often encouraged by the white Americans who were also stationed in Australia during the war——there is compelling evidence that their experiences were not always negative. Indeed, for many black Americans, Australians' apparent open-mindedness and racial views of white Britons and others with whom African Americans came into contact during the war. Making use of U.S. Army censors' reports and paying attention to black Americans' views of their experiences in Australia, this article not only casts light on an aspect of American-Australian relations that has hitherto recieved scant scholarly attention and reveals something about the African American experience, but also offers insights into race relations within the U.S. armed forces.

Publisher

University of California Press

Subject

History

Reference74 articles.

1. When we landed in Sydney we found that it was entirely different. We were allowed to go into any place that we thought we could afford. It wasn't long before the Southern officers had put this place and that place off limits for colored troops. About the same time stories began to circulate about the American Negro soldier. Some were: they are cannibals and had tails like monkeys, that every American negro soldier carried a razor and will kill a person at a minutes [sic] notice. One fellow was kind enough

2. The authors would like to thank Shane White, Ian Tyrrell, Roger Bell, Nick Doumanis, and the anonymous referees for the Pacific Historical Review for their close and careful readings of this paper.

3. Pacific Historical Review, Vol. 71, No. 4, pages 607-632. ISSN 0030-8684 c2002 by the Pacific Coast Branch, American Historical Association. All rights reserved. Send requests for permission to reprint to: Rights and Permissions, University of California Press, 2000 Center St., Ste. 303, Berkeley, CA 94704-1223.

4. 1 Censored Mail: Travis Dixon to Fred Dixon. June 5, 1943, Office of the Base Censor, South West Pacific Theatre, Box T-1419, Records of the United States Army Commands, Record Group 338 290/45/12/2-3, National Archives, Washington, D.C. (hereafter cited as RG 338, NA).

5. 2Ibid. Army intelligence had a long-standing interest in racial issues. See, for example,

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