Why so many Diggers voted ‘no’ to conscription in World War I


Australian soldiers' diaries reveal the reasons behind their strong opposition to conscription during World War I, highlighting resentment towards military authorities and concerns about the quality of conscripted troops.
AI Summary available — skim the key points instantly. Show AI Generated Summary
Show AI Generated Summary

Another, Private Arthur Giles stated forcibly that “if they don’t come of their own free will, let them stay away … the majority would only let us down when in a tight corner” and simply “wouldn’t [be] the same class of men at all”.

These entries reveal the “stigma of conscription”, a known phenomenon that occurred in countries that introduced compulsory military service, such as England and New Zealand. These comments played into concerns for the quality and calibre of conscripted men, whose motivation, discipline and military effectiveness would be supposedly less than those who had come voluntarily.

Loading

Other reasons that emerge in the soldiers’ diaries is a distinct resentment towards military authorities. The Australian history curriculum teaches well-known, but mythologised accounts of the Digger as a larrikin who had a natural distrust of authority.

The accounts in the diaries do not support that narrative, but are related. They are littered with frustrating accounts of soldiers being used in ways that created palpable anger. Sergeant Major Eric Clarke of Fairfield wrote: “We were all told to stand fast and record our votes for conscription … we were kept on parade in torrents of rain and a bitterly cold wind for five hours to record our vote, what is only for the result of same to be. In speaking of it afterwards we found that 90 per cent voted NO in [our] division”.

Similarly, Private Cameron Robertson of Rozelle wrote “if men in Australia knew what they would have to put up with ‘on active service’ … they would see the authorities in hell before they came away. Yet they want conscription in Australia!! Hell! What a fallacy?!!”

Loading

The vote among the soldiers was every bit as charged and divisive as it was on the home front. Historian Gerald Kristianson remarked that those who voted “no” on the home front were “viewed akin to traitors” while those who voted “yes” “seemed close to being murderers”.

Digger Peter Turnbull gives us a sense of the intensity of the vote to the soldiers. “We vote tomorrow for or against conscription, only two in our hut out of 12 are for it & we have been arguing all day, in fact nearly fighting,” he wrote.

Private Frank Molony, an architect from Petersham, wrote furiously of “the rumour about that conscription has so far in the counting failed… Oh God make this a lie… if the country we love denies us. The Dead will give us more honour than our living.”

The vote extended to the many faces of Australia’s wartime commitment, including women who made up more than one per cent of the Australian Imperial Force as nurses. Nurse ‘Queenie’ Avenell was not put off by the “156 dressings to do, about 30 one-armed men … [who] are going back to Australia and are all just shattered wrecks really”. Queenie interestingly “voted for it. We have got to win the war by men”.

The very fact Australia and Australian soldiers were afforded the opportunity to vote on this important question is significant historically. The reasons behind how the Diggers voted were deeply personal and provide a glimpse into the divisiveness of the issue and how split the nation was on the proposal.

The results of the two referendums were honoured. No young men were conscripted to serve. Democratic norms were observed and the very freedoms for which the Diggers fought and died were preserved. Now that’s worth celebrating.

Oliver Sinclair is a lawyer and is studying a Masters of International Relations at the Australian National University.

Get a weekly wrap of views that will challenge, champion and inform your own. Sign up for our Opinion newsletter.

Was this article displayed correctly? Not happy with what you see?

Tabs Reminder: Tabs piling up in your browser? Set a reminder for them, close them and get notified at the right time.

Try our Chrome extension today!


Share this article with your
friends and colleagues.
Earn points from views and
referrals who sign up.
Learn more

Facebook

Save articles to reading lists
and access them on any device


Share this article with your
friends and colleagues.
Earn points from views and
referrals who sign up.
Learn more

Facebook

Save articles to reading lists
and access them on any device