On November 8, 1915,
Brigadier General Blackden sent off the first Jamaican contingent under
the command of Major W. D. Neish to serve in the First World War. "Some of
you may be killed," he cautioned, "many will be wounded, but in bidding
you farewell, I hope that those who fall may fall gloriously, their faces
to the foe, victory gleaming on their bayonets." As the band played
"Soldiers of the King," and prayers for their welfare and safe return home
were said, 500 men sailed slowly off into the unknown looking for
adventure, a chance to serve God and country. The world had been at war
for over a year.
Most of the Jamaicans
who served were between the ages of 19 and 25. Frank Cundall, in Jamaica's
Part in the Great War, described these nine contingents and the over
10,000 Jamaicans, as being comprised of four types of men - (i) those who
had already chosen the Navy or Army as their career, (ii) those who were
in the West India Regiment, comprising Jamaicans under British officers,
(iii) those who, on the outbreak of war, abandoned their occupations and
went on their own, and (iv) the Contingent Men, like those first 500, who
formed the British West Indies Regiment. Recruiting meetings were held in
each parish, public calls to duty were listed in newspapers, and in 1917,
following glowing commendations on the services of Jamaican units of the
British West Indies Regiment's eleven battalions, a conscription law was
eventually passed in the House. It was never put to use. Every man who
went to the front from Jamaica was a volunteer. Many went out of
patriotism, but just as many went out of a desire to simply "get out" and
start a new chapter in their lives. At the time in Jamaica, unemployment
was high and wages were low - men received 9 pence a day to cut cane.
Together soldiers from
the West Indies represented sons of gentry and sons of labourers. There
were lawyers, doctors, engineers, farmers, carpenters, clerks,
blacksmiths, shoemakers, tailors, mason, printers, builders, coachmen and
grooms. The troops were trained in English camps - their long spells of
work broken by competitive games of cricket and football. They saw action
in Africa, Europe, the Mediterranean and the Middle East. The 2nd
Battalion of the West India Regiment (then established for over 100 years)
gained yet further Battle Honours in Belgium, France, Italy, Egypt and
Palestine.
The British West Indies Regiment
(BWIR)
The British West
Indies Regiment (BWIR) was known as a "coloured" regiment and as such was
often the victim of racial discrimination. Eugent Clarke, a Clarendonian
BWIR veteran, who in 1999 at the age of 105 received France's Legion
d'Honour for meritorious service in WWI, remembered how when his ship had
to put in at Halifax in Nova Scotia due to the dominance of German ships
in certain waters, many members of the BWIR had their first contact with
snow and frostbite. They remained clothed in tropical lightweight khaki
uniforms, denied issue of the heavier weight uniforms of British soldiers
(which were on board) until half of the battalion had already died. Clarke
was one of 200 lucky survivors, and he was sent with others to Bermuda to
convalesce before heading over to Europe. Once there conditions did not
improve much. The men of the BWIR were generally restricted to carrying
out hard labour, digging trenches, carrying supplies to men at the fronts.
Some, mainly those stationed in the Middle East, were allowed to serve as
combat troops. In the meantime all continued to suffer from severe weather
conditions, frostbite, measles and mumps. One thousand of the over ten
thousand that left Jamaica never returned.
History of the Jamaica Militia
Jamaica's
participation in Europe's wars was nothing new. This time, however,
Caribbean waters were not a main battleground. This historical connection
began in the 1600s when the first militia regiments were formed after the
island was captured by Cromwell's English troops in 1662. The "State of
Jamaica under Sir Thomas Lynch," (1683) includes the following description
of the militia:
"the militia in this island is better arm'd and much
better disciplin'd than in England, and do much more duty, as waiting on
the Governors, guarding the Forts, especially at Port Royal, where there
are Ten Companies of about 200 each, one of which watched every Night. All
the Militia is commanded by the Governor, as Captain General, according to
his Majesties Powers and the Act of Militia. There's Eight Regiments in
the Eight Provinces, and a Troop of Horse in every Province…. Every man
between the ages of 15 and 60 had to enlist and remain enlisted in the
foot or horse and provide his own horse and ammunition, each in the place
of his abode."
Except for a small artillery element manning harbour
fortifications, the militia was disbanded in 1906 under the belief that
their services would not be needed since the world was at peace and "the
populations of the West Indies could not possibly be of any consequence in
any imaginable war of the near future." A reserve regiment took its place.
Sending troops to the Front
On August 5, 1914,
England declared war on Germany not long after the assassination of the
heir to the Austrian throne. This time, however, submarines and tanks and
dreadnoughts appeared on the world stage ushering in a new stage of
warfare. There was never any doubt that Jamaica would show solidarity with
the rest of the Empire. As the Governor, Sir William Manning, said at an
August 13th meeting of the Legislative Council: "I feel that Jamaica will
loyally and patriotically assume her part in maintaining the integrity of
our Empire, and will comport herself gallantly to-day as she has done in
the past." A decision to create a reserve regiment in every parish to
guard against foreign invasion was immediately taken and well-received by
the public. One Mr. William Wilson, unable to volunteer himself wrote to
The Gleaner on April 23, 1915 - "if 99 other men will subscribe 30 pounds
each I will give an equal amount and send 200 native-born Jamaicans to the
front." Over 90 pounds were raised and a war contingent committee formed.
The target was 500 men for the First Contingent. By the end of June, 748
volunteered and 442 were accepted. The government agreed to be responsible
for the expenses of recruiting, training and transport separation
allowances, as well as disabilities, gratuities and pensions.
Jamaican women did
their part, too. They organized Flag Day fundraisers, a War Relief Fund
and sewed woolen garments for soldiers. In addition to the women's funds,
there were others including the Gleaner Fund and Palace Amusement Co.'s
Palace War Fund. Thousands of pounds were collected. Over 4000 packages of
fruits, 71 bags of sugar, 49 cases of ginger, four casks of rum, and two
cases of playing cards were shipped to military hospitals, and distributed
locally to men manning Jamaica's coastal forts.
Armistice
On November 11, 1918
armistice was declared, signaling the end of four years of war. His
Majesty's Government recalled with gratitude the share of men of Jamaica
in the final victory in Palestine and "expressed to the people of Jamaica
and her Dependencies (The Cayman Islands and the Turks and Caicos) the
Mother Country's high appreciation of the military effort they have made,
their cheerful acceptance of compulsory service to the common cause and
their unfailing support in the great struggle…." According to Cundall,
many soldiers returned to Jamaica with money, after having already sent
home considerable amounts. All soldiers were also eligible to obtain loans
to buy land, or if soldiers already owned land, to build houses, purchase
stock and cultivate. Re-employment Committees were created in every parish
with information on pay and pension, the treatment of invalids and the
disabled, as well as arrangements to obtain work.
Mutiny of the BWIR
| "Some of you may be killed, he cautioned, many
will be wounded, but in bidding you farewell, I hope that those who
fall may fall gloriously, their faces to the foe, victory gleaming
on their bayonets." |
According to veteran
Eugent Clarke who, along with thousands of other BWIR troops were held for
close to a year at the end of the war by the British War Office at a camp
in Taranto, Italy, when they returned home, times were just as hard as
they had been before the war. It was still hard to get work and that work
was still heavily agricultural based. Up to one-third of the veterans went
to Cuba where prices for cutting cane were higher. This disillusionment
came after the even greater one of Taranto, where Clarke and his fellow
BWIR soldiers were virtually kept prisoner in large barracks which still
stand, by their British Commanding Officer who, as a result of colour
prejudice, not only assigned them hard labour but also demeaning labour
such as cleaning toilets for white troops. He also refused to allow day
passes and recreational time.
On December 6, 1918
tensions at Taranto reached a boiling point and the soldiers of the BWIR
who did not understand why they had not been sent home and wanted nothing
more than to go home, mutinied. They attacked their officers and severely
assaulted their unit commanders, sending shock waves throughout the
British Army. After four days the mutineers surrendered and the entire
regiment suffered the humiliation of being disarmed. The mutineers were
severely punished, one was shot, one executed by firing squad and another
sentenced to time in prison. When the last of the BWIR troops were finally
repatriated in September 1919, they were accompanied by three cruisers in
order to prevent unrest once the ships docked at ports in Jamaica,
Barbados and Trinidad. These BWIR soldiers were not given a heroes welcome
because there was simply great fear on behalf of colonials that these
soldiers, well-trained and now more politically aware, could create havoc
for the status quo under which colonial life was governed.
In
Memorial
Today, the Caribbean's
World War I veterans are well remembered in the region, but not in Britain
where a rewriting of history to include the coloured man's point of view
is slowly taking place. In Jamaica memorials were eventually erected
around the island for those 1000 men who lost their lives. These include a
20-foot monument in the yard of the Montego Bay Parish Church, a 20-foot
one in Morant Bay, an obelisk in St. Ann's Bay, another in Kingston at
Wolmer's School, and a chapel at Jamaica College. War memorials were also
hung at Manning's School, Savanna-la-Mar, and Mico Training College,
Kingston. Jamaica's National War Memorial, a 1.5 ton, 29-foot cross, made
of Jamaica stone quarried at Knockalva with panels of marble from Serge
Island, inscribed "To the men of Jamaica who fell in the Great War,
1914-18. Their name liveth forevermore" was erected in 1922 in what was
then called Memorial Square, on Church St. in Kingston. At its November
11th unveiling onlookers crowded the streets, even filling the roofs of
nearby government buildings. Near the monuments stood the relatives of
those men who had fallen in the Great War.
In 1953 this cenotaph
(a monument erected in honour of person(s) buried elsewhere) was moved to
its present location in the National Heroes Park section of what is still
officially called King George VI Memorial Park. It is guarded by soldiers
from the Jamaica Defence Force (JDF) and a ceremonial Changing of the
Guard accompanied by the music of one of the JDF's military bands and one
of The Jamaica Regiment's Corps of Drums takes place the first Sunday of
each month at 9 a.m. Each day from 8 a.m. - 9 a.m. two sentries carry out
their drills that are open to the public. On Remembrance Sunday each
November, wreaths are laid on the memorial to commemorate the gallantry of
those who served.
-Rebecca
Tortello
For information on
the JDF see http://www.jdfmil.org/
War-time notes