Queensland State Archives | The Queensland home front during the First World War

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The Queensland home front during the First World War

It would not be unreasonable to imagine that, as Australian soldiers marched off to war, they left behind them a home front which was politically homogeneous and uniformly resolute in its support of the troops it was sending to war. Yet this was not the case and Queensland in particular was in a state of political flux. With an increasingly active and unionised workforce, vocal and radical anti-war groups, and a change of government in 1915, the people of Queensland struggled to find a partisan approach towards the war. Despite these issues, the Queensland Government had a duty to support the war effort, to keep social conflict to a minimum, to provide reasonable living and working conditions for its citizens, and to look to the welfare of returned soldiers and families of soldiers who did not return.

As the most visible public servants across the state, the Queensland Police were intimately involved in government actions throughout the war. Additional duties were thrust upon them, even as the numbers decreased due to officers enlisting in the armed forces. These duties included enforcing some of the provisions of the National Security Regulations, and the War Precautions (Alien Registrations) Regulations. Police were required to maintain the internal security of the state and to administer support to the war effort and to recruitment. One of their earliest tasks was tracking members of the British Reserve Forces in Australia to notify them of their call-up on the outbreak of war. Foreign-born reservists of combatant counties were considered to be prisoners of war, and although they were paroled to move freely within the community, they had to regularly report to police.

Anti-German feeling led to a Cabinet direction in 1916 that persons of German or Austrian birth were not to be employed in the public service if there were British nationals available for the task. The 65 German-born Queensland police officers were not dismissed, though they were scrutinised by their senior officers. Throughout the war Queensland police were required to maintain secret surveillance on members of the Turkish, Syrian, Bulgarian, Greek, and Italian communities across the state. At the behest of the Queensland War Council, police also provided assessments of the moral character of soldiers' wives who were receiving assistance.

The Queensland War Council and subsequent Local War Council Committees were established in 1915 principally to help recruit and provide support for returned soldiers and for the families of those who were disabled or killed in war. The Queensland War Council Chairperson was the Premier of Queensland. The council was the primary force in the repatriation of Queensland soldiers until the Federal Government established a similar entity in early 1918. In the early part of the war the council supported the establishment of the Anzac cottages and the tuberculosis home schemes. The Queensland Government's Discharged Soldiers Settlement Act 1917 provided land and financial assistance for which all returned servicemen could apply. Another measure to support returned servicemen was the preferential employment scheme adopted by the Public Service Board.

Queensland did not require women to take employment in war industries as they had in Britain, and full-time employment for women did not significantly increase. Relatively small numbers of women were accepted as military nurses, and only after prolonged lobbying were the Voluntary Aid Detachments of the Red Cross able to send units to overseas hospitals. It was in voluntary organisations that women made their direct and most significant contributions to the war effort. These organisations took on the responsibility of providing comforts for sick and wounded soldiers here and abroad, and providing frontline troops with morale-building gifts and articles of clothing. The Red Cross Society began work almost immediately upon the declaration of war. From initial knitting circles, the scope of Red Cross support expanded rapidly to include teaching handcrafts to convalescent soldiers, mending hospital clothes and providing food and other necessary supplies to local and overseas military hospitals. So strong was the mobilisation of Red Cross 'kitchen ladies' that in addition to providing food for the Rosemount, Kangaroo Point and Lytton military hospitals, they were also able to supplement food to asylums, orphanages, and public hospitals. Other voluntary organisations - the National Council of Women (which was an amalgam of 41 other societies), the Queensland Soldier's Comfort Fund, the Babies of the Allies Clothing Society, the Women's Mutual Service Club, the Soldier's Pastime Club, Sailor's and Soldiers Residential Club, and the Christmas Box Fund to name but a few - provided similar services. The social and economic value of such voluntary work was considerable.

Queensland women also exercised their right to vote during the war years. The Military Service Referendum Act 1916 and the War Precautions (Military Service Referendum) Regulations 1917 were contentious, the debate concerning conscription dividing Australian society on religious and political grounds. Women rose to their feet to speak publicly in support or against the proposals. Both attempts to conscript men for military service were defeated. At the height of the second conscription referendum, the Queensland Government, which had a stated anti-conscription position, took the extraordinary step of stationing armed police on the Government Printing Office to prevent the Commonwealth Government censoring anti-conscription material.

Queensland society changed considerably during the war years. The strains on the local economy prompted the government to embrace the acquisition of state-owned industries in an effort to keep living standards affordable. This social experiment also divided the population, and, as the war drew to a conclusion, the state was no less polarised by political ideology. There was however, and arguably still is, an empathy shared for the survivors of Queensland's 57,705 enlistees, for those who were killed, and for their families. This has manifested itself in many ways - in the erection of war memorials in many towns across the state, in the Anzac Day ceremonies that have been held annually for almost 100 years, and in the 2014 Anzac Centenary.

Brian Rough
January 2014

References from Queensland State Archives

  • Queensland Local War Council Committees, c 1 January 1915 - 31 December 1919. Queensland State Archives Digital Image ID 24651
  • Circular from the Hon Secretary of the Queensland Recruiting Sub-committee to the Commissioner of Police requesting the facilitation of a recruiting address for employees, 27 October 1915. Queensland State Archives Digital Image ID 25147
  • Correspondence between the Brisbane Electorate Recruiting Committee and the Police Department including a refusal to permit a proposed procession of women to follow the ordinary procession on 8-Hour Day, 3 May 1917 - 21 May 1917. Queensland State Archives Digital Image ID 25146
  • Circular from the Commissioner of Police requesting information about Greeks resident in Queensland, 21 June 1916. Queensland State Archives Digital Image ID 25114

Other sources

  • Evans, R, Loyalty and Disloyalty, Allen and Unwin, Sydney, 1987
  • Goodman, R, Voluntary Aid detachments, Booroolong Publications, Brisbane, 1991
  • Johnston, W R, The Long Blue Line, Booroolong Publications, Brisbane, 1992
  • Brisbane City Council, Brisbane 150 Stories 1859-2009, Brisbane City Council, Brisbane, 2009

Public records held at Queensland State Archives relating to life on the home front in Queensland during the First World War

Correspondence

  • Correspondence and papers re Great War, 1914 – 1918, 1 October 1914 - 31 May 1915. Includes: sheet music for song "Cubs of Empire". Also includes lists of names and addresses of reinforcements. Queensland State Archives Item ID 861785
  • Correspondence and papers on various matters re the Great War, World War I, 1914 - 1918, c 1 January 1914 - 31 December 1922. Queensland State Archives Item ID 18128
  • Home Secretary's Office general correspondence, c 1 January 1915 - 31 December 1915. Queensland State Archives Item ID 847786
  • European war: marriage of naturalised women of enemy origin to alien enemies, c 1 January 1918 - 31 December 1918. Queensland State Archives Item ID 319354

Digitised content

  • Minute Book No. 2 - Queensland War Council, 9 October 1916 - 29 January 1917. Queensland State Archives Digital Image ID 24596
  • Minute Book No. 3 - Queensland War Council, 10 February 1917 - 14 May 1917. Queensland State Archives Digital Image ID 24597
  • Recommendation that a proclamation be issued under "The Control of Trade Act 1914" regarding the export of butter from Queensland, 7 July 1915. Queensland State Archives Digital Image ID 25133
  • Letter to Mr E G Theodore, MLA from J C Lamont regarding the closure of Irvinebank Co works at Koorboora, 12 August 1914. Queensland State Archives Digital Image ID 24867
  • Letter from Queensland Patriotic Fund requesting police to make enquiries about a deceased soldier's wife and the follow-up reports, 9 January 1919 - 30 January 1919. Queensland State Archives Digital Image ID 25156
  • Correspondence regarding the status of naturalised Germans and Austrians having to report to police on a weekly basis, 12 October 1914 - 6 November 1914. Queensland State Archives Digital Image ID 25098
  • Letter from Inspector McGrath, Cairns, to the Commissioner of Police, Brisbane, attaching a list of German Reservists and Subjects with a change of address, October 1914. Queensland State Archives Digital Image ID 20744
  • Correspondence re Nurses seeking out information about joining and volunteering for active service, 7 April 1915 - 29 September 1915. Queensland State Archives Digital Image ID 25104

Related resources

Additional records relating to life on the home front in Queensland during the First World War can be located in the ArchivesSearch catalogue or in Image Queensland.

The accompanying online exhibition - On the Home Front in Queensland - of selected records from the collection is available to view in Image Queensland.



Last updated 10 January 2014
Queensland State Archives Digital Image ID 24570: Correspondence relating to the requisition of sea vessels for use in the war effort, 29 September - 6 November 1914
​Queensland State Archives Digital Image ID 24570: Correspondence relating to the requisition of sea vessels for use in the war effort, 29 September - 6 November 1914