“L’Union Fait La Force: Black Soldiers in the Great War” in First World War Studies, 9 (2)
Though the Great War is imagined and discussed as a European conflagration, an epic showdown between white Europeans, the simple fact remains that from the first, European battlefields mirrored the multiracial makeup of the empires doing battle. The Allies depended most heavily on their black soldiers, both as combatants and as labourers, even if it meant pressing these recruits into service at the end of a gun. And when the United States finally joined the war in 1917, it too leaned extensively on African Americans, this despite resistance from many white Southerners. An added consequence of the use of black soldiers in Europe – nearly one million of them from Canada, the Caribbean, Africa and the United States – were reinvigorated campaigns for more meaningful citizenship rights for blacks on the homefront, including calls for decolonization and an end to segregation. This paper examines how Allied nations enlisted and deployed black soldiers in Europe. With so many black men from so many different places in Great Britain, Belgium and France for the first time, the Black Atlantic world converged in Europe during its greatest crisis in civilisation. Drawn into the conflict by a desperate plea to save democracy, black soldiers ended the war determined to make real democracy for themselves.
Saje Mathieu is an associate professor in the Department of History at the University of Minnesota and a Faculty Fellow at the Warren Centre for Studies in American History at Harvard University. Mathieu specializes in twentieth century American and African American history, with a focus on immigration, globalization, race, war, and political resistance.
Other publications from this author include:
- “Great Expectations: African Americans and the Great War” in American Quarterly, 63 (2) (2011)
- “The Black Experience in Canada Revisited” in Migrants and Migration in Modern North America: Cross-Border Life Courses, Labor Markets, and Politics in Canada, the Caribbean, Mexico, and the United States, 399-421 (2011)
- North of the Color Line: Migration and Black Resistance in Canada, 1870-1955 (2010)
- “The Great Migration Reconsidered” in Magazine of History, 23 (4) (2009)
- “North of the Color Line: Sleeping Car Porters and the Battle Against Jim Crow on Canadian Rails, 1880-1920” in Labour/Le Travail 47, 9-42 (2001)