Collection related to Aboriginal Australian servicemen who volunteered from Lake Tyers, Victoria (known as Bung Yarnda by the local Gunai/ Kurnai community) during the Second World War.

Place Oceania: Australia, Victoria, Wangaratta
Accession Number P02140.001
Collection type Photograph
Object type Black & white - Film copy negative
Place made Australia: Victoria, Wangaratta
Date made December 1940
Conflict Second World War, 1939-1945
Copyright

Item copyright: Copyright expired - public domain

Public Domain Mark This item is in the Public Domain

Description

8 year old Shirley Anderson chatting to an Aboriginal Australian serviceman during a visit to the showground at Wangaratta, Victoria. The guard is a one of the many men who volunteered from Lake Tyers Station, known as Bung Yarnda, by the local Gunai/ Kurnai community, in Eastern Victoria. The men volunteered together, either on the 15 June 1940 or the 14 and 25 July 1940. The platoon was based at No. 9 Camp in Wangaratta from September 1940 until February 1941, serving with the 2/14 Training Battalion (October) and 2/21 Training Battalion (November-February 1941) before being transferred to 6th Training Battalion – Darley Military Camp (near Bacchus Marsh) in February 1941. During training, the men were used for publicity campaigns in newspapers and magazines, which wrote of their strength and athleticism, with one local newspaper touting them as “Dinkum Australians”. Despite positive public opinion and media, the military held the stance that only Aboriginal men of mostly European background could enlist and created strict policies preventing Indigenous enlistment. In 1940, the Defence Committee stated that Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples enlistment in either the Army or the Navy was “neither necessary nor desirable.” As a result, all of these men were discharged on 22 March 1941, their records stating “Services no longer required: not due to misconduct or discreditable service”.