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26. Red Flag Riots -
Merivale Street
So many startling events occurred
during Queensland's Red Scare of 1918-19 that one could write
a book about them. And in 1988 I did. After The Red Flag Riots.
A Study of Intolerance was published, among those who contacted
me was an elderly woman who rang to offer thanks for vindicating
her childhood memories of the principal Merivale Street clash
on the night of 24 March 1919. As she recalled, she had been playing
out in this street with a group of other children that evening
when their game was brought to an abrupt halt by a terrifying,
unearthly sound. The children stood transfixed. They had never
heard anything like it before. It was the roar of a rampant mob
of around 7-8000 adults, principally men, rushing across Victoria
Bridge and down Melbourne, Grey and Russell Streets en route to
attack the Russian community headquarters. Their wild cries were
underscored by the thunder of thousands of marching and running
feet; and as this cacophony approached a crescendo, the children
could see the front ranks of the crowd pouring into Merivale Street
as well as lines of foot and mounted police rapidly taking up
their positions to defend the Russian Hall. The children ran away
in terror and later watched or simply listened to the hours of
savage rioting which followed from the comparative safety of their
nearby homes.
Yet years later, when this woman
attempted to tell her offspring and their families what had occurred
that evening long ago they had laughed indulgently at her, saying
that her memory was playing tricks in her old age. How could that
sort of thing have ever happened in Brisbane, they demanded.
As we so often hear, the past is
another country - and an effective passport there must contain
provisos not only about 'attentive disbelief' but also about open-mindedness
towards its undoubted oddity. Merivale Street today is busy traffic-wise,
but otherwise dull and unremarkable - a long , one-way stretch
of asphalt, bordering on part of the South Bank complex and flanked
by largely characterless warehouses. There is absolutely no hint
that anything momentous ever happened here. But that is often
the way with radical history. It inspires oversight and suppression
rather than monuments.
Back in the years of World War
One, however, Merivale Street was a restless centre of urban,
proletarian life, filled with tenements, boarding houses, workers'
cottages and corner stores. It also composed part of the small
South Brisbane Russian ghetto, stretching around into Russell
and Cordelia Streets, as well as southward towards Vulture and
Stanley Streets. The Russian Hall, the focus of the rioting of
24 March, had only recently been leased and occupied, following
a raid by Military Intelligence on the Russian Rooms in the Hardgraves
and Atlas Buildings in Stanley Street during January 1919 which
had confiscated revolutionary literature, banners and a printing
press - and in the process trashed the premises.
The Russian community was habituated to this ongoing kind of harassment.
Indeed the vast majority were no strangers to suffering, having
arrived in Brisbane over the previous decade or so via a tortuous
migration route. Most were ex-political prisoners, escapees from
Czarist gulags in Siberia, following the failed Russian Revolution
of 1905. They had entered Queensland as refugees upon steamers
shipping between Asian and Australian ports. Several thousand
had arrived between 1908 and 1915, invariably to a hostile reception.
Australia's intolerance of refugees goes back a long way! In 1912-13,
Premier Digby Denham, whom we last heard from rejoicing over the
excesses of 'Baton Friday', attempted to have them debarred from
landing by claiming they were 'Asiatics' and having the Immigration
Restriction Act invoked against them.
Around the same time, it was officially
noticed that the heavily politicized Russians, many of whom were
Social Democrats and Social Revolutionaries, had formed a 'socialistic
society' and the Brisbane CIB began keeping close watch on them.
This society, the Union of Russian Workers (URW) was moulded from
an immigrants' self-help club by Tom Sergeev (alias Artem) who,
following upon the February Menshevik Revolution of 1917 overthrowing
the Czar, would return to Russia and become one of the fifteen
members of the Bolshevik Central Committee, which planned the
successful October coup.
During World War One, the URW would
take a forward role in anti-war and anti-conscription struggle
in Queensland. It published its own newspaper which kept changing
its name and format in order to stay ahead of Commonwealth censorship
prosecution. Its club-rooms were a thriving centre of debates,
lectures and social gatherings. In December 1915, for instance,
it organized a grandly named 'Conference of Citizens of the World'
to expose the excesses of militarism. Its library contained more
than 1 000 'precious volumes' of working class literature. As
a group of seven URW members proudly wrote to Labor's Daily Standard
in June 1919:
The Russian worker often refused his dinner and subscribed the
shilling to enrich the library. Sweat and toil built it up!
[The
URW] has sub-organizations and 'self assistance' and 'relief'
to the political prisoners in Siberia and other places
[It]
even had a 'Field Naturalists Club.' Yes, it had a great deal
in which the Australian working class organizations are deficient,
in the manner of self-education
By the time this was written, however,
all lay in ruins: the Russian Hall wrecked and closed down; the
Russian community in disarray from evictions, job dismissals,
rioting and general harassment; their newspaper suppressed; their
leaders and spokespersons in prison, with some facing deportation.
And most of the rest of the local labour movement turning a decidedly
deaf ear to their sufferings.
The Merivale Street riot provided
a climax to a series of clashes which stretched back into the
conscription campaigns of 1916-17. During 1918, these had taken
on a more politically focused character as local fears of the
Bolshevik Revolution connected anti-alien with anti-radical hysteria.
Feeding the mounting frenzy was the local conservative press,
principally the Brisbane Courier and the Daily Mail, depicting
revolutionary Russians as 'Bolshevik swine', guilty of 'repulsive
bestiality, lawlessness and lust'; as well as leaders of the Catholic
and Protestant churches, preaching against the alarming spread
of ungodly, atheistic communism.
Yet the principal provocateurs
of the anti-Bolshevik rioting were a key group of professional
organizers and opinion-makers. Late in 1918, E. H. Macartney,
solicitor, company director and leader of the right-wing Parliamentary
opposition in Queensland, had joined with the millionaire Catholic
merchant, T. C. Beirne and Colonel A.J. Thynne, Macartney's legal
and business partner, in launching the Australian Democratic Union
(ADU) on an exclusive anti-Bolshevik platform. This group had
joined forces with the United Loyalist Executive (ULE), a super,
populist mobilization of over 70 000 Anglophiles, royalists and
anti-socialists from all over Queensland, led by Dr Ernest Sandford-Jackson,
a prominent Brisbane physician of pastoral family background and
a former president of the Queensland Club. This enormous body
of ultra-loyalists merged, in turn, with the expanding, rightward-leaning
returned soldiers' organizations, the Returned Soldiers and Citizens
Political Federation and the smaller, more vibrant Returned Sailors
and Soldiers Imperial League, later known as the RSL.
It was largely these returned men, led by ex-military officers
and augmented by civilians from the ULE, who conducted the violent
street skirmishes against Russians and other leftists which peaked
between 23 and 25 March. Yet the strength, commitment and audacity
of this campaign also owed its momentum to yet another, more covert
source. For, since May 1918, sections of the Commonwealth government
- Military Intelligence, Military Censorship, the Special Intelligence
Bureau (SIB), run by the Governor-General's Private Secretary,
and the Commonwealth Police - had all been playing the dangerous
game of bolstering anti-revolutionary initiatives by secretly
encouraging right-wing vigilante activism. This idea had originated
from the USA where the Federal government had sponsored an American
Protective League of 250 000 citizens to suppress 'disloyalty'
during and after the war, The plan was brought back to Australia
by a former Intelligence operative, R. D. C. Elliott, a businessman
and newspaper proprietor.
It was adopted by the Minister
for Defence, Senator George Pearce and the Acting Prime Minister,
W. A. Watt. After discussions with Herbert Brookes, a business
associate of Elliott and one of the most powerful political figures
in the country, an Australian Protective League (afterwards, the
Australian Defensive League (ADL)) had been launched on 28 May
1918 along similar lines to the US prototype. Its contacts in
the various states were not only Intelligence functionaries, but
also Police Commissioners, the ostensible prime upholders of law
and order.
The ADL's Queensland links were
therefore people like the right-wing historian, Malcolm Ellis
(operating as a mole for the SIB); the Military Censor, J.J. Stable,
English Department lecturer at the University of Queensland; Commandant
G.G. Irving and Captain C.N. Woods of Military Intelligence; Captain
G.N. Ainsworth, a former Antarctic explorer and Queensland head
of the SIB, and Sergeant A.M. Short of the Commonwealth Police.
Queensland's Police Commissioner, the former avid Native Police
Officer and Baton Friday warrior, Frederick Urquhart was kept
appraised of the mounting vigilante mobilization, helping it along
and reporting developments back to Herbert Brookes in Melbourne.
Only a month before the Red Flag riots erupted, he wrote to Brookes
of a visit from Sandford Jackson of the ULE and two unnamed others
who:
came along to ask my advice and
told me
that they would have 60 societies joined up and expressed
a wish that I might take a hand in the matter
They wish to
go pretty far - not only to uphold the constitution by peaceful
means but to have a formidable striking force ready if required
Urquhart wrote not to condemn this
blatant contemplation of lawlessness but to recommend its services
to Brookes and his nascent ADL. On the same day as Urquhart was
fraternizing with the ULE, Constable Hubert Foote of the Commonwealth
Police reported to Captain Woods of Military Intelligence that
this loyalist phalanx was engaged upon 'the supplying of arms
to their members.' Woods told him to mind his own business. 'Our
work is only concerned with the disloyal associations,' he reprimanded
Foote: 'We do not worry about what the Loyal Societies are doing.'
In any case, Woods continued, most of the leaders of 'the Grand
Executive' (ie. the ULE) were already rifle club members and had
no difficulty in finding a gun - 'any man with a few pounds to
spare could easily purchase one' - and if the ULE were so organizing,
he concluded pointedly, 'All the more power to them!'
When these backroom machinations
along the central corridors of power are considered, the wild
rioting in Brisbane just one month later takes on an entirely
different aspect. At street level, it was certainly wild, visceral
and uncontrolled; but behind the scenes, it was encouraged, planned
and specifically targeted. Leading establishment figures like
Macartney, Thynne, Sandford-Jackson, Brookes and others inhabited
a web of loyalism and intrigue which stretched from the office
of the Prime Minister and the Governor-General to the fractious
ranks of returned soldiers and citizen loyalists in the streets,
smarting for a fight.
It had been Herbert Brookes during
1918 who had influenced the Commonwealth Government to ban first
the flying of the green, white and orange Irish Sinn Fein flag
and then the Red flag itself as dangerous symbols of rebellion.
Brookes was a founding member of the Liberal Party and was married
to the eldest daughter of former Prime Minister, Alfred Deakin.
He had the direct ear of Prime Minister Billy Hughes, and knew
how to get his way. Both flags were prohibited under the War Precautions
Act. Yet the Red flag was not simply an emblem of revolution.
Red was the official colour of the Australian labour movement
and, in Queensland, of the Labor Party itself. Over subsequent
months, it became a matter of who on the Left was prepared to
defend the flag and who would meekly submit to the ban.
Although
trade unionists had protected a large red flag flying on the roof
of Brisbane Trades Hall in early August 1918 from an attacking
party of returned soldiers, after the official ban in mid-September,
union officials had simply looked helplessly on as Military Intelligence
officers confiscated the emblem to the cheers of watching loyalists.
A Russian worker named Kritikoff complained to the Daily Standard:
When the red flag was hauled down
there
was not a single voice of protest
If the rank and file do
not realize the real meaning of the Red Flag - that sacred standard
and symbol of solidarity and fraternity of Labor, which in the
present struggle in Russia is protected by Bolsheviks at any price
and by any means - then the time is not ripe yet for its hoisting
on the Trades Hall.
The Russians, however, had their
own humiliations to bear. Sunday Domain meetings of Russians and
other radical leftists were physically attacked; the Russian Consul,
Peter Simonoff was interned; other Russian spokespersons were
officially gagged and on 8 November 1918 - the first anniversary
of 'the overthrow of Capitalism in Russia' - an attempted celebration
in the Centennial Hall was prohibited by the military. When the
thwarted leftists attempted a street meeting instead, this too
was violently dispersed twice by returned soldiers.
By March 1919, the general political
atmosphere throughout Australia was bitter and galvanic. During
this year there would be more than a score of violent demonstrations
and riots in urban centers involving returned men. A small number
would be directed against the authorities or employer groups but
most chose relatively powerless out-groups of so-called 'alien
intruders' and 'disloyal extremists' as their target. In Queensland
alone there were serious clashes in Townsville, Hughenden, Ayr,
Proserpine, Toowoomba, Maryborough, Bundaberg, Rockhampton, Dalby
and Charleville; but the violent events in Brisbane cast virtually
everything else of a conflictful nature around Australia into
the shade.
The fuse that lit the powder-keg
was supplied by a small, civilliberties march of 3-500 leftists,
Russians included, fromTrades Hall on Sunday afternoon, 23 March.
The march was planned to protest the continuation of the draconic
War Precautions Act in peacetime; and when the Russians marching
displayed several prohibited red flags as an act of civil disobedience,
it was unsuccessfully attacked by a small number of foot and mounted
police en route to the Domain. The Russians' act of defiance was
just the trigger that the well primed loyalist machine had been
awaiting. Within hours, thousands of returned soldiers and others
had been alerted to attack the regular Sunday meeting of the One
Big Union Propaganda League situated at North Quay. The large
speakers' platform was overturned and thrown into the river and
many radicals injured in the melee. Herman Bykov, a Russian speaker,
was beaten, kicked and stabbed.
After making short work of this
gathering, the ex-soldiers next descended upon the Merivale Street
Russian Hall. Around sixty Russians, forewarned of this approach
by their leader A. M. Zuzenko, however, stood armed and ready
to defend their premises. As the loyalist mob approached, their
mad rush was halted and dispersed by revolver shots fired over
their heads. The conservative press of the following day was filled
with provocative headlines like 'EXTREMISTS LOOSE' (meaning, of
course, radicals not loyalists), 'BOLSHEVIK OUTBREAK', 'QUEEN
ST RUSSIANISED' and 'POLICE AND SOLDIERS BADLY MAULED'; and its
press accounts read as an open incitement to further rebellion.
The clamorous 'sea' of up to 8,000
demonstrators who packed North Quay that evening, spilling back
into Queen and William Streets, did not gather there simply to
hear long-winded speeches. The site itself was not a conventional
one for large-scale political rallies but was chosen rather for
its proximity to Victoria Bridge, as this represented the only
way across the river to attack the Russian quarter once more.
The vast crowd was literally screaming for blood, and talk of
arson and lynching was rife.
Flying a large Australian flag
at their head, the huge concourse moved rapidly across the bridge
soon after the speeches had begun, some singing the wartime recruiting
anthem, 'Australia Will Be There' and, more chillingly, 'Keep
the Home Fires Burning.' Others were bellowing and chanting, 'Burn
them out!
Hang them!' In Merivale Street, they were met -
not this time by Russian weaponry - but by two lines of police,
drawn up in military formation - rifles loaded with ball cartridge
and bayonets fixed. These had been ordered out after the Labor
Cabinet had learned that, at RSL meetings that day, veterans were
advised to bring whatever weaponry they had to the evening rally.
It was also claimed that leaders of the ULE had armed a force
of forty returned men with rifles to pick off targets in the Russian
sector.
As the maddened crowd pushed onto
the bayonet line, they were attacked from behind by ten mounted
police, wielding riding crops. In response, enraged loyalists
began tearing hundreds of palings off surrounding fences to defend
themselves. Gunshots rang out, as rocks, bricks and bottles flew
through the air. Seven of the troopers were seriously injured,
as were several of their horses, one of which, hit nine times
by bullets, had subsequently to be destroyed.
With the mounted police line effectively
broken, groups of soldiers attempted to penetrate the wavering
police cordons in order to reach the Hall. Missiles hurled over
the constable's heads effectively reduced the premises to a wreck.
The pungent fumes of alcohol and gunpowder hung over the pandemonium
and the evening air was peppered with the staccato blasts of gunshots
and home-made 'jam tin' bombs, the shrill cries of frightened
and wounded animals, the clatter of hooves on asphalt, the thunder
of running feet, the crack of whips, breaking glass, the whack
and thud of palings and rifle butts, and the yells, groans and
curses of the men as they were stabbed by bayonets or felled by
flying debris. This continued for at least another two hours until
exhaustion and satiation set in. Then a deputation, led by the
Queensland Secretary of the RSL, was actually taken on a tour
of the wrecked Russian premises by police to ensure that no Bolsheviks
were hiding under any beds! Tenements, homes and shops were afterwards
raided and looted.
Nineteen police had been seriously
injured in the disturbance as well as an uncounted number of rioters.
One of the constables calculated that 'over a hundred' had been
pierced by bayonets during the Diggers' 'bonzer stunt.' He had
'prodded six' himself, he wrote to his brother in Cloncurry. Perhaps
the most ironic casualty was Commissioner Urquhart, stabbed deeply
in the right side of his chest by Inspector Ferguson, who was
using his rifle-butt to flatten demonstrators. Perhaps it had
required the point of a bayonet to drive home at last to the Police
Commissioner the folly of covertly inciting right-wing vigilantism.
Both the Brisbane Courier and
the Daily Standard reported the following day that something quite
exceptional had happened. Yet whereas the Standard viewed the
rioting as 'one of the maddest and most disgraceful scenes ever
witnessed in any part of Australia', the Courier exulted in its
'wild and thrilling' magnificence: 'Nothing
approaching
it
had ever been witnessed in Brisbane before.' From London,
Prime Minister Hughes expressed unabashed delight at hearing of
how the soldiers had dealt with the Bolsheviks of Brisbane.
The Merivale street riot, sensational
and climactic as it was, was unfortunately not the end of the
matter. In fact, it seemed to open a Pandora's box of more civil
disturbance over subsequent days as rioting spread across the
inner-city area. Bowman House, the Daily Standard building, was
attacked by a large mob and known Brisbane leftist were assaulted
in the streets. Russians too were individually beaten up by avenging
gangs as a general social and economic boycott was instituted
against them. One Russian resident wrote in early April:
Yes, it was a formal pogrom,
exactly like the pogroms of Jews organized during the reign
of the Czar
All the Russians are in a state of panic. They
are being dismissed everywhere from work.. The soldiers thrash
the Russians in the streets
Another stated, 'Many Russians
were beaten
There is danger
on every step and corner.'
Instead of punishing the rioters
or their instigators, however, Commonwealth and State Authorities
now colluded in turning punitively on the Russians and their left-wing
supporters who had been the target of public attack. The decision
of a State Labor Government, under the leadership of E.G Theodore,
to imprison fifteen men for a total period of seven years simply
for displaying red flags must stand as one of the more shameful
actions in the Queensland Labor Party's history. The same Government
also offered its police forces and its lockups to cooperate with
the Commonwealth in the deportation without trial of eleven Russians,
ostensibly involved with Bolshevik activities in Australia. Lists
were compiled for the expulsion of sixty more, but this was thwarted
by British Authorities. For more than two months after the riots,
enormous loyalist rallies, addressed by some of Brisbane's most
respected citizens, decried virtually anything 'foreign' or radical
in their midst; several thousand returned soldiers organized a
private 'Army to Fight Bolshevism' at the Exhibition Grounds;
and, in the countryside, Edward Lord and others again mobilized
their Legion of Frontiersmen, last seen in 1912, to thwart a possible
Bolshevik uprising in the capital.
The next time you happen to be
in Merivale Street, South Brisbane, near its Russell Street intersection,
close your eyes for a moment and listen for echoes of this time
of extraordinary discord - a time when the mere sight of the colour
'red' transformed seemingly ordinary citizens into raging bulls
and xenophobia ran riot against a largely manufactured enemy.
Raymond Evans.
click
here for Dan O'neill's launch speech
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