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The '''Battle of Manners Street''' refers to a riot between ] servicemen and ] servicemen and civilians outside the Allied Services Club in Manners Street, ], in 1943, over American servicemen demanding that the club ban any ] people from entering.<ref name= "McLintock p. ">{{harvnb|McLintock|2009|p=}}</ref> The club was a social centre, open to all military personnel regardless of ethnicity or sex. The '''Battle of Manners Street''' refers to a riot between ] servicemen and ] servicemen and civilians outside the Allied Services Club in Manners Street, ], in 1943, over racist American servicemen demanding that the club ban any ] people from entering.<ref name= "McLintock p. ">{{harvnb|McLintock|2009|p=}}</ref> The club was a social centre, open to all military personnel regardless of ethnicity or sex.


==Background== ==Background==

Revision as of 09:11, 8 December 2021

Battle of Manners Street
Date3 April 1943
LocationManners Street, Wellington, New Zealand
41°17′25″S 174°46′33″E / 41.290381°S 174.775743°E / -41.290381; 174.775743
Caused byU.S. Army soldiers refusal to allow entrance of New Zealand Army Māori soldiers to the Allied Services Club
MethodsRioting, race riots, protests, looting, attacks
Parties
United States Army soldiers New Zealand Army soldiers
Number
~500 ~500
Casualties
Death(s)0 confirmed, 2 possible Americans
InjuriesDozens in both sides
Arrested1 New Zealand serviceman
NZ Army minute describing the incident as a simple brawl between merchant seamen and servicemen

The Battle of Manners Street refers to a riot between American servicemen and New Zealand servicemen and civilians outside the Allied Services Club in Manners Street, Wellington, in 1943, over racist American servicemen demanding that the club ban any Māori people from entering. The club was a social centre, open to all military personnel regardless of ethnicity or sex.

Background

This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (November 2021)

In 1942–44 there were anywhere between 15,000 and 45,000 American servicemen stationed in New Zealand, most camped around major urban centres of the country. While New Zealand was then an isolated country with 1.6 million inhabitants, many of the American servicemen were coming from major American urban centres to New Zealand.

Riot

Some American servicemen in the Services Club objected to Māori soldiers also using the Club, and on 3 April 1943 began stopping Māori soldiers from entering. Many New Zealand soldiers in the area, both white (Pākehā) and Māori, combined in opposition. The stand-off escalated when Americans took off their belts to attack those who wanted to let the Māori in. Fights broke out and at one point at least a thousand servicemen, as well as several hundreds of civilians, were involved in the subsequent fracas, which was broken up by civil and military police. The major brawl lasted from 6 pm to 8 pm, with some brawls lasting for perhaps another two hours. Dozens of people were injured. The fighting spread to the ANA (Army, Navy and Air Force) Club in Willis Street and to Cuba Street. At the time, hotel bars closed at 6 pm, the six o'clock swill, and inebriated patrons were then ejected into the streets.

News of the riot was censored at the time, hence much of the mythology about the event, including the claim that two Americans were killed remain hard to verify. Twenty years after the riot, the finding of the Court of Inquiry was released.

Other riots

Around the same time as the Battle of Manners Street a similar riot between American and New Zealand service men was taking place in Auckland and one month later during the Mayfair Cabaret, in Cuba Street, Wellington, on 12 May 1945 another riot took place. Later in October a group of American servicemen and Maori civilians came to blows at Ōtaki in October 1943.

See also

Bibliography

Notes

  1. ^ McLintock 2009
  2. ^ Ministry for Culture and Heritage 2014
  3. Banning 1988, p. 40
  4. ^ Francis 2011
  5. Hunt 2015

References

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