Douglas Grant (author)
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Douglas Grant (1885 – 4 December 1951) was an
Aboriginal Australian Aboriginal Australians are the various Indigenous peoples of the Australian mainland and many of its islands, such as Tasmania, Fraser Island, Hinchinbrook Island, the Tiwi Islands, and Groote Eylandt, but excluding the Torres Strait Islands ...
soldier, draughtsman, public servant, journalist, public speaker, and factory worker. During
World War I World War I (28 July 1914 11 November 1918), often abbreviated as WWI, was one of the deadliest global conflicts in history. Belligerents included much of Europe, the Russian Empire, the United States, and the Ottoman Empire, with fightin ...
, he was captured by the
German army The German Army (, "army") is the land component of the armed forces of Germany. The present-day German Army was founded in 1955 as part of the newly formed West German ''Bundeswehr'' together with the ''Marine'' (German Navy) and the ''Luftwaf ...
and held as a
prisoner of war A prisoner of war (POW) is a person who is held captive by a belligerent power during or immediately after an armed conflict. The earliest recorded usage of the phrase "prisoner of war" dates back to 1610. Belligerents hold prisoners of wa ...
at Wittenberg, and later at Wünsdorf, Zossen, near Berlin.


Early life and career

Grant was born around 1885 into the rainforest Indigenous Nations of north Queensland near
Malanda Malanda is a rural town and locality in the Tablelands Region, Queensland, Australia. In the , the locality of Malanda had a population of 1,985 people. The economy is based upon agriculture (particularly dairy) and tourism. Geography Malan ...
on the Atherton Tablelands. Grant's repatriation file (Service Number 6020) records his birth as 5 January 1887. In 1887, as an infant orphaned as a result of a massacre of Aboriginal people by colonial police during the Australian Frontier Wars, he was 'rescued' by taxidermists Robert Grant and E.J. Cairn, who were in the region on a collecting expedition for the Australian Museum. The Aboriginal child was later fostered and renamed Douglas by Robert Grant and his wife Elizabeth. Then, contrary to the laws of the time they smuggled him aboard the steamer ship 'Barcoo' from Cairns, Queensland, across state jurisdictions and eventually to Lithgow, New South Wales. There, he lived with the extended Grant family until Robert and Elizabeth moved, together with their son Henry, to another Scottish diaspora community in the Sydney suburb of
Annandale, New South Wales Annandale is a suburb in the Inner West of Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. Annandale is located within 5 kilometres west of the Sydney central business district and is part of the local government area of the Inner West Counc ...
. Grant attende
Annandale public school
and trained as a draughtsman, working for
Mort's Dock Mort's Dock is a former dry dock, slipway, and shipyard in Balmain, New South Wales, Australia. It was the first dry dock in Australia, opening for business in 1855 and closing more than a century later in 1959. The site is now parkland. Histor ...
& Engineering in Sydney. In 1913, he was employed as a
wool classer Wool classing is the production of uniform, predictable, low-risk lines of wool, carried out by examining the characteristics of the wool in its raw state and classing (grading) it accordingly. Wool classing is done by a wool classer. Basis for ...
at Belltrees, near Scone, New South Wales. It was from Scone that he enlisted to serve in World War One, and numerous newspaper articles of the time celebrated his enlistment by describing his educational attainments, Scottish cultural skills, and skin colour:
"a man of high attainments, with a great love for Shakespeare and poetry generally. He is an artist, and is said to play the bagpipes as well as any Scot."


World War One

Grant first joined the
Australian Army The Australian Army is the principal Army, land warfare force of Australia, a part of the Australian Defence Force (ADF) along with the Royal Australian Navy and the Royal Australian Air Force. The Army is commanded by the Chief of Army (Austral ...
at Scone on 13 January 1916. Grant completed training with the 34th Battalion, but was discharged because indigenous people were officially barred from military service. However, as the number of possible recruits dwindled, such legal barriers were increasingly ignored by recruiters. Grant re-enlisted in August 1916 and was sent to France to join the 13th Battalion. Douglas Grant was one of more than 1,000 Indigenous men who served in World War I. On 11 April 1917, during the
First Battle of Bullecourt Bullecourt () is a commune in the Pas-de-Calais department in the Hauts-de-France region in France. Geography Bullecourt lies on the Upper Cretaceous plain of Artois between Arras and Bapaume and east of the A1 motorway. Thisatellite photograp ...
, Grant was wounded and captured. He was first sent to Wittenberg, where POWs received very small amounts of rations. Douglas Grant's POW colleague Harry Adams later remembered their experience in the Wittenberg camp, also recalling Grant's wit and sense of humour:
"We had been here about three or four months. We weren't getting very much food, so Doug with others he used to go sick with the idea of getting the doctor to declare them unfit for further laborious work around the front. The doctor, on examining him ouglassaid 'You don't look sick!' Doug said, 'What have I got to do – turn white ... before you can tell whether I'm sick or not?'''''Thompson, John, and Brian Hungerford. 1957. “The Story of Douglas Grant.” ABC Radio Feature, Script, Box c21, NAA: SP1297/2, National Archives of Australia, Canberra.''''
While at Wittenberg Grant was noticed by social scientists from th
Royal Prussian Phonographic Commission
which had been established by the psychologist and musicologist
Carl Stumpf Carl Stumpf (; 21 April 1848 – 25 December 1936) was a German philosopher, psychologist and musicologist. He is noted for founding the Berlin School of Experimental Psychology. He studied with Franz Brentano at the University of Würzburg bef ...
, and by linguist Wilhelm Doegen, to study the languages and culture of the men held captive as German
prisoners of war A prisoner of war (POW) is a person who is held Captivity, captive by a belligerent power during or immediately after an armed conflict. The earliest recorded usage of the phrase "prisoner of war" dates back to 1610. Belligerents hold priso ...
. Grant was transferred to the Wünsdorf POW camp and like many of the colonial soldiers from the British and French empires there, he became an object of study as part of this major research project. German doctors, scientists, anthropologists and artists sought to examine and document him. One German scientist argued that the POW camps were "a völkerschau eople showwithout comparison", and Grant later told his war colleague Roy Kinghorne that "he was measured all over, and upside down and inside out". However, Grant was given some favour within the camp and allowed a certain level of freedom within it. The German sculptor Rudolf Marcuse modelled Grant's bust in bronze, and this significant work was onl
re-discovered by researchers
in 2015. During his incarceration (April 1917 to December 1918), Grant became president of the British Help Committee (The Red Cross) and organised food parcels and medical supplies for the large number of Indian and African prisoners held at the
Halbmondlager The (known in English as the "Half Moon Camp") was a prisoner-of-war camp in Wünsdorf (now part of Zossen), Germany, during the First World War. The camp housed between 4,000 and 5,000 Muslim prisoners of war who had fought for the Allied s ...
prisoner-of-war camp A prisoner-of-war camp (often abbreviated as POW camp) is a site for the containment of enemy fighters captured by a belligerent power in time of war. There are significant differences among POW camps, internment camps, and military prisons. P ...
for coloured soldiers, near Zossen. Grant wrote on behalf of his fellow prisoners to agencies such as the British Help Committee, the Invalid Comfort Fund for Prisoners of War, the British Red Cross and the Merchant Seaman's Help Society. The Wünsdorf POW camp is also significant as the site chosen by Max von Oppenheim and the ''Nachrichtenstelle für den Orient'' ( German Intelligence Bureau for the East) to persuade Muslim prisoners of war — men who had been fighting for the British and French — to change sides and join the Ottoman-German Alliance. As part of this scheme the Intelligence Bureau for the East built the first mosque on German soil at Wünsdorf in 1915. A number of the men selected as part of this 'Jihad' scheme would have been known to Douglas Grant, who was given the task of supporting the wellbeing of British colonial troops within his role as President of the British Help Committee. On 22 December 1918, Grant was repatriated from Germany to England. He took the opportunity to visit his adoptive fathers' family in Scotland. Grant was able to mimic a Scottish accent and attracted much attention in Scotland. In 1919 he sailed back to Australia on the troopship ''Medic'' and arrived in Sydney on 12 June. He was discharged from service on 9 July and returned to civilian life, and to his former position as a draughtsman at Mort's Dock.


Post-war and death

Not long after returning to Sydney, Grant left Mort's Dock and moved to Lithgow, working as a labourer at a paper products factory and then at the
Lithgow Small Arms Factory The Lithgow Small Arms Factory, or Lithgow Arms, is an Australian small arms manufacturing factory located in the town of Lithgow, New South Wales. It was created by the Australian Government in 1912 to ease reliance on the British for the sup ...
. Here Grant also became Secretary of the Lithgow Returned and Services League (RSL), and lobbied government to keep returned soldiers employed. Despite Grant's war heroism and position within the RSL he was still subjected to acts of racism while working at the Small Arms Factory, and a colleague later recalled that Grant had to 'spit on his tools to make sure no-one had taken a blow-torch to them' while he was away from his work-station. During the 1920s, while living in both Lithgow and Sydney, Grant was also an active member of the Australian Museum (Sydney) fraternity and would often perform Scottish songs at the 'museum smokos' according to the museum's ''Curator of Fishes''
Gilbert Percy Whitley Gilbert Percy Whitley (9 June 1903 – 18 July 1975) was a British-born Australian ichthyologist and malacologist who was Curator of Fishes at the Australian Museum in Sydney for about 40 years. He was born at Swaythling, Southampton, England, an ...
. (His father Robert Grant was a taxidermist at the museum and, after his retirement in 1918, was succeeded by Douglas' foster brother.) Grant became a sought-after public speaker, giving lectures on numerous subjects including the experience of war, Aboriginal rights, and the significant role of women in society. Beyond his public appearances Grant was admired by many as a raconteur, a bagpipe player, and as a reciter of the poetry of Robert Burns and numerous Australian poets including Henry Lawson with who
he had a friendship
A significant piece of journalism by Grant was published in a major Sydney newspaper, the ''Sunday Pictorial'', on February 3 1929. The article, titled ''A Call for Justice,'' and argued that the 1928
Coniston Massacre The Coniston massacre, which took place in the region around the Coniston cattle station in the then Territory of Central Australia (now the Northern Territory) from 14 August to 18 October 1928, was the last known officially sanctioned massa ...
represented a 'wake-up call' for all Australians and 'a great unparalleled crime'. Grant wrote: 'What can we do and what are we doing for the first inhabitants, the rightful owners of this land which was usurped and portioned as your heritage, the outcome of war and bloodshed? The government has to awaken and take measures to ensure the lives of the remnants of Australia’s original inhabitants'. Throughout his wartime experience and during his public speaking work and advocacy for indigenous rights during the 1920s, Douglas Grant had achieved a level of fame that ensured that the press noted his activist activities. For example, when the
Condobolin Condobolin is a town in the west of the Central West region of New South Wales, Australia, on the Lachlan River. At the , Condobolin had a population of 3,486. History Prior to European settlement, the area was inhabited by the Wiradjuri pe ...
Football Club refused to play against an Aboriginal football team, Grant's protest was printed by several newspapers and Grant wa
quoted in several
saying: 'the colour line was never drawn in the trenches uring WW1. Grant continued this public service advocacy and media work throughout his life, and much later, while living in Lithgow, he was also a regular guest on radio 2LT Lithgow's ''Diggers Show''. A number of commentators, such as th
historian John Maynard
have described Grant's effort to establish connections between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal communities as that of a cultural 'bridge-builder'. In 1931, the cumulative effects of racial prejudices, exacerbated by his Grant suffering from " shell shock" (probably
post-traumatic stress disorder Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a mental and behavioral disorder that can develop because of exposure to a traumatic event, such as sexual assault, warfare, traffic collisions, child abuse, domestic violence, or other threats on ...
), and a decade of insecure work in Sydney, Lithgow, other parts of rural NSW and Victoria, together with the stresses of being in the public eye, resulted in him being admitted to the military wing (Ward B) of Callan Park Mental Hospital. The racism of the time is epitomised in a popular story published in the Sydney tabloid newspaper Smith's Weekly, that reads like an obituary, and describes Grant's admission into Callan Park in 1931 under the title ''The Bitter Tragedy of Douglas Grant''. Grant remained at Callan Park Hospital from 1931 until 1939, during which time he designed and built
replica of the Sydney Harbour Bridge
as a memorial to the ‘fallen’ of WW1 that is still standing today. He also engaged in sporting activities such as golf and bowls, ran errands, and spent occasional afternoons drinking in the nearby Balmain and Rozelle pubs, much to the annoyance of his nurses. In 1939 he was released back into the community. In his later years, Grant travelled between relatives and friends living in Sydney, Lithgow, and in the small townships along the coast south of Sydney, often staying in Helensburgh. There, relatives such as June Madge remembered him as an interesting and much loved presence within their households although noting that Grant was subject to racism in the wider community.''Murray, Tom. 2017. “Douglas Grant: The Skin of Others.” ABC Radio National Earshot broadcast, August 8. See: http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/earshot/douglas-grant:-the-skin-ofothers/8742008.'' Grant also lived with former WW1 colleagues such a
Peter Holburn
and also lived at the
Salvation Army Salvation (from Latin: ''salvatio'', from ''salva'', 'safe, saved') is the state of being saved or protected from harm or a dire situation. In religion and theology, ''salvation'' generally refers to the deliverance of the soul from sin and its c ...
's old men's quarters at
Dee Why, New South Wales Dee Why is a coastal suburb of northern Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia, 18 kilometres north-east of the Sydney central business district. It is the administrative centre of the local government area of Northern Beaches ...
. After 1950 Grant lived at the Bare Island War Veteran's Home in La Perouse, New South Wales. It is not known if Grant associated with the Aboriginal community at La Perouse. Grant died in
Prince Henry Hospital The Prince Henry Hospital site, formerly known as the Prince Henry Hospital, Sydney, is a heritage-listed former teaching hospital and infectious diseases hospital and now University of New South Wales, UNSW teaching hospital and rehabilitatio ...
, Little Bay, on 4 December 1951. His cause of death was a
subarachnoid hemorrhage Subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) is bleeding into the subarachnoid space—the area between the arachnoid membrane and the pia mater surrounding the brain. Symptoms may include a severe headache of rapid onset, vomiting, decreased level of consci ...
. He is buried at
Botany Cemetery Eastern Suburbs Memorial Park, Eastern Suburbs Crematorium and Botany General Cemetery (aka Botany Cemetery), is a cemetery and crematorium on Bunnerong Road in Matraville, New South Wales, in the eastern suburbs district of Sydney, Australia. ...
. He never married or had children.


Legacy

A character in the play ''Black Diggers'', written in 2013 and staged in January 2014, is based on Douglas Grant. The journalist and autho
Paul Daley
has written a series o
articles
about Grant. In 2021 the University of Newcastle Historia
John Ramsland
published a ficto-biography of Douglas Grant, entitle
''The Legacy of Douglas Grant: A Notable Aborigine in War and Peace''
A number of radio and television documentaries have been made about Grant by the filmmaker and academic Tom Murray, including an AB
Radio National Feature
from 2017, and an award-winning screen documentary

first released at th
2020 Sydney Film Festival
and later screened b
SBS and NITV
Douglas Grant was played by Australian actor and musician Tom E. Lewis in both the radio and screen versions of these documentaries. A song from the film inspired by Douglas Grant's life, Ballad of the Bridge Builders''', was performed by
Archie Roach Archibald William Roach (8 January 1956 – 30 July 2022) was an Australian singer, songwriter and Aboriginal Australian, Aboriginal activist. Often referred to as "Uncle Archie", Roach was a Gunditjmara and Western Bundjalung people, Bundjalu ...
and co-written by
David Bridie David Ross Hope Bridie is an Australian contemporary musician and songwriter. He was a founding mainstay member of World music band Not Drowning, Waving which released six studio albums to critical acclaim. He also formed a chamber pop group, ...
and Tom Murray and won th
2020 APRA Award for Best Original Song Composed for the Screen
Ursula Yovich Ursula Yovich is an Aboriginal Australian actress and singer. Early life and education Yovich was born and grew up in Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia. Her father, Slobodan Jović, was a Serbian immigrant who anglicised his name to Stan ...
performed the song at th
2020 Awards Ceremony
The Douglas Grant Park, located at Chester Street, Annandale, is named in his memory.


References


External links

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Grant, Douglas 1885 births 1951 deaths Australian prisoners of war World War I prisoners of war held by Germany Australian military personnel of World War I Indigenous Australian military personnel Burials at Eastern Suburbs Memorial Park Military personnel from Queensland Australian Army soldiers