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France, Africa, and the First World War

  • C. M. Andrew (a1) and A. S. Kanya-Forstner (a2)
Extract

World War I marked the final phase of French colonial expansion. France's African war aims were determined not by the cabinet but by the leaders of the colonialist movement and by a handful of African enthusiasts in the colonial and foreign ministries. Most of these men harboured the unrealistic aim of acquiring not merely German territory but also other foreign ‘enclaves’ in A.O.F. At the peace conference, however, France's African gains were limited to mandates over the greater part of German West Africa.

Before August 1914 no government had given serious thought to the potential contribution of French Africa, either in men or raw materials, to a war in Europe. The enormous losses on the Western Front led to the recruitment of French Africa's first great conscript army. By the end of the War French Africa had sent 450,000 soldiers and 135,000 factory workers to Europe. The crisis of French food supply also led in 1917–18 to the first concerted campaign, mounted jointly by the colonialists and the colonial ministry, for the mise en valeur of the Empire. But France's shipping losses made it impossible to increase her African imports.

In the aftermath of victory French Africa appeared genuinely popular in France for the first time. The main reason for that popularity was the naïve belief that the resources of the Empire would free France from dependence on foreign suppliers and speed her post-war recovery. When the resources of the Empire proved even slower to arrive than reparations, the Empire quickly lost its newfound popularity. The War nonetheless left behind it the myth of the Empire as a limitless reservoir of men and raw materials: a myth which, though dormant for most of the inter-war years, was to be revived by the coming of World War II.

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References
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1 Andrew, C. M. and Kanya-Forstner, A. S., ‘The French “Colonial Party”: Its Composition, Aims and Influence, 1885–1914’, Historical Journal, xiv (1971), 90128; Andrew, C. M., ‘The French Colonialist Movement during the Third Republic: The Unofficial Mind of Imperialism’, Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 5th series, xxvi (1976). Andrew, C. M., Grupp, P., and Kanya-Forstner, A. S., ‘Le mouvement colonial français et ses principales personnalités, 1890–1914’, Revue Française d'Histoire d'Outre-Mcr, lxii (1975).

2 For a more detailed analysis of France's African war aims see: Andrew, C. M. and Kanya-Forstner, A. S., ‘The French Colonial Party and French Colonial War Aims, 1914–1918’, Historical Journal, xvii (1974), 79106; idem, ‘France and the Repartition of Africa, 1914–1922’, forthcoming in Dalhousie Review.

3 Journal Officiel, Documents Parlementaires (Chambre des Députés), 1917, no. 3476 (emphasis shown as in the original).

4 The smaller of Germany's two West African colonies, Togo (one-ninth the size of the Cameroons) had been provisionally partitioned on the spot by the British and French commanders after its conquest in the first month of the War. At the Peace Conference France's share was enlarged to include the port of Lomé and all the railway lines.

5 Ageron, C.-R., Les Algériens musulmans et la France, 1871–1919 (Paris, 1968), 11, ch. 38. Michel, M., ‘Un mythe: la “Force Noire” avant 1914’, Relations Internationales, i (1974), 8390.

6 Michel, M., ‘Le recrutement des tirailleurs en A.O.F. pendant la première Guerre mondiale. Essai de bilan statistique’, Revue Française d'Histoire d'Outre-Mer, lx (1973), 645. Ageron, , Les Algériens musulmans, 11, 1165.

7 ‘Recrutement indigène fourni à la Métropole du début des hostilités au 15 novembre 1917’, ANSOM (Archives Nationales, Section Outre-Mer), Affaires Politiques 533 (3); cited by Michel, M., ‘La genése du recrutement de 1918 en Afrique noire française’, Revue Française d'Histoire d'Outre-Mer, lviii (1971), 437–8.

8 Davis, S. C., The French War Machine (London, 1937), ch. 7. Guignard, A., ‘Les troupes noires pendant la guerre’, Revue des Deux Mondes, 15 June 1919, 849–79.

9 See note 7.

10 Michel, , ‘La genése du recrutement de 1918’. Marc Michel's thesis, ‘L'A.O.F. et la Grande Guerre: contributions et réactions’, now nearing completion, will represent a major contribution to West African history. It will include a detailed analysis of A.O.F.'s military and economic involvement in the War, as well as the African and European consequences of that involvement. On French Guinea see also the article in this issue by R. Johnson and A. Summers.

11 Ageron, , Les Algérins musulmans, ii, 1162–3.

12 Van Vollenhoven to colonial ministry, 25 Sept. 1917, ANSOM, Affaires Politiques 533 (2).

13 Michel, , ‘La genèse du recrutement de 1918’, 436–8.

14 See the correspondence between Jonnart and Flandin for the period Nov. 1917 to Jan. 1918. in the Flandin MSS (uncatalogued) at the Archives Nationales.

15 Ageron, , Les Algériens musulmans, ii, 1163.

16 Michel, , ‘La genèse du recrutement de 1918’, 443. Ageron, , Les Algériens musulmam, ii, 1165.

17 The official statistics compiled by the French general staff are to be found in: Varet, P., Du concours apporté à la France par ses colonies et pays de protectorat au cours de la guerre de 1914 (Paris, 1927), 40.

18 Dépêche Coloniale, 16 July 1920.

19 Varet, , Du concours, 45.

20 Ministry of labour to colonial ministry, 21 Jan. 1918, ANSOM, Affaires Politiques, 19.

21 Fauchère, , ‘Rapport sur l'utilisation de la main-d'oeuvre coloniale dans l'industrie métropolitaine’, 12 Jan. 1918, ANSOM, Affaires Politiques, 19.

22 Ageron, , Les Algériens musulmans, ii, 1141.

23 Journal Officiel, Documents Parlementaires, (Chambre des Députés), 1915, no. 935. Cf. Ageron, , Les Algériens musulmans, ii, 1191.

24 Johnson, G. Wesley Jr., The Emergence of Black Politics in Senegal: The Struggle for Power in the Four Communes, 1900–1920 (Stanford, 1971), ch. 10. Michel, M., ‘Citoyenneté et service militaire dans les quatre Communes du Sénégal au cours de la Première Guerre mondiale’, in Perspectives nouvelles sur le passé de l'Afrique noire et de Madagascar. Mélanges offerts à Hubert Deschamps (Paris, 1976); idem., ‘La genèse du recrutement de 1918’.

25 Jonnart had persuaded Clemenceau that a new recruitment would necessitate ‘la mise en pratique d'une politique indigène d'une grande bienveillance’ Jonnart to Clemenceau (copy), 27 Dec. 1917, Archives Nationales, Flandin MSS (uncatalogued). For details of the reforms, see Ageron, , Les Algériens musulmans, ii, ch. 43, and Confer, V., France and Algeria: The Problem of Civil and Political Reform, 1870–1920 (Syracuse, 1966), ch. 7.

26 Ageron, , Les Algériens musulmans, ii, 1223.

27 Andrew, C. M. and Kanya-Forstner, A. S., ‘French Business and the French Colonialists’, Historical Journal, xix (1976), 982–6. Régismanset, C. and du Vivier de Streel, E. (eds.), Conférence Coloniale instituée par M. Maginot, ministre des colonies (Paris, 1917), 169.

28 Du Vivier de Streel, E., ‘Une grave question de l'après-guerre’, Revue de Paris, 1 Feb. 1916, 3.

29 Coquéry-Vidrovitch, C., Le Congo au temps des compagnies concessionnaires, 1890–1930 (Paris, 1972), 15.

30 See chapters 7 and 8 of the forthcoming thesis by Marc Michel referred to above (note 10).

31 Varet, , Du concours, 913. Heisser, D., ‘The Impact of the Great War on French Imperialism, 1914–1924’, unpublished dissertation (University of North Carolina, 1972), 14 ff., 121 ff.

32 Rheinhart, , ‘Note pour M. le chef du service du secrétariat et du contresigne’, 15 May 1917, ANSOM, Affaires Politiques 2613 (2).

33 Du Vivier de Streel to Maginot, 15 Apr. 1917, ANSOM, Affaires Politiques 2613 (2).

34 Régismanset, and de Streel, du Vivier (eds.), Conférence Coloniale, 17.

35 Heisser, , ‘French Imperialism’, 130–2, 180–7.

36 Lyautey, , ‘Rapport mensuel’, Jan. 1918, ANSOM, Affaires Politiques 899 bis (1). A similar point was made during 1917 in the monthly reports from Algeria and—with particular force—in dispatches from A.O.F.

37 Fauchére, , ‘Rapport sur l'utilisation de la main-d'oeuvre coloniale dans l'industrie métropolitaine’, 12 Jan. 1918, ANSOM, Affaires Politiques 19.

38 See chapters 13 and 18 of the forthcoming thesis by Marc Michel.

39 Dépêche Coloniale, 25 Feb. 1920.

40 Fidel, C., ‘La part des colonies dans nos importations de matières premiéres’, Bulletin de Renseignements Coloniaux, no. 474, Jan. 1923.

41 Régismanset, and Vivier de Streel, du (eds.), Conférence Coloniale, 159.

42 Andrew, C. M. and Kanya-Forstner, A. S., ‘The Groupe Colonial in the French Chamber of Deputies, 1892–1932’, Historical Journal, xvii (1974), 842–5.

43 Ibid. See also: Heisser, , ‘French Imperialism’, ch. 6.

44 Varet, , Du concours, 5.

45 Untitled memo [late 1920], ANSOM, Affaires Politiques 2613 (1).

46 Marseille, J., ‘L'investissement français dans l'Empire colonial: l'enquêite du gouvernement de Vichy (1943)’, Revue Historique, cclii (1974), 409–32. Andrew, and Kanya-Forstner, , ‘French Business’, 986–7.

47 Semidei, M., ‘De l'Empire à la décolonisation à travers les manuels scolaires francais’, Revue Française de Science Politique, xvi (1966), 5686.

48 Membership figures were published intermittently in the Ligue's official bulletin, Mer et Colonies.

49 France Outre-Met, 29 Sept. 1939.

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The Journal of African History
  • ISSN: 0021-8537
  • EISSN: 1469-5138
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