Liverpool riot of 1916
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The Liverpool Riot of 1916 is the name given to the event when a large group of Australian soldiers rioted through the streets of Sydney and surrounding areas.
Following Australia's entry into World War I, many Australian men volunteered to fight in Europe and were stationed in camps around Australia to receive military training before being shipped to the front. At 9.00am on 14 February 1916, at Casula Camp in Liverpool in Sydney's southwest, 5000 recruits refused to accept extra duty and went on strike to protest the poor conditions at the camp. The soldiers left the camp and marched towards the centre of Liverpool, where they were joined by other recruits from around Liverpool and the numbers of protesters now reached as many as 15 000. They invaded a number of local hotels, drinking the bar dry, refusing to pay and began vandalising buildings.
The soldiers then gained control of Liverpool train station, overpowered the engineers and commandeered trains heading towards Sydney, where they began rampaging drunkenly through Sydney streets, smashing windows and targeting anyone with a foreign sounding name, including Italian restaurants (although Italy was an ally). Shops and hotels were looted and people were forced to take refuge in churches to avoid the soldiers. Police reinforcements were called in and began battling the soldiers in the streets of Sydney.
At Sydney's Central Railway Station, armed military guards found a group of over 100 drunken soldiers destroying a toilet block and demanded they surrender. Instead a shot was fired by a soldier over the guards' heads and in response the guards returned fire, killing one soldier and seriously injuring eight others. This incident had a sobering effect on the soldiers and many began surrendering to police and military guards, although small bands of soldiers continued to cause damage throughout the night.
Following the riot, described as the "most disgraceful episode in our military history", about 1000 soldiers were courtmartialled and either gaoled or discharged from the army. However, Australia was desperate for recruits to fight the war and so many soldiers escaped punishment and were sent overseas while the government, anxious to keep the image of the Australian digger as positive as possible, discouraged the media from covering the event.[1]
As a result of the riots, New South Wales, Victoria and Tasmania introduced 6.00pm closing of hotels to guard against a repeat occurrence (South Australia had already introduced six o'clock closing the previous year). It was at least twenty years before hotels in Tasmania were allowed to open later and not until 1967 that South Australian hotels were allowed to open later than 6.00pm.[2]
[edit] References
- ^ Cockington, J. (2003) History Happened Here, ABC Books, Sydney ISBN 0-7333-1241-1.
- ^ Freeland, J.M. (1966) The Australian Pub, Melbourne University Press, Carlton.