Women on the March: radical hispanic migrants in Northern Australia.
Mason, Robert
Positioned at the intersection of studies in gender, labour history
and migration, this article is anchored in both Australian and Hispanic
scholarship. 1t analyses the Hispanic communities of rural northern
Australia during the first half of the twentieth century, and integrates
local responses with those of the broader Hispanic world. 1n particular,
it demonstrates that Hispanic women used their political experiences
from Spain and Argentina to assume public positions of community
leadership in an Australian region frequently characterised as highly
masculinise. As migrants, they applied Hispanic culture and precedent to
the Australian industrial context. 1n doing so, the women defied
characterisations of passivity and, instead, exemplified female
participation in political activism based on transnational experience.
In 1915, the diminutive Spaniard, Trinidad Garcia, led a sit-down
protest on the quayside of the Melbourne docks. Garcia was one of a
group of Spanish-speaking women who refused to reboard their vessel,
S.S. Kwantu Maru, until food and living conditions onboard were
significantly improved. The women were part of a sizeable group of
migrants on their way from Argentina to the Northern Territory. Tensions
had existed between the captain and the Spanish-speakers during the
voyage, with the women repeatedly taking the initiative and challenging
the captain. In Melbourne, Garcia spurned her husband and the other male
migrants who had remained on the vessel in order to lead the group of
angry Argentine women ashore to purchase much-needed groceries. It was
not the first time the women had defied the captain by going ashore;
they had taken similar action when the ship had stopped in Chile and New
Zealand. When the ship docked in Australia, the women successfully
goaded their husbands to action, shaming them to restrain the captain
and crew physically in order to achieve their demands.
Despite the significant resistance by these migrant women, the
extant police records marginalise the women's role and position the
Argentine men as protagonists. Knowledge of women's roles in
radical Hispanic culture can frame the disparate and fragmented evidence
to recover a coherent narrative of female action. This article derives
from Spanish settlers' memoirs and interviews with male and female
community members. More problematically, it also uses Anglophone
newspapers and Australian government records: government documents, such
as police files and immigration records, frequently imposed
male-dominated Anglo-Celtic frameworks on migrants and often
misinterpreted Spaniards' intentions. Yet, cross-referencing
Anglophone sources with Spaniards' memoirs, personal correspondence
and Spanish-language newspapers reveals the presence of a rich and
vibrant radical community. Whilst Australian historians have probed
multiple aspects of this country's immigration the interaction of
gender, ethnicity and political action remains largely unexplored.
Historians have rarely focused on Australia's Hispanic population,
(1) and Spaniards are most frequently considered as an interesting aside
to the more numerous Italian migrants. (2) This focus on Italians is
particularly pronounced in analyses of migrant politics as scholars
often discuss allegations of fascism and transnational sentiment. (3)
There has been broader research regarding the radical politics of
northern Australia, but this has rarely viewed migrants as part of the
Anglo-Celtic mainstream. (4) Scholarly discussion of the role of migrant
women in politics is very limited, and analyses have generally viewed
female migrants through Anglo-Celtic frameworks rather than those
operating in the women's countries of origin. (5) This piece seeks
to correct this lack of research through investigation of migrant
women's activities using frames of analysis from both Australia and
the Spanish-speaking world.
This article analyses the Spanish-speaking communities of rural
northern Australia during the first half of the twentieth century. It
traces the arrival of the first Hispanic groups to northern Australia,
demonstrating the women's central role in the vulnerable community.
The women's capacity for political action and organisational
leadership, as they responded to overseas events such as the Spanish
Civil War, is demonstrated in an Australian region that is frequently
characterised as highly masculinised. Through their actions, the women
defy characterisations of passivity and, instead, exemplify female
participation in political activism based on overseas experience and an
awareness of transnational context.
Hispanic Radicals
The first sizeable group of Spanish-speakers to settle in northern
Australia arrived in 1907, and was entirely male. (6) Almost all of
these men had been born in the industrial suburbs of Barcelona, and had
travelled to the north to make their fortune cutting sugar cane. Despite
being sorely disappointed at the standard of living, most settled in
north Queensland. Many waited several years before bringing their
partners to Australia, but by World War I a sizeable community had grown
in South Johnstone and the Innisfail surrounds. (7) A second large group
of Hispanic migrants entered the Northern Territory in 1915. (8) Among
this cohort was Trinidad Garcia. While several dozen of the newest
arrivals settled in the suburbs of Darwin, most moved to north
Queensland after hearing of their compatriots' settlement. Chain
migration was quickly established as individuals used their farms to
provide the necessary financial security to support their
relatives' move.
Patterns and periods of settlement were strongly influenced by
developments overseas. Male migrants were swift to respond to political
and economic circumstances in their home countries. (9) In contrast,
women often lacked the financial means to travel independently and
rarely moved overseas without male prompting. Nonetheless, the
women's presence had lasting consequences for political identity in
Australia's Hispanic community. By 1921, for example, men continued
to outnumber women but, outside the cane cutting region of Cardwell, the
ratio amongst settled migrants had stabilised at two to one. (10) The
increasing numbers of women enabled cultural expression that more
closely replicated Spanish and Latin American social spaces and
networks.
Garcia, who led the quayside protest in 1915, had been born to a
mining family in the mountainous Spanish region of Asturias in February
1892. (11) She married in 1910, and stayed with her natal family while
her new husband left to make his fortune in Uruguay. Within a year,
however, Garcia resolved to leave Spain and followed her husband, Jesus.
With thousands of other recently arrived Spanish emigrants, the couple
settled in the teeming metropolis of Buenos Aires. The pair struggled to
find regular work in the Argentine capital, and within a year they moved
south, where Jesus joined one of the many teams of Spanish migrants then
constructing Argentina's expanding railway network. (12) Buenos
Aires and the Argentine railways were at the centre of Latin
America's emerging radical networks, and Spaniards who had fled
lives of rural hardship in Spain quickly immersed themselves in
left-wing activism to improve living conditions. (13) Trinidad and Jesus
were no different, and worked in the radical centres of Bahia Blanca and
Rio Negro. Both cities supported militant and industrialised regions
that clearly evoked the Asturias of the Garcias' birth. (14)
Unlike the Garcias, most migrants in northern Australia's
Spanish-speaking communities came from either Andalusia or Catalonia.
(15) Many had spent a decade or more in Argentina, one of the main
destinations for Spanish emigrants in the early twentieth century. (16)
All three regions were politically radical, and noted centres of
libertarian socialism. By the time the migrants arrived in Australia
they were highly politically literate, and had been exposed to
anarchism, anarcho-syndicalism, socialism and a variety of millenarian
social protest movements. Although mostly pragmatic in their response to
the various ideologies, the majority of Australia's Hispanic
migrants were sympathetic to working-class movements and hostile to
government and capitalist elites. The political economies of Spain and
Argentina were both characterised by cartels and large landowners, who
had captured the machinery of government and excluded the majority of
the citizenry from political participation. (17)
While Garcia had departed Spain from the port of Barcelona, many
migrants remained in the Catalan capital. Workers' exclusion from
institutional politics increasingly focused tensions on industrial
workplaces, which became sites at which workers violently protested a
rapacious capitalism. 'Lock-outs, gun battles and severe
repression' became the normal methods of Catalan industrial dispute
resolution. (18) Barcelona's working-class world was defined by
conflict with management and by unions that maintained power through
coercive membership. General Strikes in 1902 and 1907 signalled
workers' estrangement from institutionalised politics, but it was
not until the seismic events of the 1909 Tragic Week (25 July--2 August)
that the working-class rupture with middle class politics was
formalised. (19)
Anarchism exercised a preponderant influence on Spanish radicalism,
with lasting implications for the northern Australian communities.
Radical social clubs flourished as spaces where politics could be freely
discussed, and large numbers of periodicals existed to bind disparate
sympathisers. (20) Faced with government and employer intransigence,
workers viewed anarchism as one of the few options available to escape
entrenched poverty. Anarchism, as Chris Ealman explains, thrived in
Barcelona, deriving its strength from successful integration with local
communities:
Fed by the collective memory of police repression and transmitted
by a strong oral tradition, [suburban Barcelona] was a highly
inclusive culture, uniting young and old, migrant and non-migrant,
male and female alike, and affirming a profound sense of community
identity. (21)
Anarchists' centres were embedded in neighbourhoods'
social spaces, and became points of reference for communal responses to
economic and political challenges. Together with debates in cafes and
parks, the anarchist networks provided exposure to political debate for
both men and women.
Women's conditions were rarely given lengthy consideration by
contemporary anarchists, and were generally viewed through the prism of
wages and conditions, rather than 'the specificity of women's
oppression'. (22) Mikhail Bakunin had urged 'equal political,
social, and economic rights, as well as equal obligations for
women', claiming the oppression of one human impinged on the
freedom of all humanity. (23) His exhortations to equality were intended
to evoke liberation from oppression caused by capitalism, rather than
the authoritarian and patriarchal attitudes of working-class men.
Women's exclusion from decision-making power became entrenched as
anarcho-syndicalism gained popularity, and emphasised (masculine)
industrial unions as the organising unit for revolution. (24)
Anarchists continued to view the family as the natural unit of
society, believing it demonstrated a perfect sublimation of selfish
interests. (25) Women could not be detached from family life, since
their 'natural' sentiments provided the guiding force to steer
society towards a harmonious natural state. (26) Although anarchists
proudly supported women's right to an equal education, they could
provide only limited means to achieve this. A lack of appropriate health
care, child support or quality employment limited the amount of time
women could devote to education. The psychological tension imposed on
women was profound, obliging them to negotiate an uneasy balance between
their identities as radical agitators and 'feminine' mothers.
Generally, men viewed unfavourably any independent political
organisation by anarchist women. This hostility was due, in part, to
anarchists' focus on industrial organisation, but was also linked
to the male perception that independently organised women were
suggestive of sexual availability. (27) Spanish women were unable to
organise into self-conscious groups until the radicalisation of public
life that followed the 1936 coup. (28) Groups such as Mujeres Libres
(Free Women) immediately focused their efforts on teaching illiterate
women to read and carry out skilled labour. Global anarchist discourse
remained pre-occupied with women as victims of capitalist oppression,
however, maintaining the role of women as virtuous models for future
Utopian society.
Social Welfare Concerns
The historical experience of Australia's Hispanic population
undermines characterisations of women as routinely disempowered, and
emphasises the specificity of the Anglo-Celtic analytical framework.
Sociologists have demonstrated that male concepts of female worth and
social production can be powerful determinants of female migrants'
freedom. (29) Male anarchists' perception of female social
production had provided women with an opportunity to acquire a high
degree of political literacy, although socio-economic structures had
denied them the opportunity to take advantage of this. Hispanic women in
Australia moved beyond private space, invigorated by enhanced social
welfare concerns at a time when males were temporarily unable to support
their families.
The women viewed their migration within a global framework and a
continuum of radical Hispanic opposition to capitalism. Garcia was not
alone in following her husband to Argentina, and a number of future
Australian women settled temporarily in the Latin American country. (30)
The country's Atlantic ports had provided the industrial landscape
to support their radical inclinations, as well as the social networks to
provide practical support. Ports and industrial centres contained
extensive networks of mutual aid societies and informal contacts that
provided basic services and replicated the communal identity that had
characterised the women's urban Spanish homes. (31) Nonetheless,
the women remained tied to their husbands, unable to maintain themselves
independently without risking their moral integrity.
The women's family life remained at the centre of their role
as radical agitators in Argentina. Many future Hispanic Australians
settled in the southern Patagonian region of Chubut. Children were sent
to local schools, but families soon realised this education would have
to be supplemented if their children were to be able to engage in
radical Hispanic culture. Diaries recount how families (with both males
and females present) would gather around lamps late in the evening as
their children read the latest text that had been received from Europe.
One migrant later recalled that, as a child, he had 'already read
about all the isms--nihilism, anarchism, socialism, communism,
syndicalism. Actually I was very much engrossed in reading a writer by
the name of Karl Marx'. (32) Such socialisation ensured children
could participate in the global networks of Hispanic radicalism that
crossed much of Latin America, Europe and, albeit faintly, Australia.
Ensuring their children's political fluency was at the centre of
the maternal role, which bound radical and ethnic cultures together
within the domestic sphere. (33)
The families in Chubut were not happy with their situation, and
felt victimised by both the Argentine government and the more
established Welsh settlers, with whom they competed for land. (34) In
1913, the Australian government had made overtures to the Welsh
Patagonians seeking to encourage their emigration to Australia. Few
Welsh proved interested in the move but, unknown to the Australian
government, their places were quickly filled by Spanish-speaking
settlers. Had the Australian authorities known of the change, they would
have most likely vetoed the operation. A request by Italian Argentines
for passage one year later was rejected on the basis that the group had
been implicated in radical social protests in 1912. (35)
The sea voyage to Australia on board the S.S. Kwantu Maru
demonstrated the women's refusal to submit to authority, and their
increased importance in securing social welfare. The period of enforced
inactivity proved particularly disorientating for the males, regardless
of their ethnicity. Ethnic tensions between the Welsh and the
Spanish-speakers caused serious friction, and the Welsh successfully
monopolised positions of authority, such as the ship's cook. (36)
In the tensions surrounding access to resources, it was the
(largely-Spanish) women who rose to prominence. Faced with concerns
regarding food distribution and profiteering, it was the women who
lobbied most effectively for change. While Hispanic males had physical
altercations with the Welshmen, the women lobbied the captain for
improved food and tobacco supplies to be delivered to them directly.
(37) They successfully delayed the ship's departure from Chile
until a doctor was secured to care for a pregnant woman. Although the
Hispanics elected two males to represent their interests, the men were
confined for brawling with other nationalities. In contrast, Trinidad
successfully assumed the role of a reasonable mother, bargaining for
practical benefits. (38)
The women refused to acquiesce to any decision for which they had
not voted, and disregarded any orders that impinged on the provision of
social welfare, including those from the captain. On their arrival at
Wellington, New Zealand, the Hispanic men chaffed at the enforced
inactivity caused by the authorities' refusal to permit
disembarkation. In contrast, the Spanish-speaking women took a lifeboat
and deftly reached the harbour undetected, from where they immediately
moved to collect fresh groceries and more varied food. Disregarding the
captain's fury, the women repeated their actions on arrival at
Melbourne. This time, as previously noted, they refused to return to the
ship until their demands were formally recognised.
[The] gangplank was just starting to be hauled up when the women
decided to walk off the ship. And, sure enough, they did walk off.
One of the sailors tried to stop one of the women but she hit him
with her handbag. Whatever she had in it, she knocked him
unconscious. There was a hell of a turn-up. The women and kids were
on the wharf and the men aboard. (39)
Only when the captain threatened to leave without the women, did
their husbands take action to protect their partners. The women showed
no hesitation in securing their families' social welfare needs, and
the men proved willing to defer to the women on the matter. Such
division in responsibility proved to be a precursor for later
independent action by women in the north of Australia.
On their eventual arrival in the Northern Territory, the Hispanics
were shocked to realise that they would not be provided with farms as
they had believed. Whilst their savings were frozen by the federal
government, (40) the migrants were moved to work on the railway being
built to the south of Darwin. Families were housed in inadequate tents
near Pine Creek, and most of the men were moved from the encampment to
the railway itself. The men argued with the appointed supervisor and,
instead, elected their own supervisor, refusing to work at their
designated site. (41) The Commonwealth Railways responded angrily,
cutting off the women's credit at the shops in Pine Creek. Panicked
and angry, the women recalled the men to the camp.
One blew the telephone wires to Darwin with a shotgun. The rest
marched on the only constable stationed in the town and told him
that, unless he forced the engineer to release food for the people,
they would hang the engineer. (42)
Although no punitive action was taken, the group continued to feel
cheated and vulnerable. (43)
The group returned to Darwin to find work, with the women again
dependent on males' employment status. The end of World War I
contracted the employment market sharply, and the community was left
destitute on the outskirts of Darwin. Conflicts within the group
increased as men began to fight to secure access to scarce water
resources at the makeshift camp. Evidence suggests that, in such
circumstances, it was the women who mediated between the men. In 1918,
when Lorenzo Duran argued with his neighbour, Daniel Martinez, shots
were fired and a number of men were hit. Immediately Juana Duran and
Dolores Martinez intervened. Although the memoir of Emilio Duran recalls
the women 'howling', 'screaming' and
'crying', it is clear that they mediated between the families
to diffuse tension before the Anglo-Celtic police could arrive. (44) The
men's enforced inactivity propelled the women to positions of
community influence as they sought to protect the families'
collective welfare.
Making Home
The move from the Northern Territory to Queensland increased the
potential for female involvement in social and political activism. After
considerable pressure was applied to the Territory Administrator, the
Spanish-speaking group was given the option of free passage to the cane
cutting region of northern Queensland in 1919. (45) The women's
response to the cultural landscape of northern Queensland was to be more
clearly informed by radical socialism and, more specifically, by the
pragmatic application of anarchist principles.
On arrival in Queensland, the community was horrified by the cane
fields, saying 'the work done there was done in Cuba by the blacks.
[Lorenzo Duran] said we might as well try to get back to Argentina and
live like white people'. (46) The families lobbied the federal
government in order to secure their passage back to Argentina. It is
noteworthy that whilst the decision about whether to return to Latin
America was taken by men, Trinidad Garcia assumed the role of principal
negotiator once a meeting with the minister was secured. Her position
was a consequence of her literacy, fluency in English and her status
within the community (shared with Jesus). Her abrasive and
confrontational style of negotiation is unsurprising given her
background, but it did not suit the Australian political landscape.
Garcia failed to secure passage to Argentina. Her inability to lobby
successfully on this issue made her vulnerable to significant community
criticism, and she was ostracised for a number of years. (47) The
failure to return to Argentina meant the majority of the group drifted
north to settle with their compatriots in Innisfail. The reinforced and
stabilised community began to reach out into the local Anglo-Celtic
radical movement, simultaneously re-establishing contact with global
networks of Hispanic radicalism.
Queensland's cultural and industrial landscape provided the
women with new opportunities to express themselves publicly.
Queensland's political culture was characterised by a proclivity
for left-wing radicalism, fuelled by the monopolistic industrial
practices of the sugar mills. The Communist Party of Australia (CPA)
would garner significant support in Queensland in the 1930s, but the
Hispanic community initially gravitated to the anarchist-inspired
Industrial Workers of the World (IWW). The migrants had spent time
during their journey to Australia in Valparaiso, Chile, where the IWW
had an established presence. Many men, who had worked on the Argentine
railways, helped spread radicalism whilst labouring on Queensland's
own expanding rail network. Men like Jesus Rosende worked on the
railways with well-known IWW sympathisers, helping to develop cells that
staged a series of disruptive strikes in the early 1920s. A number of
Australian migrants were deported to Chile for their participation in
illegal IWW activities. (48) Spaniards used their previous
anarcho-syndicalist experiences to assume leadership positions in the
IWW, and maverick Australian strikers regularly sought the advice of
Spanish 'expert agitators'. (49) Yet, women were again
marginalised by the emphasis on industrial sites of protests.
Hispanic women sought to negotiate roles in the context of local
stereotypes of radical motherhood. The Spanish-speaking males fully
endorsed the Anglo-Celtic campaign for a family wage, which would have
institutionalised women's dependency, but conformed to anarchist
constructs of gender. Rather than being able to easily communicate as in
the tightly knit consolidated communities of Spain and Argentina,
however, women were often isolated in remote rural locations that were
several days ride from their nearest compatriot. Many women suffered
depression as a consequence of their isolation, and were forced to beg
their partners for financial support that would more usually have been
supplemented by the tight-knit urban networks of Spain and Argentina.
(50)
Newly arrived women, whose husbands did not yet own farms, lived
with their husbands in barracks in the sugar cane fields. Responsible
for feeding whole cutting gangs, the women's working day was hard
and long. Yet, the barracks introduced the women to the collapsed
boundary between domestic and industrial spaces that was to prove
decisive in their willingness to assume public political roles. Although
few Anglo-Celtic women debated with men publicly, it was not considered
abnormal for women to be fully versed with the industrial debates of the
time. For radical Hispanic women, the blurred boundary between the
domestic and industrial spheres conformed neatly with their role as the
moral custodians of the social revolution.
Over time, the Spanish-speaking community established a permanent
presence in the townships surrounding Innisfail. Continued immigration
from Spain meant large numbers of peripatetic cutters required regular
accommodation and food when they arrived in the town at weekends. One
Spaniard described Innisfail's 'two or three Spanish eating
houses, which served food for their compatriots, as well as for the
general population'. (51) Such cafes became central to Hispanic
cultural expression, replicating the spatial and social contexts that
enabled the debates in the cafes and clubs of Spain and Argentina. (52)
Unlike the commercial enterprises of the cities, the cafes were family
enterprises providing employment for women and retirees. Marina Goni,
who had been born on the voyage from Argentina, ran a club in
Innisfail's Ernest Street, whilst a retired farming couple, the
Escuders, operated another Spanish Club in Innisfail during the 1930s.
(53) A similar Spanish Club existed in Ayr, and was a noted political
centre during the Spanish Civil War. All key guest house and cafe owners
were in regular receipt of the anarchist periodical Cultura Proletaria,
imported from Spain and distributed freely to guests. (54)
The cafes provided another locale where domestic and public spaces
merged, and which women could attend without social approbation. Radical
women's participation was further facilitated by the close
relationship between ethnic and political identities, and females'
vital legitimating role in both. Social situations such as picnics and
cafes remained gender segregated, but were open to both sexes. Women and
men would often arrive together, separate to socialise and then come
together at the close of the event. (55) Whilst space remained strongly
gendered in local Hispanic communities, men were unwilling to forbid
female participation in private discussions without contradicting the
egalitarian philosophies they vehemently proselytised.
The more ideological males viewed Innisfail's large numbers of
prostitutes with distaste, regarding them as a symptom of the repressive
institution of loveless marriage. (56) For others, however, periodic
access to brothels and gaming houses were an integral part of social
life, and locals boasted that Innisfail's red light district was
famous throughout Australia. Emilio Duran estimated Innisfail possessed
seven to eight brothels at any one time, although he recalled 12
existing at one stage in the 1920s. (57) Spanish-speaking women were not
immune to the risks that caused women to become prostitutes and at least
one Spanish woman turned to prostitution. The fact she was arrested in
Brisbane suggests she was ostracised by family in both Australia and
Spain as an unworthy example of Hispanic femininity. (58)
Few of the weekend visitors to Innisfail or Ingham had homes in
town, and boarding houses were important points of contact. They also
served as information hubs, placing the female managers at the centre of
the distribution of local and international news. Maria Martinez ran a
boarding house in Innisfail's China Town, whilst another was
operated by the Sorli family in Innisfail's Ernest Street. (59)
Police reports recorded that Gabriel Sorli was 'a good citizen,
[and] not inclined to associate'. (60) Unbeknownst to police, the
Sorli household regularly received the anarchist newspapers, and guests
were routinely involved in anarchist associations locally and in
Argentina. Sorli accosted Spaniards on street corners, proselytising
political radicalism with men such as Salvador Torrents. (61) Limited
evidence remains for women's role in the radical boarding houses,
but inferences can be made through comparison with Basque boarding
houses situated to Innisfail's south. Basque women, such as Teresa
Mendiolea, fed and cared for migrant males, acting as surrogate wives
and mothers. Mendiolea was at the centre of decisions regarding newly
arrived migrants' employment or social relations with other ethnic
groups. (62) It can be inferred that radical women's location at
the hub of information networks embedded them in similar positions.
Women sought to employ their knowledge to support their political
and social obligations. Using their legitimate presence in both private
and industrial spaces, radical women conformed to the stereotype of the
virtuous woman, emblematic of community justice. Hispanic radicals were
active in Queensland's industrial and political disputes, despite
Anglo-centric labour history's tendency to marginalise migrants. A
commitment and understanding of anarcho-syndicalism initially directed
the men towards trade unions. Men such as Salvador Torrents withdrew
once Anglo-Celtic prejudice became clear, whilst others, such as Jesus
Rosende, tore the compulsory union tickets in officials' faces.
(63) Hispanic women were accustomed to having an important voice in
industrial relations, frequently marching at the head of strikes in
defiance of armed police in Spain and Argentina. (64) Trinidad Garcia
continued to speak at public meetings, and lobbied strongly against
British Preference on both practical and ideological levels. Along with
Marina Goni and Dolores Martinez, Trinidad Garcia was also at the centre
of protests against mill owners during the Weil's Disease strike in
1934.
Organisation of Women
The CPA had become the dominant force in radicalism by the early
1920s, and viewed the organisation of women as an important aspect of
community engagement. Social welfare became more politicised in
Anglophone discourse during the Depression, particularly regarding the
provision of food and domestic security. Jean Devanny, the Sydney
communist and author, regularly proselytised in northern communities and
actively organised local women. Devanny also had sustained contact with
the Spanish-speaking population, at one stage being despatched to
remonstrate with Hispanic CPA members who were urging greater
responsiveness to local circumstance. (65) Garcia was well aware of the
role model Devanny provided, and had met the activist at a meeting
regarding Weil's Disease, which had itself been chaired by a
community member born in Argentina. (66)
As Popular Front strategies gained momentum in Australia, Devanny
was instrumental in exploiting women's position in the northern
industrial landscape. On directions from Sydney, she organised northern
Women's Progress Clubs and local cells of the Movement Against War
and Fascism (MAWF). Once the Spanish Civil War erupted in 1936, the
pre-existing contact between groups of Hispanics and sympathetic
Anglo-Celtic women proved to be vital. Indeed, the members of the
Women's Progress Clubs and MAWF were generally the same women that
would lead the establishment of Spanish Relief Committees (SRCs). (67)
Northern Australia's Hispanic radicals had been understandably
excited by the declaration of the Second Spanish Republic in 1931.
Reinvigorated correspondence occurred between community leaders
throughout the Spanish-speaking world, whilst other migrants sent their
children back to Spain to experience the new era first hand. (68) The
rhetoric of change and dynamism that reached migrants reinforced the
ties between the migrants' ethnicity and their commitment to social
justice and revolution.
Celia Zamora of Tully had been sent to Spain at the start of the
Second Republic by her antifascist and pacifist father to learn how
'to become a Spaniard'. (69) On the generals' coup, she
was trapped in Spain, but after her return to Australia she provided
first-hand accounts of Republican life. Celia was in Madrid during 1936,
and recalled the excitement of attending political meetings to hear the
legendary communist 'La Pasionara' debate freely with other
radicals. On the advice of the British Embassy, however, she was
evacuated in the first few months of conflict. Celia continued her
passion for left-wing politics on her return to northern Australia,
publicising her experiences in Republican Spain and deliberately
provoking Australian Catholic priests, before becoming active in the
Tully Spanish Relief Committee. (70) Her description of women's
new-found freedoms in Spain proved to be of great interest to the
northern Australian community.
Hispanic women in Australia were in regular contact with friends
and family throughout Spain. Many of the migrants remained deeply
connected to the spaces of their youth, and their memories were
transformed by the imminent threat posed by fascism. Energised by the
outbreak of civil war and eager to garner additional information,
families imported increased numbers of radical Spanish-language
newspapers. Garcia wrote immediately to her friends on the outbreak of
war, and established contacts to acquire independent information from a
small group known as New Antifascist Spain. (71) Maria Ruiz wrote to her
sister in Queensland about the dangers facing her son as he fought for
the Republicans. The letter's language displays the typical belief
that the Spanish Civil War was part of a global bipolar struggle between
fascism and proletarian emancipation: Maria's heart ached 'for
our noble and heroic people who are defending the freedom and liberty of
the world'. (72) The women's status was elevated by their
position at the centre of information exchange, as the Spanish Civil War
became an issue of direct and vital importance.
Northern Australia was integrated into the women's broader
knowledge of events throughout the Hispanic world. Women Against War and
Fascism had spread rapidly throughout 1930s Spain, and shared communist
origins with Devanny's MAWF. Primarily designed to oppose fascism,
it also strongly championed women's right to receive an education
and participate in public life. (73) The anarchist organisation recalled
Spanish society at the time of the women's youth more closely than
the communist Women Against War and Fascism, and was characteristically
more focused on social revolution. Recognising the impediments caused by
education and the domestic economy in a capitalist state, Free Women
focused on childcare provision and evening classes in an attempt to
place women's oppression at the centre of anarchist struggle.
Discussions between Australian Spanish women and their anarchist friends
in Barcelona recalled these models and led to their replication in the
Australian community.
The conflict had a momentous impact on broader Australian life, and
was perceived as a microcosm of the global struggle against fascism.
(74) Whilst Australian Catholics quickly rallied around the Nationalist
rebels, the CPA led a number of organisations to support the Republican
government. The Spanish Relief Committees were the most prominent of
these groups, and relied heavily on female participation to raise funds
and public awareness. Key figures in the SRCs, such as the liberal
author Nettie Palmer, were in extensive and prolonged contact with the
Spanish-speaking community in Queensland, and proved formative of the
campaign. Through her 20-year correspondence with Salvador Torrents,
Palmer was regularly exposed to an alternative, Hispanic interpretation
of global events.
A number of male migrants returned to Spain to fight for the
Republic. Palmer provided young men such as Raymundo Jordana with the
social contacts necessary to raise funds to make the trip. (75) Jesus
Garcia also returned to fight for the Republicans, and became a
political commissar in their army. Other northern Australians who
departed included: Bartholomew Blanchart, Angelo Plaza, Rosendo Sala and
Salvador Barker. (76) Although a number of Anglo-Celtic nurses returned
to Spain, no Hispanic women enlisted as nurses. Garcia's status was
immediately elevated, however, as she assumed the moral stature of a
soldier's wife. Such status empowered her to move beyond the mill
committees to public political roles in which she contested the
Anglo-communist monopoly on radical discourse.
Ennobled by her status as a soldier's wife, and empowered by
her independent contact with Spain, Garcia moved confidently into the
union meetings normally reserved for men. Hispanic women were
increasingly uncomfortable with the strictures of communist presence in
the MAWF, and lobbied directly in the mills. Such women were protected
from ridicule by the blurred boundary between domestic and industrial
space. Garcia's status as a soldier's wife gave her particular
authority over the men who had not volunteered, and she persuaded mill
workers to donate a tithe of their salary to the Republican cause. (77)
Her actions displayed a willingness to distance herself from
Devanny's MAWF, instead deriving inspiration from the Spanish Free
Women. One unit of Free Women supported male troops on the front line,
whilst other anarchist women enlisted to fight directly. (78) Their
actions were widely publicised in Spanish-language newspapers, and
Garcia clipped such papers and distributed relevant articles to
Australian sympathisers. (79)
The CPA sought to limit Garcia's independent activity, which
it correctly viewed as an alternative source of authority. The CPA had
initially supported her establishment of the Innisfail SRC network, but
she quickly established a reputation as a 'Trotskyist', being
'recalcitrant', and unwilling to submit to Sydney's
dominance. (80) Garcia, and other founding members, insisted that the
Spanish community choose where its money was sent, and refused to
surrender funds to the Sydney branch. Instead, Garcia helped to
establish a rival group in the international anarchist umbrella
organisation, the International Antifascist Solidarity (IAS). The group
raised the very considerable sum of 270 [pounds sterling] in 1938, (81)
which it sent directly to anarchist organisations in France and Spain.
The group raised in excess of 88 [pounds sterling] in the next six
months, making it one of the most effective fundraisers in Australia.
(82) Garcia sought to expand the IAS in Australia when she read about
Barcelona's May Day Riots, in which anarchist and communist
supporters had clashed. In response, the prominent communist Lawrence
Sharkey attacked the Hispanic anarchists in the press, and the community
was left to seethe at the accusation they were supporting Fifth
Columnist elements. (83)
Garcia's success, and the support she derived from the
Hispanic community, relied on her ability to balance her roles as both
wife and radical activist. Whilst the Anglo-dominated SRCs used formal
public talks and information sessions to disseminate information, Garcia
ran community dances and a Miss Spanish Relief competition (the latter
won by her daughter, Lily Garcia). Such events reiterated the
stereotypical image of the radical woman, charged with facilitating the
social revolution through support for the family and her status as an
exemplar of natural femininity. The women's virtuous roles as
devoted wives and daughters placed them beyond reproach, rendering
communist attacks ineffective and counterproductive.
The Republicans lost the Spanish Civil War, and the community
perceived itself as excised from the Spanish nation. Unable to return to
Nationalist Spain, the radicals were cut off from the spaces and people
of their youth, and became fearful as their old friends disappeared in
Spain without explanation. (84) Many Hispanic women retreated from
political participation, as men assumed the mantle of maintaining the
diminished radical presence in Australia. Those women who remained
politically active found themselves constrained by the paradox of
aspiring to emulate Spanish role models in the local Australian context.
(85) Garcia continued to lobby federal ministers and demand reduced
censorship into the late 1940s, undaunted by police raids on her home.
(86) Her protests returned to the domestic sphere, however, and her only
contact with the broader Hispanic world was through the traditional
anarchist media of newspapers and correspondence between believers who
were increasingly elderly and isolated.
Conclusion
Trinidad Garcia can be viewed as an example of an exceptional
Australian migrant woman, whose experiences differed markedly from the
norms of her Anglo-Celtic counterparts. Garcia had already spent many
years in the cultural and industrial landscapes of Spain and Latin
America by the time she arrived in Australia, and had been strongly
influenced by the perceptions there of femininity, politics and place.
Analysis of her actions in Australia must acknowledge the accumulated
experiences and memories that connected her to the broader Hispanic
world.
Yet there was a tension in anarchist femininity, as women sought to
negotiate meaningful roles as both virtuous mothers and radical
agitators for a social revolution. Migration was one opportunity when
male inability to provide for the family increased women's symbolic
importance in social welfare, and simultaneously accentuated the
women's role in ethnic continuity. Spanish-speaking migrant women
could use their situation to lobby, threaten and cajole authority
figures without threatening their femininity. Queensland's cultural
and industrial landscape provided an ideal environment for these women
to organise bodies that possessed both practical and mnemonic contacts,
integrating Australia and the broader Hispanic world.
The extent of Garcia's political organisation was unusual but
not unique, and other Spanish-speaking women were also embedded in the
centre of ethnic and political groups. Garcia's presence in memoirs
and archives is a product of her forthright personality, which rendered
her memorable to male chroniclers. Yet, given women's important
role in ethnic groups, and the high levels of politicisation amongst
Spanish-speakers, it is likely other migrant women were similarly
positioned at the centre of community knowledge and social
organisations. Political fluency, social norms and awareness of global
events facilitated the women's movement beyond stereotypes of the
passive migrant wife in assuming independent political agency.
Robert Mason *
Endnotes
* This article has been peer reviewed for Labour History by two
anonymous referees.
(1.) For examples, see William A. Douglass, Azucar Amargo: Vida y
Fortuna de los Cortadores de Cana Italianos y Vascos en la Australia
Tropical, Servicio Editorial Universidad del Pais Vasco, Bilbao, 1996;
Michele Langfield, and Peta Roberts. Welsh Patagonians: The Australian
Connection, Crossing Press, Sydney, 2005; Robert Mason, 'Anarchism,
Communism and Hispanidad: Australian Spanish Migrants and the Civil
War', Immigrants and Minorities, vol. 27, no. 1, March 2009, pp.
29-50.
(2.) William A. Douglass, From Italy to Ingham: Italians in North
Queensland, University of Queensland Press, St. Lucia, 1995.
(3.) For an important example, see Gianfranco Cresciani, Fascism,
Anti-Fascism and Italians in Australia, 1922-1945, Australian National
University Press, Canberra, 1980.
(4.) Diane Menghetti, The Red North: The Popular Front in North
Queensland, Studies in North Queensland History, No. 3, History
Department, James Cook University of North Queensland, Townsville, 1981.
(5.) The main exception has been published interviews with Italian
women which prioritise the women's sense of isolation and rarely
address political views. For examples, see Elizabeth Weiss and Anna
Maria Kahan-Guidi (eds) Give Me Strength = Forza e Coraggio: Italian
Australian Women Speak: A Bilingual Collection, 2nd ed., Women's
Redress Press, Broadway, New South Wales 1990; Tonina Gucciardo-Masci
and Oriella Romanin. Someone's Mother, Someone's Wife: The
Italo-Australian Woman's Identity and Roles, Catholic Italian
Renewal Centre, North Fitzroy, Victoria, 1988.
(6.) List of Passengers Onboard the Wakefield on Arrival in
Townsville, 12 July 1907, National Archives of Australia, Brisbane
(hereafter NAA B), J721 Roll 3.
(7.) Robert Mason, Agitators and Patriots: Cultural and Political
Identity in Queensland's Spanish Communities, 1900-1975, PhD
thesis, Department of History, University of Queensland, 2009, p. 97.
(8.) List of Passengers Onboard the Kwantu Maru on Departure from
Chile, National Archives of Australia, Canberra (hereafter NAA C), A3 NT
1916-165.
(9.) Mason, Agitators and Patriots, p. 89.
(10.) Census of the Commonwealth of Australia, 1921, Volume 1,
Tables 5 and 6, pp. 839-847.
(11.) Application for passport, Case file--Trinidad Garcia, NAA B,
J25 1941-14251.
(12.) Application for passport, Case file--Jack Garcia, NAA B, J25
1949-14248.
(13.) Jeremy Adelman, 'State and Labour in Argentina: Port
workers in Buenos Aires 1910-1921', Journal of Latin American
Studies, vol. 25, no. 1, 1993, p. 76; For details on the anarchist
presence in Bahia Blanca from 1906 to 1909, see 'Anarchism and
Anarcho-Syndicalism in South America', Fanny Simon, Hispanic
American Historical Review, vol. 26, no. 1, 1946, p. 43.
(14.) For details on the Asturian political culture, see Sandie
Holguin, Creating Spaniards: Culture and National Identity in Republican
Spain, University of Wisconsin Press, Madison, 2002, p. 31.
(15.) A significant number of Basques also lived in Queensland, but
are not considered in this article.
(16.) Jose C. Moya, Cousins and Strangers: Spanish Immigrants in
Buenos Aires, 1850-1930, University of California Press, Berkeley, 1998,
p. 13.
(17.) Natalio R. Botana, El Orden Conservador: La Politica
Argentina entre 1880 y 1916, 5th ed., Sudamericana, Buenos Aires, p.
154.
(18.) Robert W. Kern, Red Years, Black Years: A Political History
of Spanish Anarchism, 1911-1937, Institute for the Study of Human
Issues, Philadelphia, 1978, p. 4.
(19.) Colin M. Winston, Workers and the Right in Spain, 1900-1939,
Princeton University Press, Princeton, 1985, p. 102; Cesar M. Lorenzo,
Les Anarchistes Espagnols et le Pouvoir, 1868-1969, Editions du Seuil,
Paris, 1969, p. 44. The week saw riots as the workers resisted
government attempts to impose conscription, and directed their ire at
vulnerable symbols of state oppression, such as churches.
(20.) Victor Alba, Catalonia: A Profile, Praeger Publishers, New
York, 1975, p. 98.
(21.) Chris Ealham, Class, Culture and Conflict in Barcelona,
1898-1937, Routledge, Abingdon, 2004, p. 33.
(22.) Mary Nash, cited in Martha A. Ackelsberg, 'The Popular
Front: Women and the Politics of the Spanish Popular Front',
International Labor and Working-Class History, vol. 30, Fall, 1986, p.
4.
(23.) Mikhail Bakunin, cited in Sam Dolgoff (ed.), Bakunin on
Anarchy: Selected Works by the Activist-Founder of World Anarchism,
Allen and Unwin, London, 1971, p. 76.
(24.) Roberto P. Korzeniewicz, 'The Labour Movement and the
State in Argentina', Bulletin of Latin American Research, vol. 8,
no. 1 (1989), p. 25.
(25.) Temma E. Kaplan, 'Spanish Anarchism and Women's
Liberation', Journal of Contemporary History, vol. 6, no. 2, 1971,
pp. 101-110.
(26.) Kirwin Shaffer, 'The Radical Muse: Women and Anarchism
in Early Twentieth-Century Cuba', Cuban Studies, vol. 34, no. 1,
2003, p. 145.
(27.) Frances Lannon, 'Women and Images of Women in the
Spanish Civil War', Transactions of the Royal Historical Society,
vol. 6, no. 1, 1991, p. 220.
(28.) Martha A. Ackelsberg, '"Separate and Equal"?
Mujeres Libres and Anarchist Strategy for Women's
Emancipation', Feminist Studies, vol. 11, no. 1, Spring 1985, p.
64.
(29.) Caroline Wright, 'Gender Awareness in Migration
Theory', in Katie Willis and Brenda Yeoh (eds), Gender and
Migration, Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, UK, 2000, p. 16.
(30.) For select examples not discussed elsewhere in this article,
see: Lorenza Martinez, Personal Declaration, NAA B, BP9-3 Spanish
Martinez L; Catalina Martinez Saez, Personal Correspondence, NAA C, A1
1930-24; Josefa Martinez, Personal Declaration, NAA B, BP9-3 Spanish
Martinez J; Elisa Martinez, Personal Declaration, NAA B, BP9-3 Martinez
de Morentin E; Blanca Martinez, Case file, NAA B, J25-190 1949-13659.
(31.) Peter de Shazo, 'The Valparaiso Maritime Strike of 1903
and the Development of a Revolutionary Labor Movement in Chile',
Journal of Latin American Studies, vol. 11, no. 1, May 1979, p. 146.
(32.) Emilio Duran Memoirs (hereafter EDM), Robert Mason Collection
(hereafter RMC), p. 12.
(33.) Marie de Lepervanche, 'Working for the Man: Migrant
Women and Multiculturalism', in Kay Saunders and Robert Evans
(eds), Gender Relations in Australia: Domination and Negotiation,
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Sydney, 1992, p. 90.
(34.) EDM, RMC, p. 6.
(35.) Michele Langfield, 'Filching the Argentine Colonists:
The Encouragement of Patagonians to the Northern Territory in the Early
Twentieth Century', Journal of Northern Territory History, no. 13,
2002, p. 35; Francisco Netri to the Minister of State for Commerce, 22
April 1915, NAA C, A2 1916-1711.
(36.) AWU Secretary Nelson on behalf of Eduardo F. Molina, 17
December 1915, NAA C, A3 NT 191i>48; Investigating Officer of
Department of External Affairs to Spanish Consul, 9 July 1915, NAA C, A3
NT1915-4577.
(37.) EDM, RMC, p. 21.
(38.) 'Report Upon the Argentine Immigration to the Northern
Territory of Australia', translation of original complaint by
Eduardo F. Molina, NAA C, A3 NT 1916-48; Investigating Officer of
Department of External Affairs to Spanish Consul, 9 July 1915, NAA C, A3
1915-4577.
(39.) EDM, RMC, p. 21.
(40.) 'Report Upon the Argentine Immigration to the Northern
Territory of Australia', translation of original complaint by
Eduardo F. Molina, NAA C, A3 NT 1916-48.
(41.) Spanish Consul to Minister of External Affairs, 13 January
1916, NAA C, A3 NT 1916-503; Commonwealth Railways to Department of
External Affairs, 28 January 1916, NAA C, A3 NT 1916-503.
(42.) EDM, RMC, p. 28.
(43.) Department of External Affairs to King O'Malley,
Minister of Home Affairs, 1 December 1915, NAA C, A3 NT1916-287.
(44.) EDM, RMC, p. 41.
(45.) EDM, RMC, p. 58.
(46.) Ibid., p. 53. Such comments demonstrate the importance of the
Hispanic framework, referencing the complex racial relations of the
Hispanic Americas.
(47.) Ibid., p. 61.
(48.) Investigation Branch to Home and Territories Department, 16
February 1923, Mackay, NAA C, A435 1946-4-6645; Frank Cain, 'The
Industrial Workers of the World: Aspects of its suppression in
Australia, 1916-1919', Labour History, no. 42, 1982, p. 60; Report
by Boyland of Waterside Workers' Federation, undated, Innisfail,
Queensland State Archives (hereafter QSA), RSI 13214-1-586.
(49.) Douglass, Azucar Amargo, p. 148.
(50.) Ray Jordana, interview with Prof. Alan Frost, Innisfail,
1984, tape one, by kind consent of Prof. Alan Frost. For details of one
woman's legal battles to extract support from her husband, see
Innisfail Bench Records and Summons Book, 1921-29, QSA, RSI-1120;
Nominal role of Spanish Aliens Resident in the State of Queensland as at
9 March 1943, NAA B, BP242-1 Q30582 (part 4).
(51.) 'Memorial de un Obrero: Costumbres de los espanoles, en
el Norte de Queensland (Australia)', S. Torrents, James Cook
University, Special Collection (hereafter JCU-SC), ST 5-3.
(52.) Judith Keene, '"The Word Makes the Man": A
Catalan Anarchist Autodidact in the Australian Bush', Australian
Journal of Politics and History, vol. 47, no. 3, 2001, p. 314.
(53.) Maria Trapp and Vince Cuartero, interview with author, 31
August 2007, Innisfail, RMC.
(54.) Police List of those receiving Cultura Proletaria, 21
November 1940, NAA B, BP242-1 Q25027; Diane Menghetti, 'North
Queensland, Anti-Fascism and the Spanish Civil War', Labour
History, no. 42, 1982, p. 71.
(55.) Ramon Ribes, interview with author, 27 November 2004,
Mossman, RMC.
(56.) 'Cuento: El Honor en la familia', Torrents, unnamed
paper, 20 February 1925, JCU-SC, ST 5-18.
(57.) Dorothy Jones, Hurricane Lamps and Blue Umbrellas: A History
of the Shire of Johnstone to 1973, G.K. Bolton, Cairns, 1973, 301; EDM,
RMC, 65.
(58.) Bench Book for Petty Courts, July 1944, QSA, CPS1-AM54.
(59.) Trapp and Cuartero, interview with author, RMC.
(60.) Innisfail Police Station to Criminal Investigation Branch, 11
January 1941, NAA B, BP242-1 Q25027.
(61.) Alien Registration Form, NAA B, BP4-3 Spanish Marti B; Trapp
and Cuartero, interview with author, RMC; Torrents to Palmer, 30 June
1949, Mena Creek, National Library of Australia (hereafter NLA),
1174-1-7702.
(62.) Dolores Larrazabal, interview with author, 21 June 2007,
Townsville, RMC.
(63.) Police Report, Mackay, 18 March 1940, QSA, RSI 13214-3-46.
(64.) Holguin, Creating Spaniards, p. 31; Simon, 'Anarchism
and Anarcho-Syndicalism in South America', p. 42.
(65.) EDM, RMC, p. 112.
(66.) Ibid., p. 110.
(67.) Spanish Relief Committee Minutes, 1937, Noel Butlin Archive
Centre (hereafter NBAC), P15-3-1.
(68.) Gallego, interview with Diane Menghetti, North Queensland
Oral History Project (hereafter NQOP).
(69.) Eliseo Zamora, interview with Amirah Inglis, Tully, undated,
NBAC, Q47-2.
(70.) Celia Gallego, interview with Diane Menghetti, 1976, NQOP.
For further details on women's exposure to political debates, see
Judith Keene, 'Strange Bedfellows: Feminists, Catholics and
Anticlericals in the Enfranchisement of Spanish Women', Australian
Feminist Studies, vol. 17, no. 38, 2002, p. 167; Celia Gallego,
interview with Amirah Inglis, undated, NBAC, Q47-3.
(71.) 'Australia: A los Camaradas de Francia y de
Espana', Trinidad Garcia, 1936, unnamed paper, JCU SC, ST 5-18.
(72.) 'They Shall Not Pass: Spanish Patriots Write While Bombs
Fall', 30 October 1937, North Queensland Guardian, p. 1.
(73.) Ackelsberg, 'The Popular Front', p. 8.
(74.) For details, see Amirah Inglis, Australians in the Spanish
Civil War, Allen and Unwin, Sydney, 1987; Menghetti, The Red North.
(75.) Nettie Palmer Diary, 11 November 1936, NLA, 1174-16-18;
Nettie Palmer Diary, 7 April 1937, NLA, 1174-16-19.
(76.) Identity card, Jack Garcia, Republican Armed Forces, NBAC,
Q47-4; Alien registration application, NAA B, BP4-3 Spanish Plaza A;
Alien registration application, NAA B, BP4-3 Spanish Sala R; Len Fox and
Nettie Palmer, Australians in Spain, Current Book Distributors, Sydney,
1948, p. 28.
(77.) 'South Johnstone: Monthly Meeting of the AWU', 12
August 1938, North Queensland Guardian, p. 6.
(78.) For more details, see Ackelsberg, 'The Popular Fronf, p.
8; Kaplan, 'Spanish Anarchism and Women's Liberation', p.
106.
(79.) Marta Iniguez de Heredia, 'History and Actuality of
Anarcha-feminism: Lessons from Spain', Lilith, vol. 16, 2007.
Available at http://lilith.org.au/the-journal/lilith-16-2007/article/
historyand-actuality-of- anarcha-feminism/ accessed June 2010.
(80.) Ken Coldicutt to Phil Thorpe, 26 October 1938, NBAC, Q47-3.
(81.) 'Desde Australia', Torrents, undated, Cultura
Proletaria, JCU-SC, ST 5-17.
(82.) 'Australia', Torrents, undated, Cultura Proletaria,
JCU-SC 5-13, ST 5-18.
(83.) 'Rise of Spanish Communist Party', L. Sharkey,
Workers' Weekly, 16 July 1937; 'El Partido Comunista nos
llevara a la catastrophe', 1937, unnamed paper, JCU-SC, ST 5-17.
(84.) Torrents to Nettie Palmer, 16 April 1943, Mena Creek, NLA,
1174-1-6324.
(85.) Gina Herrmann, 'Voices of the Vanquished: Leftist women
and the Spanish Civil War', Journal of Spanish Cultural Studies,
vol. 4, no. 1, 2003, p. 12; Mercedes Yusta Rodrigo, 'The
Mobilization of Women in Exile: The Case of the Union de mujeres
antifascistas espanolas in France (1944-1950)', Journal of Spanish
Cultural Studies, vol. 6, no. 1, 2005, p. 44.
(86.) Innisfail Police Station to Criminal Investigation Branch, 4
January 1941, NAA B, BP242-1 Q25027.
Robert Mason is a lecturer in History at the University of Southern
Queensland, where he is also a member of the Public Memory Research
Centre. He has published a number of articles on Hispanic Australia, and
on Australian multiculturalism and migration histories more broadly. He
is particularly interested on the effect of democratic transition and
remembered social trauma in migrant communities.
<robert.mason@usq.edu.au>