Curio

State Library of New South Wales

Enlistment poster

c1916
Printed ephemera
Published by WA Gullick, government printer, Sydney
Bequest of Sir William Dixson, 1952
F91/32

Despite the early rush to enlist, by 1916 the Australian military faced a critical shortage and the pressure on eligible men to enlist became enormous. Posters were an important element of government campaigns to persuade volunteers to sign up. With slogans such as, ‘Defend your homes, your women and your children’, ‘Don’t stand looking at this. Go and help’ and ‘Get into Khaki, your comrades at Gallipoli need you’, these posters directly targeted strong emotions and values: loyalty and national pride, patriotism, mateship and adventure, as well as guilt, fear and hatred of the enemy.

Along with newspaper editorials and much of the public debate, recruitment posters presented a highly simplified and polarised view of the issue: as put by the Sydney Morning Herald, ‘There are two classes of Australians in this war, those who go to it and those who stay behind.’*

The pressure around enlisting culminated in the Conscription referendums of October 1916 and December 1917 (both narrowly defeated), which are still considered the most bitter and divisive in Australia’s history.

Never more lies

‘People never lie so much as before an election, during a war, or after a hunt.’

Otto vonBismark, Prime Minister of Prussia and the first Chancellor of the unified German empire

The early rush

‘Left home early in the morning and went to Victoria Barracks had to wait outside the gates with about 1,000 or more other recruits for about an hour. When the gates opened there was a big rush of men to get in. We were then drafted into two batches one body composed of those who had done soldiering before and those that had not.’*


Private C Lee from Newtown in Sydney, 1st Battalion AIF, 1914 


Footnotes
* Bill Gammage, The Broken Years: Australian Soldiers in the Great War, 1974, p 6