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No Conscription Campaign
Successor League for Freedom;
League for Freedom and World Friendship
Formation 1916; 109 years ago (1916)
Founded at New South Wales, Australia
Purpose Anti-Conscription in Australia
Headquarters Sydney, Australia
Key people

James Catts, David Watkins,

Kenneth Kenafick, Maurice Blackburn,

The No Conscription Campaign was an Australian campaign that started during World War I.

It was succeeded by the League for Freedom, later becoming the League for Freedom and World Friendship.

Organisation[]

The campaign was based in MacDonell House in Sydney.[1]

History[]

In 1916, James Catts was the general organiser and Director.[1] The campaign's first meeting took place on November 27, 1917 in the Mechanic's Hall in Singleton, New South Wales, less than a year after the 1916 Australian conscription referendum. Organisers David Watkins, Daisy Loughran, and Mayor Alderman McDougall as chair. Speakers at the event were D. J. McGuire and Austin Elliott who spoke about conscription for World War I.[2] In 1917, ahead of the 1917 Australian conscription referendum, the campaign published a leaflet calling upon mothers to vote against conscription.[3] The campaign's pamphlet Wholesale Slaughter read "Maintain ‘White Australia’! This cannot be done if our manhood is deported!", arguing that killed white Australian conscripts would trigger an increase non-white immigration to Australia.[4]

Maurice Blackburn's involvement in the campaign was documented in Kenneth Kenafick's 148 page book Maurice Blackburn and the No-conscription campaign in the Second World War.[5] Kenafick was the secretary for the campaign, and later the secretary of the group's successor League for Freedom.[6]

After being succeeded by League for Freedom, the organisation later became the League for Freedom and World Friendship.[6]

The League for Freedom and World Friendship published the journal Anti-Militarist News and Review in Melbourne, edited Kenafick.[7]

See also[]

  • Australian Freedom League

References[]

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The original article can be found at No Conscription Campaign and the edit history here.