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Globalizing St George: English associations in the Anglo-world to the 1930s*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 February 2012
Abstract
While English nationalism has recently become a subject of significant scholarly consideration, relatively little detailed research has been conducted on the emigrant and imperial contexts, or on the importance of Englishness within a global British identity. This article demonstrates how the importance of a global English identity can be illuminated through a close reading of ethnic associational culture. Examining organizations such as the St George's societies and the Sons of England, the article discusses the evolving character of English identity across North America, Africa, Southeast Asia and the Antipodes. Beginning in the eighteenth century, when English institutions echoed other ethnic organizations by providing sociability and charity to fellow nationals, the article goes on to map the growth of English associationalism within the context of mass migration. It then shows how nationalist imperialism – a broad-based English defence of empire against internal and external threats – gave these associations new meaning in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The article also explores how competitive ethnicity prompted English immigrants to form such societies and how both Irish Catholic hostility in America and Canada and Boer opposition in South Africa challenged the English to assert a more robust ethnic identity. English associationalism evinced coherence over time and space, and the article shows how the English tapped global reservoirs of strength to form ethnic associations that echoed their Irish and Scottish equivalents by undertaking the same sociable and mutual aspects, and lauded their ethnicity in similar fashion.
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References
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113 Sydney Morning Herald, 27 April 1904; also New York Times, 24 April 1901.
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115 Philadelphia Inquirer, 24 April 1862.
116 E.g. Montreal Gazette, 24 April 1878.
117 Hawaiian Gazette, 29 April 1868.
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122 Straits Times, 13 February 1933; 24 April 1937.
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131 Christian Science Monitor (Boston), 8 September 1913.
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141 Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser, 9 December 1930; Straits Times, 8 November 1932.
142 Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser, 15 November 1932.
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145 For instance, James Connolly wrote an article, ‘Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee (1897)’, which set out the case: Ellis, Peter Beresford, James Connolly: selected writings, London: Pluto, 1988, p. 14Google Scholar.
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148 North American, 18 March 1892.
149 Bangor Daily Whig and Courier, 13 May 1854.
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151 Chicago Tribune, 25 May 1866.
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158 Rules and regulations of the British American society 1830, St John: Donald A. Cameron, 1830, Rule 1, p. 3; Daily Evening Bulletin, 22 November 1888.
159 Berthoff, British immigrants, pp. 196–7; Anglo-American Times (London), 14 November 1874; Fall River Daily Evening News, 28 October 1876; Canadian-American, 17 September 1886.
160 Milwaukee Sentinel, 24 October 1888, 1 November 1889, 19 May 1892; Daily Inter Ocean, 13 May 1888.
161 Daily Inter Ocean, 25 October 1895, 25 October 1896.
162 Irish World and Industrial Liberator (New York), 30 April 1898.
163 Classic among proliferating Anglo-Saxon literature, is J. R. Dos Passos, The Anglo-Saxon century and the unification of the English-speaking people, New York and London: The Knickerbocker Press, 1903. See also Brandt, John L., Anglo-Saxon supremacy or race contributions to civilization, Boston, MA, and Toronto: Badger and Copp Clark Co., 1915Google Scholar.
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165 Irish World and Industrial Liberator, 3 June 1899.
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167 Ibid.
168 ‘Address to Englishmen’, in Constitution of the Sons of England Benevolent Society under the supreme jurisdiction of the Grand Lodge of Canada, Bellville: J. W. London, 1899, pp. 3–5 (quotation from p. 3). A more sympathetic view was taken in South Africa, where it was said that the ‘more phlegmatic Englishman takes longer to stimulate into enthusiasm’: Mafeking Mail, 15 April 1904.
169 Elyria Daily Telephone, 15 May 1887; Aberdeen Weekly Journal, 18 May 1887.
170 Freeman's Journal, 15 July 1878; Leeds Mercury, 20 July 1878; Lloyd's Weekly Register, 21 July 1878.
171 The Argus, 19 March 1847. The clandestine, Catholic, Ribbon Society was founded in 1811 to resist the spread of the Orange Order, often using violence.
172 The Argus, 24 December 1884.
173 Western Argus (Kalgoorlie), 12 March 1918.
174 Brisbane Courier, 14 January 1920.
175 Mafeking Mail, 15 May 1901; Rhodesia Herald, 18 May 1910.
176 Rhodesia Herald, 24 April 1900.
177 Sir George Sprigg, at consecutive St George's Society events in Cape Town: The Pioneer (Allahabad), 13 June 1900; Mafeking Mail and Protectorate Guardian, 15 May 1901.
178 One noticed in Paul A. Kramer's excellent analysis of the coming together of British and American ideologies under the umbrella of Anglo-Saxonism: ‘Empires, exceptions, and Anglo-Saxons: race and rule between the British and United States empires, 1880–1910’, Journal of American History, 88, 4, 2002, pp. 1315–53.
179 National Library of Australia, Pethick Collection, cloth souvenir programme, RSStG, St George's Day, 1920.
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