Sunday, January 8, 2023: 11:40 AM
Regency Ballroom C1 (Loews Philadelphia Hotel)
On August 7, 1942, U.S. forces began their first offensive action against Japan on the island of Guadalcanal in the Solomon Islands. Over the next few years, thousands of Solomon Islanders assisted Allied soldiers as construction workers, local scouts, and messengers. Based on oral histories and soldiers’ memoirs, my paper argues that these islander war workers not only played a crucial role in the ultimate Allied success in the Pacific war, but were part of a longer history of foreigners in the service of the U.S. empire. Faced with pervasive racism and demeaning work conditions, Solomon Islanders managed to create new opportunities both for themselves and for their home societies.
See more of: Working for the State in War and Peace: Gender, Race, and Labor, 1898–1945
See more of: AHA Sessions
See more of: AHA Sessions