Jean P. Smith
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‘The height of my ambition is to become a Springbok’
Wartime travel to southern Africa, race and the discourse of opportunity
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This chapter demonstrates the importance of wartime experience to post war migration and highlights the ways in which the Second World War strengthened connections between the United Kingdom, South Africa and Southern Rhodesia. The war brought millions of British troops to the region, providing more Britons than ever before with experience of the lifestyle possible for white migrants. Using memoirs and letters to the South African government, I argue that this experience of abundance and white privilege convinced many to make their stay permanent. Would-be migrants sought to took advantage of wartime contingencies, asking the British government for demobilisation in southern Africa and drawing on relationships formed during the war in their appeals to the South African government for admission. More broadly, war-time travel provided more Britons than ever before with direct experience of imperial sites and this contributed to the continuing significance of empire and especially the Dominions in the post-war United Kingdom.

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Settlers at the end of empire

Race and the politics of migration in South Africa, Rhodesia and the United Kingdom

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