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Occupation of German Samoa
Part of the Asian and Pacific theatre of World War I
Date 1914
Location German Samoa
Result Allied victory
Belligerents
United Kingdom United Kingdom
German Empire Germany

The Occupation of Samoa was the takeover and subsequent administration of the Pacific colony of German Samoa in August 1914 by an expeditionary force from New Zealand called the Samoa Expeditionary Force and New Zealand's first action in World War I. On 7 August 1914, the British government indicated that it would be a great and urgent Imperial service[1] if New Zealand forces seized the wireless station near Apia, one of several German radio stations used by the German East Asiatic Squadron. Since the days of Seddon, New Zealand had aspired to control Samoa, and in 1913 General Godley had discussed the seizure of German Samoa with British military authorities.

A 1,370-man force sailed on 15 August. The convoy stopped in Fiji to collect some guides and interpreters, and to rendezvous with the battlecruiser HMAS Australia, cruiser HMAS Melbourne and the French cruiser Montcalm. The escorting "P" class cruisers Philomel, Pyramus and Psyche were no match for Spee’s German East Asiatic Squadron with the armoured cruisers SMS Scharnhorst and SMS Gneisenau. Defence Minister Allen recalls that the government was worried about the German Fleet, but McGibbon [2][3] says that there was no basis for the assertion in the 1923 history and subsequently by Michael King that the force narrowly escaped disaster, with the German cruisers being well to the north rather than only 15 miles (25 km) distant.

The force landed at Apia on the 29 August. Although Germany refused to officially surrender the islands, no resistance was offered and the occupation took place without any fighting. However the first seizure of a German colony was four days earlier (Togoland, captured as part of the West Africa Campaign), despite claims that German Samoa was the first enemy territory to fall to imperial forces [4]. The German cruisers the Scharnhorst and Gneisenau appeared off Apia on 14 September, but sailed away without exchanging shots with the 15-pounders and 6-pounders of D Battery on the beach.

After escorting the force, the Australian Naval and Military Expeditionary Force sailed to Port Moresby and met the Queensland contingent aboard the transport HMAHS Kanowna. The force then sailed for German New Guinea on 7 September, for another takeover of a German colony.

The story that Francis Fisher then Minister of Marine recalled (as published by Downie Stewart in 1937) that the government asked London what defences there were in Samoa and was told by the British Colonial Secretary to consult Whitaker's Almanac was not supported by a search of papers in Archives New Zealand [5]. The authorities in Melbourne advised that Samoa had a German-officered constabulary of about 80 and a gunboat, which could have been augmented by seamen off merchant ships or warships.

The force occupied German Samoa until 1920. New Zealand then governed the islands from 1920 to independence in 1962 as a League of Nations Class C Mandate and after 1945 a United Nations Trust Territory.

External links

Notes

  1. ^ New Zealand Electronic Text Centre
  2. ^ McGibbon page 65
  3. ^ Blue-Water Rationale: The Naval Defence of New Zealand 1914-1942 by I. C. McGibbon page 21-22 (Government Printer, Wellington, 1981) ISBN 0 477 01072 5
  4. ^ McGibbon page 65
  5. ^ McGibbon page 64

References

  • McGibbon, Ian The Shaping of New Zealand’s War Effort August-October 1914 (The Occupation of German Samoa, pages 63–65) in New Zealand’s Great War: New Zealand, the Allies and the First World War edited by John Crawford and Ian McGibbon (2007, Exisle, Auckland) ISBN 0-908988-85-0
  • Leary, L P New Zealanders in Samoa (1918, William Heinemann, London)
  • Smith, S J The Samoa (N.Z.) Expeditionary Force 1914-1915 (1924, Ferguson and Osborne, Wellington) Semi-official, with a forward by Prime Minister Massey.







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