An Aboriginal Digger’s Story – Douglas Grant

Douglas Grant image courtesy of State Library NSW photographer: Sam Hood

Grant was probably born in 1885 in north Queensland near Yarrabah. In 1887, as an orphaned infant, he was fostered by taxidermists Robert Grant and E.J. Cairn, who were in the region on a collecting expedition for the Australian Museum. The baby’s parents were apparently killed in an undocumented skirmish.[3] He was renamed Douglas and taken to Lithgow, New South Wales, to live with Robert Grant’s parents. Douglas was later adopted by Robert Grant and his wife and lived with them and their son Henry at their home in Annandale, New South Wales.[1]

Grant attended public school and trained as a draughtsman, working for Mort’s Dock & Engineering in Sydney. In 1913 he was employed as a wool classer at Belltrees, near Scone, New South Wales.

World War I

Grant first joined the Australian Army at Scone on 13 January 1916.[2] Private Grant completed training with the 34th Battalion but was blocked from embarkation because, at that time, Aboriginal Australians could not leave the country without permission. He re-enlisted in August 1916 and was sent to France to join the 13th Battalion.[4]

On 11 April 1917, during the First Battle of Bullecourt, Grant was wounded and captured. In the German prisoner of war camps, he became an object of curiosity. German doctors, scientists and anthropologists sought to examine him. As a result, he was given favor and allowed some comparative freedom within the camp.[5] The German sculptor Rudolf Markoeser modelled Grant’s bust in ebony.[1]

During his incarceration (April 1917 to December 1918) Grant became president of the British Help Committee and organised food parcels and medical supplies for the large number of Indian prisoners held at the Halbmondlager prisoner-of-war camp for coloured soldiers, near Zossen.[5] Grant wrote on behalf of his fellow prisoners to agencies such as the British Help Committee, the Invalid Comfort Fund for Prisoners of War, the British Red Cross and the Merchant Seaman’s Help Society.[4]

On 22 December 1918 Grant was repatriated from Germany to England. He took the opportunity to visit his adoptive fathers’ family in Scotland. Grant was able to mimic a Scottish accent and attracted much attention in Scotland.[5] In 1919 he sailed back to Australia on the troopship Medic and arrived in Sydney on 12 June. He was discharged from service on 9 July and returned to civilian life, and to his former position as a draughtsman at Mort’s Dock.

Post-War and death

Not long after returning to Sydney, Grant left Mort’s Dock and moved to Lithgow, working as a labourer at a paper products factory and then at the Lithgow Small Arms Factory.

Percy Cowan introduced Grant to Henry Lawson. The three whiled away evenings at Lawson’s North Sydney home, with Cowan playing the Violin, Lawson writing and Douglas, an accomplished speaker, probably chatting about the War and his “imprisonment” in Berlin.[6]

In February 1929, the Sunday Telegraph Pictorial published a commentary by Grant on a Massacre of Aborigines in Central Australia, the previous year.[7]

Grant also worked for the Australian Museum. He assisted WW Thorpe to catalogue a collection of Aboriginal Relics which had been left to the yet to be established Federal Museum (National Museum of Australia). The collection was transferred to the newly built Institute of Anatomy in 1931.[6]

In the early 1930s, after the deaths of his adoptive parents, Grant returned to Sydney and eventually became a clerk at the Callan Park Mental Asylum where he also lived.[5]

In his later years he lived at the Salvation Army‘s old men’s quarters in their Home at Dee Why, New South Wales, then after 1950, at La Perouse, New South Wales.[4] It is not known if Grant associated with the Aboriginal community at La Perouse.

Grant died in Prince Henry Hospital, Little Bay, on 4 December 1951. His cause of death was a subarachnoid hemorrhage. He is buried at Botany Cemetery.[5] He never married or had children.

Grant’s Legacy

The central character in Black Diggers, written in 2013 and staged in January 2014, is based on Douglas Grant.

References

  1. “Australian Dictionary of Biography”Grant, Douglas (1885-1951). Retrieved 29 March 2013.
  1. “National Archives of Australia”AIF war records. Retrieved 29 March 2013.
  1. “Trove”Aboriginal Soldiers. Story of Douglas Grant. Retrieved 29 March 2013.
  1. “State Library of NSW”Douglas Grant papers, 1917-1918. Retrieved 1 April 2013.
  1. Ramsland, John (2006). Remembering Aboriginal Heroes. Melbourne, Victoria: Brolga Publishing. pp. 2–15. ISBN 9781920785857.
  1. Anecdotal History of Annandale: Douglas Grant (1885?-1951)
  2. 1928 shooting of 31 aborigines in Central Australia, Grant, February 1929