Charles Bean

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Charles Bean
Charles EW Bean portrait.jpg
Portrait by George Lambert, 1924
Born
Charles Edwin Woodrow Bean

(1879-11-18)18 November 1879
Died30 August 1968(1968-08-30) (aged 88)
AwardsMentioned in Despatches (1915)
Chesney Gold Medal (1930)
Academic background
Alma materUniversity of Oxford
InfluencesBanjo Paterson
Academic work
Main interestsAustralian military history
First World War
Notable worksOfficial History of Australia in the War of 1914–1918
InfluencedGavin Long
Bill Gammage

Charles Edwin Woodrow Bean (18 November 1879 – 30 August 1968), usually identified as C. E. W. Bean, was Australia's official war correspondent, subsequently its official war historian, who wrote six volumes and edited the remaining six of the twelve-volume Official History of Australia in the War of 1914–1918. He was the foundational force and primary advocate in establishing the Australian War Memorial (AWM). According to the Online International Encyclopedia of the First World War no other Australian has been more influential in shaping the way the First World War is remembered and commemorated in Australia.[1][2]

In February 2021, in recognition of the significance of the influence of Charles Bean and his works within Australian history 'The diaries, photographs and records of C. E. W. Bean' (in the possession of the AWM and the State Library of NSW) were officially inscribed on the UNESCO Australian Memory of the World Register.

The citation stated: “The diaries, photographs and records of C.E.W. Bean (1876–1968) comprise multiple collections relating to his experience as Australia’s official correspondent and historian of the First World War. They document his role as one of the founders of the Australian War Memorial and other civic institutions, and are regarded as fundamental to an understanding of critical aspects of Australian identity and commemorative practices.”[3]

Charles Bean was many things [4] school master,[5] barrister, judge's associate,[6] journalist and author.[7] patron of art,[8][9] a key figure in the development of Australia's national archives,[10] visionary,[11][12][13][14] social reformer,[15][16][17] public intellectual,[4] moral philosopher,[18] conservationist,[19][20]advocate for education[21][22] and for place planning especially for green open spaces for the well-being and health of the community.[23]

When Charles Bean died on 30 August 1968, aged 88, an obituary written by Guy Harriott, Associate Editor of the Sydney Morning Herald, and a former war correspondent, described Bean as being “one of Australia's most distinguished men of letters.[24]


Early life and education

Charles Bean was born in Bathurst, New South Wales, the first of three sons of the Reverend Edwin Bean (1851–1922), then headmaster of All Saints' College, Bathurst, and Lucy Madeline Bean, née Butler (1852–1942). Bean's parents' preoccupation with truth, social justice and public service became his.[25]

His family and his formal education fostered his values which were influenced by 'The Arnold Tradition', the model of moral values and education championed by Dr Arnold of Rugby School in England. This model emphasised individual self-worth and qualities associated with 'good character': trust and reliability, honesty, openness, self-discipline, self-reliance, independent thought and action, friendship, and concern for the common good over selfish or sectional interests.[26] Bean's preoccupation with character was consistent with, if not a reflection of, the 'Arnold Tradition.[27] Bean's formal education began in Australia at All Saints' College, Bathurst. In 1889, when Bean was nine, the family moved to England, where he was educated at Brentwood School, Essex (1891–1894), of which his father was newly appointed headmaster. In 1894 Bean entered Clifton College, Bristol – his father's alma mater, the ethos of which was also in the tradition of Arnold.[28]

While at Clifton, Bean developed an interest in literature and in 1898 won a scholarship to Hertford College, Oxford taking a Masters of Arts in 1903 and a Bachelor of Civil Law in 1904.[29]

During his schooling Bean served in the volunteer corps both at Clifton College and at Oxford University.[30]

Early career

In 1904 Bean taught at Brentwood and as a private tutor in Tenerife. Later that year he returned to Australia where he retained his parallel interests for teaching and writing, becoming an assistant master at Sydney Grammar School and writing articles for the Evening News, then edited by Andrew 'Banjo' Paterson.[31]

Admitted to the New South Wales Bar in 1905, Bean commenced his legal career in Australia as a barrister, and as a judge's associate. As such he saw much of New South Wales on circuit in 1905–07 and was struck by the outback way of life.[32]

In 1907, in his last days as a judge's associate, he wrote articles about 'The Australian character' which were published in the Sydney Morning Herald (S.M.H.) under the banner 'Australia.'[33]

In 1908 Bean forsook law for journalism and, at the suggestion of Paterson, applied to join the staff of the S.M.H.[34] In mid-1908, as a junior reporter he covered the waterside workers' strike and wrote a twelve part series of articles on country NSW under the banner 'Barrier railway.'[35]

Later in 1908, as a special correspondent on HMS Powerful, the flagship of the Royal Navy squadron in Australia, Bean reported on the visit of the United States' 'Great White Fleet' to Australia. The following year the articles were published in book form as With the Flagship in the South in which Bean advocated the establishment of an Australian Navy Fleet.[36] The Imperial Naval Conference of 1909 decided that Australia should be advised to form her own Fleet unit which occurred in 1911.[37]

In 1909 Bean was sent by the S.M.H. to far western New South Wales to write a series of articles on the wool industry.[38] This event in his life reinforced his views on the Australian character from his encounters with the people in the environment of the outback – mateship, resilience and laconic cheer in the face of adversity.[39] Bean took that sense of an independent Australian character with him to war.[40] His articles from this experience were subsequently reworked into two books: On the Wool Track, first published in 1910, reprinted many times and now accepted as an Australian classic and The Dreadnought of the Darling first published in 1911.[41][42][43]

In 1910 the S.M.H. sent Bean to London as its representative. He travelled via America writing a series of articles about the development of the cities he visited and the provision of open spaces. While in England, he continued this interest and took the opportunity to visit town planning experiments. Whilst there he was also able to witness the building of the newly-established Australian fleet's flagship, HMAS Australia, and the cruisers HMAS Melbourne and Sydney. His despatches to the S.M.H. describing their construction were later incorporated in Flagships Three which was published in 1913.[44][45][46]

Early in 1913 Bean returned to Sydney as a leader-writer for the S.M.H., writing about town planning and the steps that should be taken to control the city’s future development. Among his initiatives was his call for a Chair of Town Planning and Architecture at Sydney University and for the resumption of land to allow a necessary expansion of the city's railways.[47]

Bean's 'The Great Rivers' series for the S.M.H. was published in May 1914.[48] At the outbreak of World War I, he was investigating social conditions in Aboriginal communities with a view to publishing a series of articles on that topic, by mid-1914, he was writing a daily commentary on the crisis in Europe.[49] [50]

World War I

Informal portrait of Captain C E W Bean, Official War Correspondent, calf deep in the muddy Gird trench, near Gueudecourt in France, during the winter of 1916–1917.

Following the declaration of the World War I, the Australian Government requested the Australian Journalists' Association to nominate an official correspondent to accompany the Australian Imperial Force (A.I.F). In September 1914 Bean was elected by his peers defeating Keith Murdoch in the national ballot. Bean became an embedded correspondent, whose despatches, reporting on Australia's participation in the war, were to be available to all Australian newspapers and published in the Commonwealth of Australia Gazette.[51] He was accorded the honorary mess rank of captain, provided with a batman and driver and was required to submit his despatches to the British censor.[52][53] On advice, however, he retained his civilian status in order to be free of unnecessary military restrictions in carrying out his duties as correspondent.[54][55] Whatever he wrote was to be subject to rigid censorship.[56][57]

On 21 October 1914 Bean left Australia on the troopship HMAT Orvieto, which carried Major General Bridges and his headquarters.[58] Bean was accompanied by Private Arthur Bazley, his formally designated batman, who became his invaluable assistant, researcher, lifelong friend and, later, a one-time acting Director of the AWM.[59][60]

During the course of the war, although Bean developed close relationships with senior commanders, he was never far from the front line, reporting on the activities of the A.I.F. he could personally witness.[61] He would position himself with his telescope about 1,200 yards from (or, on Gallipoli, almost right in) the frontline.[62][63]

As well as reporting, Bean kept an almost daily diary record of events. These diary entries also reflected the feelings and views of an individual who witnessed those events which ranged from battles to planning and discussions in headquarters, and to men at rest and in training.[64] Bean knew that he would later be writing the official history, and his work habits throughout the war were also focused on gathering information for that task.[61]

He regarded his diaries as the foundation of the official history. In later years he reviewed his diary comments and sometimes revised his wartime opinions. Still, the immediacy of each diary entry provides insight into the times and conditions as he was experiencing them.[65]

Bean was aware of the limitations of the diaries and of eyewitness accounts. As a condition of the gift of his papers to the AWM in 1942 he stipulated that it attach to every diary and notebook a caveat which was amended in 1948 to read, in part: 'These records should … be used with great caution, as relating only what their author, at the time of writing, believed.'[66]

Egypt

Bean arrived in Egypt on 3 December 1914. He was asked by Senior A.I.F. Command to write a booklet, What to Know in Egypt … A Guide for Australian Soldiers to help the troops better understand their new environment'.[67][68] Despite the advice contained in the guide 'a handful of rowdies' was sent home from Egypt and Bean was asked to send a report covering the issue. The resulting newspaper coverage aroused concern with families in Australia and resentment towards him from among the troops in Egypt.[69]

Gallipoli Campaign

Bean landed on Gallipoli about 10 am on 25 April 1915, a few hours after the dawn attack.[70]

The Australian Dictionary of Biography entry on Bean notes: "Australians at home read a detailed account of the landing in the papers of 8 May. It was not by Bean, whose first dispatch was held up by the British authorities in Alexandria until 13 May, but by the English correspondent Ellis Ashmead-Bartlett. Both accounts were much reprinted. Bean's was the more precise, for he had seen more. The English reporter betrayed surprise that untrained colonials had done so well; Bean was seeing what he hoped to see: the Australian soldiers, as he described them, were displaying qualities he had observed out in the country".[71]

For the help he gave to wounded men under fire on the night of 8 May during the Australian charge at Krithia, he was recommended for the Military Cross: as a civilian he was not eligible, but was Mentioned in Despatches. His bravery erased whatever hostility remained from his report from Egypt about those soldiers sent home.[72] During the August Offensive, the last British throw at the Dardanelles, Bean was shot in the thigh. Reluctant to relinquish his post at a time of activity he refused to be evacuated from the peninsular to a hospital ship, convalescing in his dugout. The bullet remained lodged within millimetres of his femoral artery for the rest of his life.[73]

The only Allied correspondent who stayed on Gallipoli throughout the campaign, Bean sent a stream of stories back to his newspapers.[74] His work was a quest for accuracy not sensation. When his despatches were censored, as they often were, he buried facts in a story rather than surrender to a plausible fiction that censors or news vendors may have favoured. He risked criticism of a 'wooden', analytical writing style rather than succumb to sensationalism.[75][76]

As no official photographer was appointed to cover Gallipoli Bean also recorded events with a camera. The AWM's official photograph collection contains 1100 of his prints covering the first convoy, Egypt and Gallipoli.[77]

Bean left Gallipoli on the night of 17 December 1915, watching and recording from the deck of HMS Grafton the A.I.F's final evacuation of Anzac Cove.[78] Bazley had left for the island of Imbros on the previous night with the 150 contributions for The Anzac Book which was initially conceived as a New Year magazine for the troops on the Gallipoli peninsula. The evacuation of the forces, however, lead Bean, assisted by Bazley and a committee, to re-characterise the book to commemorate the time spent by the Anzac troops at Gallipoli. Almost every piece of art, prose and verse was created in the trenches by the soldiers who, despite being under constant enemy fire and in conditions of hardship and deprivation, managed to scrounge bits of paper, pens and pencils, and to use improvised items.[79] Bean contributed photographs, drawings, and two pieces of verse: 'Abdul', acclaiming the Turk as an honourable opponent, and 'Non Nobis,' questioning why some, including Bean himself, had survived the Gallipoli fighting while others had not survived. The Anzac Book, subsequently published in London in May 1916, became a reminder of the endurance, reckless bravery and humour in adversity of the original Anzacs, qualities that have come to characterise 'the Anzac spirit.'[80][81]

Although The Anzac Book presented a specially crafted image of the Anzac soldier, Bean did not want the historical record altered because of selective editing for its initial intended purpose. In February 1917, he wrote to the War Records Office with a suggestion that important documents – such as The Anzac Book manuscript and rejected contributions – be preserved so that they could one day be deposited in a museum. This request was granted and the rejected contributions can now be viewed in the AWM's archives.[82]

Western Front

In late March 1916, Bean sailed with the A.I.F. from Egypt to France where he reported on all but one of the engagements involving Australian soldiers. He moved back and forth along the Western Front with the Australian troops, often at the frontline, under fire, sending press despatches back to Australia, continuing to keep diary entries of military actions and recording interviews.[83][84]

His editorial opinions often contradicted military authorities, yet he was highly respected. Bean observed the 'fog of war' (communication breakdown between commanders in the rear and troops at the frontline) and he described the devastating effects of shellshock. Intense artillery fire, he said, ripped away the conventions of psychological shelter and left men 'with no other protection than the naked framework of their character', an experience too much for many. His reputation and influence grew and, in 1916, he was granted access to British Army war diaries, a privilege not extended to some British historians.[85]

Bean brought a democratic and colonial scepticism to bear on the assumption that the despatches of high commanders were the best source of information about what actually happened when men went into battle. His diaries recorded the evidence about 'what actual experiences, at the point where men lay out behind hedges or on the fringe of woods, caused those on one side to creep, walk, or run forward, and the others to go back'.[86]

Bean endeavoured to visit every Australian battlefield on the day of battle, or the day after. Having missed the poorly conceived and executed attack at Fromelles on 19 July 1916, the first big Australian action in France which had resulted in heavy losses, he was there the following morning moving among survivors getting their stories.[87]

It was the fallen at Fromelles to whom Bean dedicated his Letters from France, a selection of his first-hand observations from the Western Front published in 1917. The dedication reads; 'To those other Australians who fell in the Sharpest Action their Force has known, on July 19, 1916, before Fromelles, these Memories of a Greater, but not a Braver, Battle are herewith Dedicated'.[88]

Several days after the battle of Fromelles ended Bean witnessed the battle of Pozieres. Over several weeks he was on the ground and sometimes in the trenches as the fighting raged. The experience shook him as it revealed the horror and destruction of modern warfare. The heavy casualties incurred there almost broke the back of the all-volunteer A.I.F. Bean recorded in his diary: 'Pozieres is one vast Australian cemetery'.[89]

The carnage on the Somme caused Bean to conceive the idea of a memorial where Australia could commemorate its war dead and view the relics its troops collected.[90]Bean had noticed as early as the Gallipoli campaign that Australian soldiers were avid collectors of battlefield souvenirs and imagined a museum where they would be displayed.[91] Several months after the fighting at Pozières, Bean returned to retrace the battle where he collected the first relics for what would eventually become the AWM.[92]

Subsequently, at Bean's prompting, the Australian War Records Section (AWRS) was established in London in May 1917, under the command of Lieutenant, later Lieutenant Colonel, John Treloar. The Section's task was to collect and organise the documentary record of the Australian forces, so that it could be preserved for Australia, rather than be absorbed into Britain's records. Over the next two years the AWRS acquired approximately 25,000 objects, termed by Bean as 'relics', as well as paper records, photographs, film, publications, and works of art. All were brought back to Australia in 1919 and formed the basis of the collection of the AWM. Treloar, who was later appointed the AWM's Director, contributed more than any other person to the realisation of Bean's AWM vision.[93][94]

Bean believed that photography was essential to the work of a modern historian, taking his own photographs on Gallipoli. On the Western Front, private cameras were banned in British armies. After much lobbying Bean succeeded, in mid – 1917, in having two Australians commissioned as official photographers to the A.I.F: polar adventurers, Frank Hurley and Hubert Wilkins. Bean and Hurley, however, had opposing ideas, particularly over composite images some of which have become classics of the genre and priceless insights into the nature of the Great War. But for Bean the quest was for accuracy and honesty rather than artistry.[95]

Bean, with Treloar, was also involved in the program for employing Australian war artists. Among the selected artists were Will Dyson (1880–1938) and George Lambert (1873–1930) who were already living in London, and Frank Crozier (1883–1948) who was already serving with the AIF.[96][97]

In these three initiatives, namely the establishment of the AWRS, the commissioning of official Australian war artists and the commissioning of official Australian war photographers, Captain H. C. Smart of the Australian High Commission in London played an important part.[98]

Bean was further involved in the administration of the A.I.F., contributing to the formation and development of the A.I.F. educational scheme for returning soldiers which was subsequently established in May 1918, with Bishop George Long as its inaugural Director of Education.[99][100][101]

In 1918, when a successor to General Birdwood as commander of the Australian Corps was being chosen, Bean intervened on behalf of General Brudenell White, General Birdwood's Chief Staff Officer.[102] According to Chadwick Bean was one of many who considered that White, not General Sir John Monash, should have the corps command.[103] In his last book, Two Men I Knew: William Bridges and Brudenell White, Founders of the A.I.F. Bean told the story, related also in volume VI of the Official History, of his own 'high-intentioned but ill-judged intervention' in this matter.[104] Kelly viewed that intervention as having been, nonetheless, motivated by what Bean believed to be in the best interests of the A.I.F. [105]

To Bean, repatriation meant the future of Australia.[106] In October 1918 Bean urged Prime Minister, William Hughes, 'that it was all important to get some plan drawn up by the A.I.F. at the earliest possible moment – put Monash in charge – Birdwood is not the man for it at all. It was urgent, I said, if they did not want a catastrophe'.[107] Ten days after the armistice, on 21 November 1918, Monash was brought to London to be Director General of the A.I.F. Department of Demobilisation and Repatriation, taking command formally on 4 December.[108]

On 11 November 1918, Armistice Day, Bean returned to Fromelles. Realising the significance of this tragic 1916 battle to the young Australian nation, Bean walked over the ground to think, reflect and record. In this Bean revealed his dedication to these men, their legacy and their role in shaping Australia's emerging identity.[109]

Bean was the only Australian correspondent who was with the A.I.F. for the duration of Australia's involvement in the War, from Gallipoli to the last battles Australia fought on the Western Front, a feat which had few parallels elsewhere in the Empire.[110] In an article subtitled 'Tribute to Mr Bean' in the Sydney Morning Herald on 9 June 1919, Sir Brudenell White said: 'That man faced death more times than any other man in the A.I.F., and had no glory to look for either. What he did – and he did wonders – was done from a pure sense of duty.'[111]

Post-war

Charles and Effie Bean in the grounds of Tuggeranong Station between 1919 and 1925.

Post-war, in addition to his writing commitment, Bean was active in a variety of civic and war-related works, causes and organisations. Most reflected his concern to improve Australian society and the welfare of its people. Others were linked with his wartime and pre-war occupations.[112] He had ideas, opinions and a vision for Australia.[113]

Immediately on war's end, Bean wrote and published his tract, In Your Hands, Australians, exhorting Australians to pursue the aims of peace with the dedication, organisation and tenacity with which they had fought the war. The last and longest chapter was about the importance of education: 'We must plan for the education of every person in the State, in body, mind, and character.' Bean argued that the 'big thing in war...was the discovery of the character of Australian men'.[114][115]

The Australian Historical Mission

Early in 1919, en route from London to Australia, Bean led a group of eight Australians – including artist George Lambert and photographer Hubert Wilkins – to revisit Gallipoli. The aim of the group, the Australian Historical Mission, was to carry out research on the battlefields of the 1915 Anzac campaign; create new works of art and photographs to help convey the story of the trauma and tragedy; collect sacred relics; discuss a plan for the Gallipoli war graves, and obtain from the Turks their story of the fighting.[116]

Bean returned to Australia in May 1919 after an absence of four and a half years. On the boat voyage home he had put into written form his ideas for the official history and for a national war museum. He envisaged the museum not only as the repository of official pictures, photographs, maps, records, dioramas and relics from the battle field but as a national memorial to Australians who had died in the War. The government accepted his proposals.[117][29]

The Official History of Australia in the War of 1914–1918

With a small staff, Bean took up his appointment as official historian in 1919, based first at Tuggeranong, near Canberra, and later at Victoria Barracks in Sydney. The central stipulation that Bean laid down when he became official historian was that the history was to be free from government censorship, though he had to yield when the Australian Commonwealth Naval Board insisted on removing critical passages from Volume IX, A. W. Jose's The Royal Australian Navy.[118]

In writing the Official History Bean was animated by a guiding principle: that the history was to be a memorial to those who had served, suffered and died. The question he set out to explore, as he later explained, was 'how did the Australian people … come through the first universally recognised test of this, their first great war?' It was answered by his conclusion that through service and sacrifice in the war 'Australia became fully conscious of itself as a nation.'[119]

The first two volumes of the history, The Story of Anzac, appeared in 1921 and 1924 respectively. Bean wrote both volumes, together with the next four on the A.I.F. in France. He edited the remaining six and, with H. S. Gullett, annotated the photographic volume. Between 1919 and 1941 Bean sent out over ten thousand letters seeking information or clarification on detail for the history.[120] The last volume written by Bean, Volume VI, appeared in 1942. Its final paragraph recorded: 'What these men did nothing can alter now. The good and the bad, the greatness and smallness of their story will stand. Whatever of glory it contains nothing now can lessen. It rises, as it will always rise, above the mists of ages, a monument to great-hearted men; and, for their nation, a possession for ever.'[121][122][123]

In 1916, the British War Cabinet had agreed to grant Dominion official historians access to the war diaries of all British Army units fighting on either side of a Dominion unit, as well as all headquarters that issued orders to Dominion units, including the GHQ of the British Expeditionary Force. By the end of the war, the Committee of Imperial Defence (CID) were less than willing to divulge this information, possibly fearing it would be used to criticise the conduct of the war. It took six years of persistence before Bean was allowed access and a further three years for a clerk to make copies of the enormous quantity of documents. Bean therefore had available to him resources that were denied to all British historians who were not associated with the Historical Section of the CID.

Bean was unwilling to compromise his values for personal gain or political expediency. He was not influenced by suggestions and criticism from British official historian, Sir James Edmonds about the direction of his work. Edmonds reported to the CID that, "The general tone of Bean's narrative is deplorable from the Imperial standpoint." For his maverick stance, it is likely that Bean was denied decorations from King George V, despite being recommended on two occasions during the war by the commander of the Australian Corps. Bean was not motivated by personal glory; many years later when he was offered a knighthood, he declined.[124]

Bean studying Army documents while working on the official history in 1935

Bean's style of war history was different from anything that had gone before. Partly reflecting his background as a journalist, he concentrated on both the 'little people' and the big themes of the First World War. The smaller size of the Australian Army contingent (240,000) allowed him to describe the action in many cases down to the level of individuals, which suited Bean's theme that the achievement of the Australian Army was the story of those individuals as much as it was of generals or politicians. Bean was also fascinated by the Australian character, and used the history to describe, and in some way create, a somewhat idealised view of an Australian character that looked back at its British origins but had also broken free from the limitations of that society. "It was character", he wrote, "which rushed the hills at Gallipoli and held on there during the long afternoon and night, when everything seemed to have gone wrong..."[125]

Bean's approach, despite his prejudices and his intention to make the history a statement about society, was to record and analyse what had happened on the battlefields. His method was generally to describe the wider theatre of war, and then the planning behind each battle. He then moved to the Australian commander's perspectives and contrasted these with the impressions from the troops at the front line (usually gathered by Bean 'on the spot'). He then quoted from the German (or Turkish) records of the same engagement, and finally summarised what had actually happened, often going over the ground after the war. He noted the individual Australian casualties where there was any evidence of the circumstances of their death. Even with that small contingent of 240,000 (of whom 60,000 died) this was a monumental task.

Bean’s history is neither definitive nor flawless. He tended to lionise those whom he admired and to omit what he found uncomfortable.[126] Bean’s focus on the tactical level and front line experiences of the men meant there was little or nothing on training, doctrine, logistics, organisation or administration – all the things that make modern armies functional and successful armies victorious. [127]

Historians generally agree that Bean’s belief in rural virtues does not adequately explain how the AIF transformed from an organisation of neophytes in 1914 to the effective fighting force that contributed to Germany’s defeat in 1918.[128]

Like most history writing the work is coloured by the personal views and cultural ideology of its author.[129] While later studies have elaborated, revised and challenged many aspects of it, it retains its integrity as the single greatest source of interpretation of Australia’s part in the First World War.[130]

Bean also contributed the Australian section to volume three of Sir Charles Lucas' The Empire at War, Oxford, 1924.[131]

Australian War Memorial

Bean accompanying Queen Elizabeth II during her visit to the Australian War Memorial on 16 February 1954

Bean's idea was to create a national memorial where families and friends could grieve for those buried in places far away, as well as being a place that would contribute to an understanding of war itself.[132][133] Accordingly, the style of the AWM reflects Bean's desire for the building to at once be museum, monument, memorial, temple and shrine to Australians who lost their lives and suffered as a result of war.[134] Bean's vision for the AWM appears on the wall inside its front doors:'Here is their spirit, in the heart of the land they loved; and here we guard the record which they themselves made.'[135]

The heart of the AWM –the Hall of Memory - embodies its spirit and aim. The quintessential qualities informing character, as witnessed by Bean, of Australia's fighting men and women are depicted in the Napier Waller designed and executed stained glass windows. These are - personal qualities: Resource, Candour, Devotion, Curiosity, Independence; social qualities: Comradeship, Ancestry, Patriotism, Chivalry, Loyalty; and fighting qualities: Coolness, Control, Audacity, Endurance, Decision - collectively referred to as the Anzac Spirit.[136][137]

The AWM had been Bean's conception emerging from the horror that the A.I.F. had endured at Pozieres in 1916. In 1919 an Australian War Museum committee was established.[138] The committee had hoped Bean would become the first director of the Memorial (the term now being used) as well as official historian, but it was evident to Bean that he could not undertake both tasks. H. S. Gullett (later Sir Henry Gullet), who had been in charge of the AWRS in Egypt and a war correspondent in Palestine, was appointed director.[122] Bean and Lieutenant-Colonel Treloar conceived that the memorial and museum functions were philosophically and operationally inseparable and, with Gullett, they were to guide its creation and operations over a 40 year period.[139]

From selecting the site in 1919, Bean worked on creating the AWM, and was present when the building opened on 11 November 1941. He served continuously as a member of the AWM Board from 1919 and was its chairman from 1952 to 1959 remaining on the Board until 1963.[140] As the general editor and principal author of the Official History Bean was also associated with the AWM as publisher and as a donor and adviser on the collections including post-war art commissions.[141] He expounded the philosophy of commemoration through exhibits, documentary collections and the Roll of Honour.[142] Bean's moral principles and the fact that the enemy should not be referred to in derogatory terms, influenced the philosophical angle that the AWM would adopt.[143]

Further post-war works: war-related; civil-related; publications.

Charles Bean featured on the cover of the May 1931 issue of Reveille

During the years in which he was engaged in his work with the AWM and the Official History and after its completion, Bean promoted his ideals in various fields of national interest. Most reflected his concern to improve the nature of Australian society and the welfare of its people causing him to be described as a 'social missionary'.[144] Others were linked with his wartime and pre-war occupations.[112]

In some of the societies and organisations formed around these interests and occupations Bean held official positions: councillor of the National Fitness Council of New South Wales for ten years; councillor of the Town Planning Association of New South Wales; president of the New South Wales Institute of Journalists and vice –president of the Recreation and Leadership Movement; chairman of the NSW Standing Committee on Community Centres and a member of the Australian Services Education Council. He was chairman of the Promotions Appeal Board of the Australian Broadcasting Commission from 1947 to 1958 and in 1949, was vice president of the United Nations Association, NSW.[145]

Bean wrote to the press in support of these movements, maintained an output of articles (mostly for soldiers' journals), and gave lectures and the occasional broadcast.[131] In Bean's writings on the improvement of society, education was one of his most important topics.[146][147][148]

Underscoring his concern for open spaces and the natural environment, in 1930 he established the Parks and Playgrounds Movement of NSW and became the Movement's honorary secretary. Its aims included the provision of suitable public spaces to enable sports, especially team sports; the preservation of adequate passive recreational spaces and reserves for flora and fauna; ensuring that existing and future parks and reserves were properly used; and maintaining the right of all Australians to enjoy the natural beauties of Australia and of healthy open-air sport and play.[149][150]

In 1932 Bean persuaded the AWM to buy the Pozieres windmill ruins in France. In July 1916 he had written that the Pozieres ridge 'was more densely sown with Australian sacrifice than any other spot on earth'.[151] Today the site, a place of pilgrimage, is in the care of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission with a memorial tablet bearing Bean's words.[152]

Bean was an active member of the League of Nations Union, believing in the League as guardian of peace. Horror of war led him to support Chamberlain's conciliation of Hitler. Bean hoped that Hitler would keep his pledges — would play the game — until the German invasion of Czechoslovakia. On 21 March 1939 in a letter which appeared in the S.M.H under the heading 'Recantation,' Bean withdrew that support.[153]

In 1940, with the Second A.I.F. at war, Bean wrote a pamphlet called The Old A.I.F and the New. In that same year he was employed by the Federal Department of Information to provide liaison between the chiefs of staff and the press.[154]

Bean was involved in the creation of the National Archives of Australia.[155] In 1942 on retiring as Official War Historian of the First World War, he accepted Prime Minister Curtin's invitation to chair what was then known as the War Archives Committee to recommend procedures for the collection and preservation of records created during the Second World War. Bean, along with other historians, had lobbied for this initiative as prior to that time Australia possessed no national archives resulting in World War I records being destroyed. After the war, during Bean's seventeen year chairmanship, the committee expanded its scope to include all Commonwealth records thereby establishing the foundations for the management of the official records of the Commonwealth of Australia.[156]

In 1943 Bean published War Aims of a Plain Australian. Its message was much the same as that of In Your Hands, Australians: 'May we all play the game with larger wisdom than in 1918 and with our whole strength, so as to win not only the war but the peace – this time'.[157]

After some unsuccessful lobbying, Bean persuaded the Curtin Government to sponsor a history of the Second World War, recommending the appointment of journalist Gavin Long as official historian. In 1943 Long was appointed general editor of the Official History of Australia in the Second World War, of which Long wrote three volumes and which eventually comprised five series totalling twenty-two volumes.[158][159]

In 1943 Bean was a member of a committee of twenty-one representative citizens in Sydney, who wrote to Prime Minister Curtin commending the Kimberley plan (a Jewish Settlement Proposal in the Kimberley) pointing out that 'Australia should acknowledge her increased moral and political responsibilities to the world at large, and extend all possible aid to persecuted peoples.' The proposal was ultimately unsuccessful.[160]

In 1944 Bean wrote the Anzac Requiem - a short meditation on Australian service and sacrifice.[161] It was Australian, imperial and internationalist and articulated what Anzac Day meant to him, and what he thought it should mean to the nation.[162] Bean recorded it in August 1946 for radio broadcast on Anzac Day, 25 April 1947, and possibly on subsequent Anzac Days.[163]

In 1946 Bean produced a single-volume history of the Great War, Anzac to Amiens: A Shorter History of the Australian Fighting Services in The First World War. It contained the following significant statement: 'Anzac stood, and still stands, for reckless valour in a good cause, for enterprise, resourcefulness, fidelity, comradeship, and endurance that will never own defeat', thereby outlining what has become known as the Anzac tradition.[164]

In 1948 Bean's Gallipoli Mission reporting on the Mission's work in 1919 was published. His preface noted: 'This book was planned with the intention merely of passing on to general readers in Australia experiences which seemed too interesting to be stored in a few fading memories and in semi-official records.'[165]

In 1950 Bean's commissioned history of the independent corporate schools of Australia was published.[166] The strength of "The Arnold Tradition", as Bean there labelled it, is manifest in it.[167] The title, Here, My Son emanates from Sir Henry Newbolt's poem on the chapel at Clifton, Bean's former school in England.[168]

In 1951 Bean and his wife visited England and when they returned to Australia it was by a migrant ship, on which Bean was employed as a migration officer.[169]

Towards the end of his life Bean planned to write a series of biographies but only one was written: Two Men I Knew: William Bridges and Brudenell White, Founders of the A.I.F., which was published in 1957.[170] It was his last book.[169]

Honours

Bean did not seek personal honours.[171] He declined a knighthood on more than one occasion but accepted other acknowledgments and honours for his work.[172] In 1913 The Royal Society of the Arts awarded him its Silver Medal.[173] He was Mentioned in Despatches(1915).[174] In 1930, the Royal United Services Institute in London awarded him the Chesney Gold Medal.[122] In the same year the University of Melbourne awarded him its degree of D.Litt. and in 1959 he was awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Laws by the Australian National University, an institution which he had been one of the first to foresee.[175]

Legacy

Bean was admitted to Concord Repatriation Hospital in Sydney in 1964 suffering from dementia and died on 30 August 1968. His legacy is that of a chronicler, a creator, a historian, a subject and an inspiration.[176]

Military Contribution and Civil Contribution

Bean's Personal Papers and his Life Story

Bean's Papers are a resource for social historians, not only historians of war. In many respects Bean became a national figure through his war history. His position and work brought him into contact with a great number of people and a considerable correspondence is one enduring consequence.[177] His legacy, therefore, includes a large archive of personal papers (mostly housed in the AWM) which provides a resource for the study of Australian society, not limited to military affairs, during the course of his long life.[178] Described as 'a gift to the nation' when donating them to the AWM Bean's papers form probably the single most significant collection of personal records held by the AWM.[179][180]Through Bean's writings we can chart the personal growth of a thoughtful man, and the growth of Australia as a nation, from the insularity of the White Australia Policy at the time of Federation in 1901 to acceptance of full membership of the world community in the 1960s. His constancy of character, his personal growth in the opinions he held, and his role in shaping national opinion provide a means of calibrating national change.[181]

Bean's First World War notebooks, diaries and folders

Bean's documents created during and after the War have immense historic value and are considered to be one of the most significant records created by a single Australian. The collection includes 286 volumes of diaries and historical notebooks recorded by Bean at the time and often at the front line. The diaries are therefore first-hand accounts of the war and offer a unique perspective due to Bean's status as official correspondent.,[182] The diaries represent the evolution of Bean's thoughts over time – a sense of forming, then testing and revising opinions. Bean thought deeply about issues and felt obliged to write about them truthfully and later modify them, if appropriate, in the face of new evidence. An instance of Bean modifying an opinion is in one of the diary entries critical of Monash which has the essential emendation 'I do not now believe this to be true'.[183]According to the Australian Media Hall of Fame: "It is his extraordinary, painstakingly detailed (and often harrowing) private notes and diaries written during the war that remain one of his greatest achievements."[184]

The Official History of Australia in the War of 1914–1918.

Bean's work established the tradition and set the standard for subsequent Australian official war histories.[185] Bean's volumes are still used as an essential reference, often as a starting point for research today, because of his command of the sources and the clarity of his narrative. Bean's history remains notable because it was the work of a participant, one who instigated the collection of the archive on which it was based. It was the product of an individual vision, of one man who worked with a tiny staff of co-authors and dedicated colleagues.[186]

His own six volumes are unique among national military histories because he himself was present at, and observing from, the midst of the battlefields, almost all the fighting he describes; because he was even more concerned to tell what manner of men the front - line soldiers were and how they fought the battles than he was to tell how the generals planned that those battles be fought.[187][188] Bean's democratic history of ordinary men in battle gave him the latitude to comment on the Australian character.[189] The volumes, therefore, were also a study and celebration of what became Bean's central preoccupation as a writer, the Australian character.[190] Bean stressed that the main reason the history was so detailed was that it was a study of national character – 'war reduces itself the actions of single citizens.'[191] His history remains one of the great works of Australian historical literature.[192]

The Australian War Memorial, Canberra.

The AWM has been listed on the Australian National Heritage Register.[193] People from all over the world visit it to view its galleries and access its archival holdings.[194] The AWM Memorial is unique among the world's war memorials in that it combines a shrine, a world-class museum, and houses an extensive archive.[195][196] Bean served his nation in war, and faced the fight to realise his vision of commemoration through understanding. No single figure from other nations emerges to rival what Charles Bean did for Australia in preserving the memory of the contributions of their troops.[197]

The Anzac Tradition and Charles Bean's role in the construction of Australia's cultural identity

In marking the centenary of Federation and Australia Day the Sydney Morning Herald’s “2001: One hundred most influential Australians of the century” Charles Bean was listed as probably doing more than anyone to foster a sense of Australian nationhood.[198] His contribution to the definition of Australia's national character was influenced by his perception of the Rugby School Tradition of Dr Thomas Arnold as much as anything he witnessed in the Great War, Gallipoli not excepted. It was a lens through which he saw the world. It was written up by him first as "The Australian Character" in 1907 and later as 'The ANZAC Spirit'.[199] From the Gallipoli front line to the armistice on the Western Front Bean witnessed and recorded the actions of the A.I.F., a volunteer army, whose performance was a test not just of professional military competence but of something deeper – national character.[200] He wrote: 'We now share with the New Zealanders one condition that was lacking to our young nations in 1915: we have passed through the test (of war) which until now, unfortunately, has necessarily been judged by mankind as the supreme one for men fit to be free; and we have emerged from that test with the Anzac tradition. In a Second World War that tradition has nobly served humanity. May the day be near when it will be safely and gloriously used in the tradition of a free mankind.'[201]According to former Australian Prime Minister, John Howard: of all the traditions, and all of the things that Australians hold dear today, none is held more dearly than the Anzac tradition.[202]

The National Archives of Australia

Today the National Archives' collection contains more than 40 million items, mainly Australian Government records from Federation in 1901 to the present - records about key events and decisions that have shaped Australian history.[203] The collection is considered irreplaceable.[204]

Parks and Playgrounds Movement NSW

As the founder of this organisation, Bean was instrumental in bringing together the early town planning and conservation movements and ensuring the establishment of a network of green spaces throughout the Greater Sydney Region. These green spaces, range from playgrounds and sporting fields to public gardens and bushland parks, and the qualities of beauty, health, engagement and joy they embody and inspire, are a critical part of Bean's legacy.[205]

Bibliography

  • Volume I – The Story of Anzac: the first phase (1921)
  • Volume II – The Story of Anzac: from 4 May 1915 to the evacuation (1924)
  • Volume III – The Australian Imperial Force in France: 1916 (1929)
  • Volume IV – The Australian Imperial Force in France: 1917 (1933)
  • Volume V – The Australian Imperial Force in France: December 1917 – May 1918 (1937)[207]
  • Volume VI – The Australian Imperial Force in France: May 1918 – the Armistice (1942)
(A further six volumes were the work of other authors with Bean having varying degrees of involvement)
  • War Aims of a Plain Australian (1943)[208]
  • Anzac to Amiens (1946)
  • Australia's Federal Archives: John Curtin's Initiative (1947)
  • Here, My Son, An account of the independent and other Corporate Boys' Schools of Australia (1950)
  • Gallipoli Mission (1952)
  • Two Men I Knew, William Bridges and Brudenell White, Founders of the A.I.F. (1957)
  • A Bibliography of CEW Bean's Major Works, Appendix X, to Be Substantially Great in Thy Self: Getting to Know C.E.W. Bean; Barrister, Judge's Associate, Moral Philosopher (2011)[209]

Copyright in the works of Dr. Bean, other than the Official History of Australia in the War of 1914–1918, is held by the Bean Family. Copyright in the Official History of Australia in the War of 1914–1918 is held by the Australian War Memorial.

Personal life

In St Andrew's Cathedral, Sydney, on 24 January 1921, Bean married Ethel Clara "Effie" Young of Tumbarumba, acting matron at Queanbeyan Hospital during the time Bean worked at Tuggeranong. Officiating at the ceremony was Albert Talbot, the Cathedral's Dean whom Bean had known as an A.I.F. chaplain. Effie died in Sydney in 1991, aged 97 years. The Beans adopted a daughter, Joyce, who was their only child.[210]

Eponyms

  • The Federal Division of Bean in the Australian Capital Territory (ACT) which covers an area in the south of the ACT and also includes Norfolk Island.[211]
  • The C.E.W. Bean Foundation established to honour Charles Bean and to commemorate Australian war reporting generally.[212]
  • The C.E.W. Bean Building Research Centre at the AWM.[213]
  • C.E.W. Bean Prize for Military History awarded annually by the Australian Army to the best honours or postgraduate thesis submitted in any Australian university focusing the history of the Australian Army.[214]
  • The Charles Bean Sports Field, in Lindfield in NSW (where Bean and his family lived at one stage) named in recognition of Bean's work with the Parks and Playgrounds Movement in NSW.[215]
  • C.E.W. Bean plaque in The Sydney Writers Walk located on the Opera House Walk, East Circular Quay, Sydney.[216][217]
  • C.E.W. Bean plaque in the A.C.T. Honour Walk.[218]
  • C.E.W. Bean plaque in the Pillars of Bathurst Commemorative Garden which commemorates past citizens of Bathurst for their services to the Bathurst region and to Australia.[219]
  • C..E.W. Bean plaque in Poets Corner of Central Park, Bourke, New South Wales, notes Bean's On the Wool Track and Dreadnought of the Darling.[220]
  • C.E.W. Bean Memorial Wall, Bathurst City Library.[221]
  • Bean and Long Memorial, Scots All Saints College Bathurst.[222]
  • Australia Post's commemoration of Bean in the Centenary of WWI stamp series recognising that Bean 'was a key non-combat figure, who recorded Australia's part in the war and initiated our national military heritage collection.'[223]
  • C.E.W. Bean Room in heritage-listed Tuggeranong Homestead, ACT.[224]

See also

References

Citations

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  3. ^ "The diaries, photographs and records of C.E.W. Bean". National Committee of Australia Memory of the World.
  4. ^ a b Piggott, Michael (1983). A guide to The Personal Family And Official Papers of C.E.W. Bean. Canberra: Australian War Memorial. ISBN 0-642-99438-2.
  5. ^ Inglis, K. S. (1970). C.E.W. Bean Australian Historian, The John Murtagh Macrossan Lecture, delivered at the University of Queensland, June 1969. Queensland: UQP. p. 8.
  6. ^ Lindsay S.C., Geoff (2011). "'Be Substantially Great in Thyself: Getting to Know C.E.W. Bean; Barrister, Judge's Associate, Moral Philosopher'" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 4 March 2015. Retrieved 16 June 2021.
  7. ^ Inglis, K. S. (1979). "Bean, Charles Edwin Woodrow (1879–1968)". Australian Dictionary of Biography.
  8. ^ First World War, Australian official war artists. "Australian official war artists – First World War'". Australian War Memorial. Archived from the original on 25 April 2018.
  9. ^ Australia's official art and photography of the First World War. "Art of Nation". Australian War Memorial. Archived from the original on 3 April 2018.
  10. ^ Conde, Anne-Marie (2017). 'Bean and the making of the National Archives of Australia' in Peter Stanley (ed.), Charles Bean: Man, Myth, Legacy, , (2017). UNSW Press, Sydney. p. 62. ISBN 9781742234892.
  11. ^ Rees, Peter (2015). Bearing Witness: The remarkable life of Charles Bean, Australia's greatest war correspondent. Sydney: Allen & Unwin. pp. 69–75. ISBN 978-1-74237-954-8.
  12. ^ Burness, Peter (October 2018). "In his own words". Australian War Memorial.
  13. ^ Bean, C.E.W. (1918). In Your Hands, Australians. London: Cassell and Company.
  14. ^ Conde, A. M. (3 October 2017). "Charles Bean and the making of the National Archives of Australia was also active in the creation of another key institution". Inside Story.
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Sources

External links