
In a national broadcast Prime Minister Curtin announces that Australia is now at war with Japan.
Summary by Maryanne Doyle
An instrumental version of 'Advance Australia Fair’ begins the recording. It is followed by the voice of a male presenter who solemnly introduces the prime minister. Notice his standard English accent which contrasts with Curtin’s unmistakable Australian accent.
Curtin appeals directly to the listener by addressing the ‘men and women of Australia’. It was thought that Curtin was the first to use this form of address which Gough Whitlam, another ALP prime minister, adopted in tribute to Curtin. Apparently Robert Menzies, the Liberal prime minister who preceded Curtin, also used this form of address in speeches.
In the beginning of the speech Curtin details why Australia is at war and how the Allies had attempted to negotiate with Japan to avoid war. The language then becomes more emotive as he aligns the actions of Japan ‘like an assassin in the night’ with that of the approach of Hitler. He beseeches the Australian public to serve the nation which is in peril and facing its ‘darkest hour’. The inference, though not stated, is the threat of invasion. Darwin was bombed for the first time several months later on 19 February 1942. It is now thought that the Japanese were not intending to invade Australia as such, but to seize raw materials and to secure a perimeter.
Curtin aims to reassure listeners by describing the steps being taken by the Australian government to prepare and plan for ‘whatever eventuality’. Curtin exhorts the listeners to support the efforts of the government: ‘The call is to you, for your courage, your physical and mental ability, your inflexible determination that we, as a nation of free people, shall survive’.
The history of Australia as a British colony is inferred by such references to the 150 years in ‘this spacious land’ without any reference to the original inhabitants. Australia is a citadel for the ‘British-speaking’ and ‘a place where civilisation will persist’. The speech concludes with a quote from the English poet Swinburne.
Though Curtin’s early education was disrupted by frequent moves, he maintained a lifelong interest in learning. During his involvement with the Socialist Party as a young man he attended classes in literature and public speaking, both of which increased his confidence and skills in writing and giving speeches. He also had experience in journalism, starting out as a copy boy at the Age newspaper and later editing several union newspapers.
Prime Minister John Curtin addresses the nation from Melbourne to inform them that Australia is now at war with Japan. This was the first occasion in Australian history that the nation had independently declared war on another nation.
Early on the morning of Monday 8 December 1941, in the Victoria Hotel in Melbourne, press secretary Don Rodgers woke Prime Minister Curtin with the news of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. Ian Hamilton, an ABC journalist based in Canberra at the time, revealed in an oral history interview (NFSA title no: 225120) that he not only broke the news of the attack to Curtin via Rodgers but also reported on radio that Australia was now at war with Japan prior to any statement from the government. Hamilton sourced the news of the attack from a listening post that had been set up by the government to monitor the world via short-wave receivers at Mont Park near Melbourne.
On the evening of the 8th December Curtin broadcast to the nation that Australia was at war with Japan from Melbourne, though where in Melbourne is unclear. It was possibly either the Postmaster-General’s room at the Commonwealth Offices in Melbourne, where Prime Minister Robert Menzies had broadcast on 3 September 1939 via an ABC microphone the announcement of war with Germany, or the War Cabinet Room within the Victoria Barracks in Melbourne where the Declaration of War with Japan was signed on 9 December 1941. Still photography and film has survived which shows the presence of a microphone in this room.
Following the news of the attack, Curtin attended a War Cabinet meeting and also spoke at a public meeting to raise funds to replace the HMAS Sydney, which had been sunk on 19 November by the German cruiser the Kormoran.
It wasn’t until Monday, 8 December 1941, that Curtin broadcast to the nation that Australia was at war with Japan. It was broadcast from Melbourne, though where in Melbourne is unclear. It was possibly either the Postmaster-General’s room at the Commonwealth Offices in Melbourne, where Prime Minister Robert Menzies had broadcast on 3 September 1939 via an ABC microphone the announcement of war with Germany, or the War Cabinet Room within the Victoria Barracks in Melbourne where the Declaration of War with Japan was signed on 9 December 1941. Still photography and film has survived which shows the presence of a microphone in this room.
This broadcast has survived because it was recorded onto what was known as a transcription disc. These discs were made not specifically to preserve the recording for posterity during this period, but in order to distribute the recordings to a number of radio stations. Radio was an important medium during the Second World War for a public hungry for news of the conflict.
Other recordings of wartime broadcasts have survived in the National Film and Sound Archive, including speeches by Curtin and two other wartime prime ministers, Robert Menzies and Ben Chifley, as well as news reports and light entertainment such as variety shows and serials. The disc holding Curtin’s speech also holds another recording, dated several days later, of an episode of World of Sport. Sponsored by Dewar’s Scotch Whisky it consists of short reports on recent boxing and horseracing events.
It is unknown if the recording of the Curtin speech is an ABC broadcast or a commercial radio one or, in fact, both. It is believed that the Department of Information paid for the cost of landlines for a joint ABC–commercial half-hour broadcast on Sunday nights in the mid-1940s. In addition, there were various arrangements in place for commercial stations to use elements of ABC news. Other copies of Curtin’s speech have survived, but without the introductory music.
The recording begins with 'Advance Australia Fair’. This national song became the theme for the ABC news but not until February 1942. From 1942, the government directed the ABC to 'put Australia first’ in its news reporting, with daily bulletins of Australian news broadcasts to be introduced with 'Advance Australia Fair’.
Though the Australian national anthem at the time was 'God Save the King’, it was not used in this broadcast, possibly to make the point that Australia itself was for the first time declaring war on another nation and that the region was directly threatened by an aggressor. This also sent a message to Britain that the priority of the Curtin government was to secure the defence of Australia. Curtin had previously warned that committing forces to Europe would expose Australia to danger.
Curtin was considered a great wartime leader, respected across the political spectrum. He stood up to the pressures from the Allies in order to protect Australian interests and used his oratory skills to unite the nation. He struggled to maintain his health under the stress and, unfortunately, did not live to see the end of the war. He died in office on 5 July 1945.
Notes by Maryanne Doyle
The National Film and Sound Archive of Australia acknowledges Australia’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the Traditional Custodians of the land on which we work and live and gives respect to their Elders both past and present.