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Boer War
The outbreak of the Boer War in 1899 saw each of Australia's colonies raise contingents of volunteers to send to South Africa to serve as units within the British army. The war was waged by an army of regular soldiers against the Afrikaaner republics of South Africa fighting for their independence from the British Empire.
Most Australians believed in the idea of Empire and thought of themselves as British subjects. The Boer War gave Western Australians a chance to show their patriotism and to prove that they, like other Australian colonists, were loyal to Queen and country.
The first Western Australian volunteers were dispatched in 1899, followed by five other contingents and a contribution to the Commonwealth contingent after Federation. 923 West Australians served in the Boer War out of a total of over 11,000 Australians.
The West Australian colonial contingent retained its own identity and fought
as a discrete unit, with officers drawn from their number. They fought as
British soldiers. Because there was no Australian nation, there was no Australian
commander or Australian representative in the British High Command. By the
time a Commonwealth contingent could be sent by the new nation of Australia
to South Africa in 1901, the war was all but over.
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