William Andrew White

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Born on 16 June 1874 to former slaves in Virginia, William Andrew White moved to Nova Scotia in 1899 at the age of twenty-five and attended Acadia University, before being ordained as a reverend in 1903. On 1 February 1917, at the age of XX, he enlisted in the No. 2 Construction Battalion, an all-black unit of the Canadian Expeditionary Force. The first and only black officer in the Canadian Expeditionary Force during World War I, White was also the only black chaplain who served in the Canadian or British forces during the war.

Written behind the Front Lines, White’s diary provides insight into the operations of the No. 2 Construction Batallion, an all-black Canadian unit. A Baptist chaplain, White uses his diary to detail the emotional labour required in supporting the war. Even though White’s entries are short and terse, reading between the lines, the reader senses the loneliness of the writer’s separation from his wife, Izie, and the labour required to maintain a long-distance marriage. The diary also reveals the intersection of war with race and religion. White critically references the racist second-class treatment of the “coloured boys.” He provides snippets on his weekly Sunday sermons, and the names of the patron saints’ are printed for each day also reminding the reader (and the writer) of the chaplain’s spiritual function.

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William Andrew White Diary 1917 Physical Object
William Andrew White Diary 1918 Physical Object