France’s Black Defenders
By Mike Bennighof, Ph.D.
June 2006
In the spring of 1940, the French Army fielded 101 divisions of varying quality. Among the very best of these were the elite
formations of the Armée d’Afrique and La Coloniale, the two branches of France’s overseas forces.
By the time of the Armistice, the elite 1st Moroccan Division, seven other North African divisions, three African divisions,
and eight Colonial divisions had arrived at the front plus three cavalry brigades. In addition, a number of regiments had been
attached to Metropolitan French divisions; manpower from outside France made up about one-fifth of the French Army.
In our Strange Defeat game, the two corps made up solely of colonial units are among the best the French player fields.
These are the only strictly colonial pieces in the game; most of the colonial divisions are part of the “French” corps.
Tirailleurs Sénégalais head to the front, May 1940.
Until 1900, La Coloniale had been known as the Troupes de Marine, and had fallen under the French Navy’s administration.
They had provided colonial garrisons for the preceding several centuries; these were the regiments that waged the French
and Indian War and fought for Dupleix in India, for example. In 1900, control passed to the War Ministry, who
administered the force separately from the metropolitan Army. La Coloniale had its own officers, promotion paths, and pay
scales. Officers could and did transfer between the branches, but such a change was both rare and frowned upon.
White cadres came from French volunteers; these served five-year commitments and included all-white units known as
Coloniale Blanche. Most were recruited in economically-depressed areas like Brittany or the Paris slums. Black soldiers from
sub-Saharan Africa, some volunteers and some conscripts, formed Tirailleurs Sénégalais regiments. “Sénégalais” referred to
all black peoples of Africa, not just those from Sénégal itself where the units had first been formed. The French did not
administer a European-style draft: Village chiefs were assigned recruiting quotas, and received cash bonuses for exceeding them.
Vietnamese and Laotian soldiers did not serve in France in the 1940 campaign in any great numbers, but several thousand
Malagasy did, chiefly in Maginot Line machine-gun battalions.
The “white” and “black” distinction was more cultural than racial; black soldiers from Martinique or Guadeloupe serving as
cadre in Sénégalais regiments were classed as “blanche” and assigned white barracks and pay scales. Most troops had
experience serving alongside one another in “mixed” regiments in the colonies, and the Coloniale’s officer corps consciously
fostered comradeship between the races. And thanks to their Great War heroism, Tirailleurs Sénégalais had a very positive
reputation among the French civilian population; in the 1920s and 1930s images of balck soldiers became very prominent in
advertising campaigns. French breakfast cereal boxes even exhorted French children to eat their flakes like a brave
Tirailleur. And at a time when the United States Army still practiced intense racial segregation, Africans could and did rise
to officer rank in La Coloniale.
The elite 3rd Division d’Infanterie Coloniale, an all-blanche unit, fought extremely well at Chiers in May and June, where
Sgt. François Mitterand was wounded. The other Colonial divisions fought mostly on the Meuse in May and along the Somme
River in June; Sénégalais shouting the traditional “Allah Akbar!” war cry at one point overran tanks of the 7th Panzer
Division. Most Coloniale units did not have anti-tank guns, and those that did received them only at the start of the campaign.
Yet they still managed to mount a very effective defense.
German directives warned their troops that African soldiers routinely mutilated their prisoners, a charge not supported by
any evidence but widely believed. Black French soldiers taken captive were to be treated “severely.” Nazi ideology held the
Africans to be sub-human, and many Germans resented the French Army’s deployment of Sénégalais regiments on occupation
duty in the Rhineland after the First World War. The troops gleefully complied: at Montluzin on 19 June 1940, German
soldiers machine-gunned 200 unarmed prisoners of the 25th Tirailleurs Sénégalais. At Aubigny in May an unknown number of
Africans of the 24th Tirailleurs Sénégalais including all of their black officers were murdered, and between 16 and 25
June in Cote d’Or over 250 Sénégalais prisoners were massacred.
Museum display of Sénégalais uniform, Ministere de Forces-Armées, Senegal. Note the “anchor” badge, a holdover from the
Troupes de Marine days.
France’s black soldiers suffered approximately 17,500 killed and wounded in the 1940 campaign. But their war was only
beginning. Sénégalais units were among the first to rally to Charles DeGaulle’s Free French movement (though the very first
formed unit to do so was a Foreign Legion battalion mostly made up of Spanish communists). They made up most of the
infantry in LeClerc’s epic march across the Sahara, and made the stand at Bir Hakeim in June, 1942. Four battalions fought
at El Alamein, and five others in the 1st Free French Division in Italy in 1943. And the mostly-black 9th Division d’Infanterie
Coloniale took Elba and landed in southern France. France’s claim to have continued to fight rested in large part on the
contributions of its African troops. Their reward came swiftly.
By late 1944, with Free French units moving into France itself, the Gaullist movement replaced the black soldiers with young
metropolitan white recruits of the FFI, in a movement called blanchiment. Officially, the stated reason was that the Africans
would not stand up to the cold winter weather then approaching. But the Sénégalais suspected outright racism on the part of
both DeGaulle and his American allies, who had demanded that no Sénégalais have contact with black U.S. troops. The
Africans were sent to camps and in many cases treated as prisoners; at Morlaix seven veterans were shot and wounded by
white French guards.
After the war, La Coloniale’s own officer corps was surprisingly able to repair most of the damage done by the regular Army
in 1944. Black regiments fought in Indochina willingly and very capably. By the early 1960s, the experiment of France in
Africa was over and the former colonies began to claim their independence.
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