During this time period, hotel bars closed at 6pm and masses of inebriated patrons were subsequently ejected into the streets. This was known colloquially as the '
six o'clock swill'. Around 6pm on 3 April 1943, fighting broke out between US servicemen and New Zealand soldiers and civilians outside the Allied Services Club. The brawl spread to the ANA (Army, Navy, and Air Force) Club in
Willis Street and to
Cuba Street, continuing for hours. Civilian and military police attempted to break up the fights, but they only subsided once the US soldiers left town on trains back to their camps. Reports of the riot vary. One version states that some American servicemen in the Allied Services Club objected to
Māori soldiers also using the club, and began to stop Māori soldiers from entering. Many New Zealand soldiers in the area, both
white and Māori, combined in opposition. The stand-off escalated when Americans took off their belts to attack those who wanted to let Māori back in. The Commissioner of Police downplayed the riots at the time, telling the
Evening Post that although "there was certainly a bit of a skirmish" by a "small crowd", nobody had been injured, hospitalised, or killed. He said that one [drunken] civilian had been arrested and faced court proceedings, one New Zealand serviceman had been dealt with by military authorities, and no US servicemen had been arrested or charged. An army major wrote in an internal memo just after the event that the army had prior intelligence that trouble might occur, and had all its military police on duty that night. He said that the disturbance was caused by a few merchant seamen who had been drinking and decided to "clean up" the Americans, which led to fighting. The major said that furniture at the club was damaged before the club was closed and barricaded at around 8pm. For example, on 27 April 1943 two men were arrested after a large and "nasty" fight erupted at the
Basin Reserve between New Zealand and US troops, and in October 1943 a group of American servicemen and Māori civilians came to blows at
Ōtaki over vandalism and insults to a Māori woman. A fight on 12 May 1945 in Cuba Street involved over 150 Māori and US servicemen. This fight was racially motivated: Māori troops were angry at their treatment by the Americans, who tended to treat them the way they treated African-Americans. Military reports stated that, "Maori from whom statements were taken allege they have been insulted by the Americans and have been told by Americans not to ride in the same tramcars and that they should walk via back streets etc., that the Americans call them black curs etc. and have generally insulted the Maori race". This event did not attain the notoriety of the 'Battle of Manners Street'. ==See also==