E-Book, Englisch, 215 Seiten
Meredith Afrikaner Odyssey
1. Auflage 2017
ISBN: 978-1-86842-774-1
Verlag: Jonathan Ball
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 6 - ePub Watermark
The Life and Times of the Reitz Family
E-Book, Englisch, 215 Seiten
ISBN: 978-1-86842-774-1
Verlag: Jonathan Ball
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 6 - ePub Watermark
Martin Meredith is a journalist, biographer and historian who has written extensively on Africa and its modern history. He is the author of several bestselling books including The State of Africa: A History of the Continent Since Independence; Mugabe: Power, Plunder, and the Struggle for Zimbabwe, and Mandela: A Biography. His 2002 book Fischer's Choice, which documents the life of anti-apartheid activist Bram Fischer, was published as a revised edition earlier this year.
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chapter 1
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The Fountain of Flowers
Long before the discovery of diamonds and gold on the highveld of southern Africa, the village of Bloemfontein, where Deneys Reitz was born, had achieved unusual distinction. It was founded in 1846 by a British army officer, Captain Henry Warden, who had been sent by the British authorities in Cape Town with orders to cross the Orange River, marking the northern frontier of the Cape Colony, and to establish a military outpost in the turbulent region beyond, then known as Transoranje. British officials were worried that intractable disputes over land and stock theft between emigrant trekboers from the Cape Colony who had settled in Transoranje and an assortment of rival African chiefdoms – Tswana, Sotho, Griqua and Khoikhoi – would increase the likelihood of clashes and instability in the northern interior. Warden’s mission, with the support of a small detachment of Cape Mounted Rifles, was to try to maintain peace.
The site that Warden chose for his garrison lay in a small valley surrounded by hills that dominated the vast plains between the Riet and Modder rivers. A small stream and a perennial spring there provided a reliable source of water. An emigrant trekboer, Johan Nicolaas Brits, and his family, had settled in the valley in the 1820s, living in a small mud house with a front garden of flowers and an orchard watered from a furrow between the spring and the stream. Wild clover growing around the spring led Brits to name his farm Bloem Fontein – ‘Fountain of Flowers’.
Warden paid Brits the sum of 500 rijksdaalders (£37.10s.0d) for his farm and set his detachment of riflemen the task of building a ‘Residency’ – a simple house of sun-dried bricks – and a stockade and stables. Within a few weeks, Bloem Fontein had grown into a small military settlement, 150 kilometres north of the Cape Colony border.
When Warden’s efforts to resolve land disputes made little headway, a new British governor, Sir Harry Smith, fresh from military victories in India, adopted a far more aggressive approach. In February 1848, without any consultation, he proclaimed British sovereignty over the entire region between the Orange and Vaal rivers, an area that included not only scattered Boer emigrant groups but land belonging to Tswana, Sotho and Griqua chiefdoms.
Smith’s arbitrary decree provoked opposition from several Boer factions. In July, an emigrant leader, Andries Pretorius, led a trekboer commando from northern districts and turfed Warden out of Bloem Fontein and back into the Cape. Relishing the opportunity for a fight, Smith retaliated with a force of British troops and Griqua auxiliaries, defeating Pretorius in a short, sharp battle at Boomplaats in Griqua territory and forcing him to retreat across the Vaal River into the Transvaal region.
Smith duly named his new territory the ‘Orange River Sovereignty’, declaring Bloem Fontein as its capital. An English visitor in 1848 described it as ‘a small village consisting of some half-dozen houses and some huts, prettily situated on the banks of a stream’. Warden was reinstated as Resident; a new fort was built on the slope of a kopje close to his residence and named Queen’s Fort, after Queen Victoria; and a surveyor was commissioned to draw up a plan for the development of the village, opting for long, straight streets running parallel to the stream, Bloem Spruit, as it was called. In November 1848, Warden sold a number of plots – ‘water erven’ – in Bloem Fontein, raising funds for the construction of a thatched hall on St George’s Street, which was used for school lessons, church services, public events and meetings of the legislative assembly of the Orange River Sovereignty.
From the outset, Bloemfontein acquired a distinctly English character. Most of its inhabitants were English-speakers. The territory’s first newspaper, The Friend of the Sovereignty and Bloemfontein Gazette, was published weekly with articles in Dutch and English but favoured the English cause. It was the only official bulletin for government proclamations.
The British government, however, soon became alarmed at the cost and difficulties of trying to maintain order in the highveld region. An influx of English settlers and land speculators after the proclamation intensified conflicts over land ownership. Warden made a bad situation worse by drawing up a demarcation line that deprived the Basotho leader, Moshoeshoe, of large chunks of fertile territory along the Caledon River valley and precipitated a series of clashes. The Boer leader, Andries Pretorius, threatened to side with Moshoeshoe against the Sovereignty unless Britain recognised the independence of the Boers north of the Vaal River. Elsewhere in southern Africa, British forces were engaged in a costly military campaign against Xhosa clans to the east.
Rather than plunge further into the quagmire, the British government decided to retreat. In January 1852, two British officials met Pretorius at Sand River and negotiated an agreement granting independence to ‘the Emigrant Farmers’ in territory north of the Vaal River – the Transvaal, or the Zuid-Afrikaansche Republiek, as it was later called.
But in the Orange River Sovereignty, the prospect of Britain’s withdrawal aroused considerable dismay and opposition, from trekboers as well as English residents. Protest meetings were held in Bloemfontein and other villages. British officials were consequently obliged to shun loyalist groups and negotiate with burgher representatives willing to shoulder the burden of government.
At a meeting in the government ‘school room’ in St George’s Street on 23 February 1854, a British commissioner, Sir George Clerk, signed a convention agreeing to transfer power to a republican committee. On 11 March, troops from the Cape Mounted Rifles rode out of the village, leaving behind four obsolete cannons in Queen’s Fort. As the London Times observed cynically, other bequests to the new Boer republic included ‘tables, chairs, desks, shelves, inkstands, green baize, safes … freely sacrificed in the cause of peace’.
As capital of the new Vrijstaat (Free State), Bloemfontein possessed few accoutrements. It was in reality no more than a rural dorp, a collection of some 60 houses, a few stores and church halls, dispersed among orchards, willow trees, dry-stone walls and rough wagon tracks. After the departure of British troops and officials, the white population dwindled to about 400.
The surrounding grass plains abounded with a vast array of wildlife, which often ventured into the village. A German store owner, Gustav Fichardt, recalled that shortly after his arrival in 1853, while he was standing on the stoep in conversation with his brother, a herd of wildebeest stampeded past them. The local postmaster was instructed to dispatch mail to the Cape Colony village of Colesberg no later than 4 pm to reduce the risk of lion attack. The highveld climate was generally benign; there were long, uninterrupted days of sunshine and dry air. But summer brought heat and storms; in winter there were many days of frost and bitter cold; and drought and locust plagues were common hazards.
The Vrijstaat itself possessed a new national flag of white and orange, but few resources. Its white population amounted to only about 15 000 scattered across a territory of 130 000 square kilometres; many were illiterate. The number of blacks was estimated to be about 50 000, mostly Tswana, Sotho, Griqua and Khoikhoi. The republic’s main product was wool for export. Supplies of building materials, furniture, household articles and clothing all had to be transported to Bloemfontein by ox-wagon across rough roads from Port Elizabeth, on the coast at Algoa Bay, a journey of 650 kilometres that took up to two months. The first plank floor installed in a private house in Bloemfontein came from the timbers of a ship that had foundered at Port Elizabeth.
Despite its inauspicious beginnings, the new republic rapidly took shape. Within two months of its independence, a council of elected members approved a constitution widely regarded as providing the country with a firm foundation. The constitution accepted as citizens all whites with six months’ residence. The legislature was a unicameral Volksraad whose members were elected by white males over the age of 18 – provided they had registered for military service. Executive power was placed in the hands of a president, directly elected for a period of five years, and an executive council composed of officials and Volksraad nominees. In local districts, the chief sources of authority were landdrosts (magistrates) appointed by the government and locally elected field-cornets and field commandants. The constitution also contained elements of a bill of rights, with provisions guaranteeing equality before the law, personal freedom and freedom of the press. Although Dutch was chosen as the official language of the Volksraad, English remained in common use in town and business life.
Disputes over land ownership, however, still festered. When the British departed, they had still not established a clear boundary with Moshoeshoe’s Sotho kingdom in the Caledon Valley. The republic’s first president, Josias Hoffman, made efforts to come to terms with Moshoeshoe, arranging a meeting with him. Without consulting the Volksraad, Hoffman presented Moshoeshoe with a cask of ceremonial gunpowder as a gesture of good faith. When Volksraad members belatedly heard of the gift, they accused Hoffman of supplying ammunition to the enemy and hounded him out of office.
The white quest for...




