The first shots
of both the 1st and 2nd Anglo-Boer Wars were fired in the
North West.
The Anglo-Boer War
Conflict in southern Africa between Great Britain and the
allied Afrikaner-populated Transvaal (the South African
Republic) and the Orange Free State in, what is today,
South Africa.
Tensions Leading to War
Throughout the 19th century, after Great Britain had acquired
the Cape of Good Hope in 1814 and expanded its possessions
in southern Africa, ill feeling mounted between the Dutch-descended
population, called Afrikaners, or Boers, and British settlers.
This resulted in the Afrikaner migration called the Great
Trek (1835-1843) and the consequent establishment of the
Afrikaner republics: Natal, Orange Free State, and the South
African Republic. Natal became a British colony in 1843,
but the Transvaal territories were granted independence from
Great Britain in 1852, and Orange Free State in 1854.
In the late 1850s, the Transvaal territories formed the
South African Republic. The stage for war was set in 1884,
when gold was discovered in the Witwatersrand, a region then
encompassing parts of the southern Transvaal. The discovery
lured thousands of British miners and prospectors to settle
in the area, the influx being so great that the city of Johannesburg
was created almost overnight.
The Afrikaners, primarily farmers, resented the newcomers,
whom they called Uitlanders (“foreigners”), and
in token of their feeling, taxed them heavily and denied
them voting rights. The resentment on both sides grew, ultimately
leading to a revolt by the Uitlanders in Johannesburg against
the Afrikaner government.
This revolt was instigated by the British colonial statesman
and financier Cecil Rhodes, then premier of the Cape Colony,
who desired to bring all of southern Africa into the British
Empire. In December 1895, Leander Starr Jameson, a friend
of Rhodes, led a band of 600 British armed men in an unauthorized
attempt to support the rebellious Uitlanders in the South
African Republic. Called the Jameson Raid, the venture resulted
in Jameson's capture and imprisonment and in Rhodes's resignation.
Jameson later served as premier of the Cape Colony from 1904
to 1908.
Direct negotiations to solve the South African problem
proved unfruitful, and hostility between the Afrikaners and
the Uitlanders continued unabated. The president of the South
African Republic, Paul Kruger, was unyielding in his opposition
to the Uitlanders. In 1899 the recently appointed British
governor of Cape Colony, Alfred Milner, who strongly resented
the Afrikaners' treatment of British subjects, issued orders
to build up the 12,000-man British army contingent then in
southern Africa into a force of at least 50,000 troops. On
October 9, 1899, Kruger demanded the withdrawal of all British
troops from the Transvaal frontiers within 48 hours, with
the alternative of formal war.
Major Battles
British non-compliance with Kruger's demands brought immediate
action, and an alliance of the South African Republic and
the Orange Free State declared war on October 12, 1899. Boer
forces under the command of General De la Rey attacked the
British garrison and railway siding at Kraaipan, south west
of Mafikeng, thereby signalling the start of the Anglo-Boer
War.
The North West province saw a number of important battles
as both sides sought control of the main railway link to
the north.
The Afrikaner forces were initially successful, invading
Natal and Cape Colony. Within days they succeeded in surrounding
British forces at Ladysmith, Natal, and at Mafeking (now
Mafikeng) and Kimberley, Cape Colony. In December the British
commander in chief Sir Redvers H. Buller sent fresh troops
to relieve besieged British forces in three areas of the
war zone: Colenso, Natal; the hills of Magersfontein on the
Orange Free State and Cape Colony borders; and the mountain
range of Stormberge in the Cape Colony. Within a week's time,
referred to as Black Week by the British, each of the new
units had been defeated by Afrikaner forces.
On January 10, 1900, the British general Frederick S. Roberts
was sent to replace Buller as commander in chief. (Buller,
however, remained to fight throughout the war). Early in
February, Roberts ordered the British commander John D. P.
French north to relieve the city of Kimberley; French's objective
was attained four days later. Simultaneously, Roberts undertook
a north-eastward march from Cape Colony into the Orange Free
State. Attacked by the Afrikaner general Piet Cronje on February
27, Roberts fought back successfully and forced the surrender
of Cronje and his troops, altogether about 4000 men. On March
13, Roberts entered Bloemfontein, capital of the Orange Free
State. Two months later, on May 17, besieged Mafeking, defended
by troops under the command of the British soldier Robert
Baden-Powell, was relieved.
The Siege of Mafikeng commenced on 14 October 1899 and
lasted for 217 days until 17 May 1900. The town became somewhat
of an icon at the time. During this time Sol Plaatje wrote
his literary masterpiece "The Boer War Diary of Sol
T Plaatje: an African at Mafikeng".
Roberts captured Johannesburg on May 31 and Pretoria, the
capital of the South African Republic, on June 5. Upon these
defeats, President Kruger fled to Europe, and Roberts, believing
the war to be won, returned to England in January 1901.
Guerrilla Resistance
British satisfaction proved short-lived. Boer leaders,
among them such soldiers and future statesmen as Louis Botha
and Jan Christiaan Smuts, launched extensive and well-planned
guerrilla warfare against the occupying British troops. The
fighting thus continued for the next year and was finally
quelled only through the severe tactics of the new British
commander in chief, Lord Horatio Herbert Kitchener. He exhausted
the enemy by devastating the Afrikaner farms that sustained
and sheltered the guerrillas, placing black African and Afrikaner
women and children in concentration camps, and building a
strategic chain of formidable iron blockhouses for his troops.
Treaty of Vereeniging
Negotiations for peace began on March 23, 1902, and on
May 31 Afrikaner leaders signed the Treaty of Vereeniging.
The settlement provided for the end of hostilities and eventual
self-government to the Transvaal and the Orange Free State
as colonies of the British Empire.
Britain agreed in turn to pay a £3 million indemnity
for rehabilitation, and granted amnesty and repatriation
to Afrikaner soldiers who pledged their loyalty to the British
monarch.
In the course of the Afrikaner War, British losses totaled
about 28,000 men. Afrikaner losses were about 4,000 men,
plus more than 26,000 civilians who died from disease in
concentration camps. Thousands of black Africans died in
the camps.
The Treaty of Vereeniging brought peace and political unification
to South Africa but did not erase the underlying causes that
had triggered the conflict. Even after the establishment
of the Union of South Africa in 1910, the Afrikaners, by
and large, kept themselves culturally and socially separate
- a fact that has begun to change only in recent years.
Many of the battle sites and war cemeteries have been restored
in the province. Special events were hosted as part of the
centenary commemorations of the war during 2001/2002
The North West has a rich history of clashes that strectch
between the coming of the Voortrekkers and the end of the
Anglo-Boer Wars. The bulk of these battles occured during
the final two years of the Second Ango-Boer War with the
Siege of Mafikeng (14 October 1899 till 17 May 1900). |