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Jameson Raid

The Jameson Raid (29 December 1895 – 2 January 1896) was a botched raid against the South African Republic (commonly known as the Transvaal) carried out by British colonial administrator Leander Starr Jameson, under the employment of Cecil Rhodes. It involved 500 British South Africa Company police launched from Rhodesia over the New Year weekend of 1895–96. Paul Kruger, towards whom Rhodes had a great personal hatred, was president of the South African Republic at the time. The raid was intended to trigger an uprising by the primarily British expatriate workers (known as Uitlanders) in the Transvaal but failed to do so. The workers were called the Johannesburg conspirators. They were expected to recruit an army and prepare for an insurrection; however, the raid was ineffective, and no uprising took place. The results included embarrassment of the British government; the replacement of Cecil Rhodes as prime minister of the Cape Colony; and the strengthening of Boer dominance of the Transvaal and its gold mines. The raid was a contributory cause of the Anglo-Boer War (1899–1902).

Jameson Raid
Part of the Boer Wars

Cecil Rhodes and Alfred Beit, instrumental in the Jameson Raid
Date29 December 1895 – 2 January 1896
Location26°06′S 27°48′E / 26.1°S 27.8°E / -26.1; 27.8
Result South African Republic victory, see: Aftermath
Belligerents
 Cape Colony  South African Republic
Commanders and leaders
Leander Starr Jameson
Cecil Rhodes
Piet Cronjé
Casualties and losses
18 killed
40 wounded[1]
4 killed
5 wounded[1]
class=notpageimage|
Location within South Africa

Background

What later became South Africa was not a single, united nation during the late nineteenth century. The territory had four distinct entities: the two British colonies of Cape Colony and Natal; and the two Boer republics of the Orange Free State and the South African Republic, more commonly referred to as the Transvaal.

Foundation of the colonies and republics

The Cape, more specifically the small area around present day Cape Town, was the first part of South Africa to be settled by Europeans; the first immigrants arrived in 1652. These settlers were transported by, and long remained under the control of, the Dutch East India Company.

Gradual consolidation and eastward expansion took place over the next 150 years; however, by the beginning of the nineteenth century, Dutch power had substantially waned. In 1806, Great Britain took over the Cape to prevent the territory falling to Napoleon and to secure control over the trade routes to the Far East.

Antipathy towards British control and the introduction of new systems and institutions grew amongst a substantial portion of the Boer community. One of the primary causes of friction was policy of the British authorities towards slavery in South Africa. In 1828, legislation passed by the British parliament guaranteed equal treatment under the law for all, regardless of race. In 1830, a new ordinance imposed heavy penalties for harsh treatment of slaves. The measure was controversial among some of the population, and in 1834, the government abolished slavery in the British Empire altogether. The Boers opposed the changes, as they believed they needed enslaved labor to make their farms work. They believed the slaveholders were compensated too little upon emancipation. They were also suspicious of how the government paid for compensation. This resentment culminated in the en-masse migration of substantial numbers of the Boers into the hitherto unexplored frontier, to get beyond the control of British rule. The migration became known as the Great Trek.

This anti-British feeling was by no means universal: in the Western Cape, few Boers felt compelled to move. The Trekboers, frontier farmers in the East who had been at the front of the colony's eastward expansion, were the ones who elected to trek further afield. These emigrants, or Voortrekkers as they became known, first moved east into the territory later known as Natal. In 1839, they founded the Natalia Republic as a new homeland for the Boers. Other Voortrekker parties moved northwards, settling beyond the Orange and Vaal rivers.

Reluctant to have British subjects moving beyond its control, Britain annexed the Natalia Republic in 1843, which became the Crown colony of Natal. After 1843, British government policy turned strongly against further expansion in South Africa. Although there were some abortive attempts to annex the territories to the north, Britain recognised their independence by the Sand River Convention of 1852 and the Orange River Convention of 1854, for the Transvaal and the Orange Free State, respectively.

 
South-East Africa, 1887

After the First Anglo-Boer War, Gladstone's government restored the Transvaal's independence in 1884 by signing the London Convention. No one knew there would be the discovery of the colossal gold deposits of the Witwatersrand two years later by Jan Gerrit Bantjes (1843-1911).

Economics

Despite the political divisions, the four territories were strongly linked. Each was populated by European-African emigrants from the Cape; many citizens had relatives or friends in other territories. As the largest and longest established state in Southern Africa, the Cape was economically, culturally, and socially dominant: by comparison, the population of Natal and the two Boer republics were mostly pastoralist, subsistence farmers.

The fairly simple agricultural dynamic was upset in 1870, when vast diamond fields were discovered in Griqualand West, around modern-day Kimberley. Although the territory had historically come under the authority of the Orange Free State, the Cape government, with the assistance of the British government, annexed the area, taking control of its vast mineral wealth.

Discovery of gold

 
Beit, associate of Rhodes and privy to Jameson's plans, financed the revolutionists to the order of £400,000[2][3] and was subsequently censured in the House of Commons and British press.[4]
 
Wernher, Beit's business partner, was not drawn into the investigation, and his role, at least in the raid's initial stages, remains unproven.[3]
 
In the raid's aftermath Rhodes was severely censured and had to resign as chairman of the Chartered Company and Cape prime minister.[5]
 
To re-engineer the subjugation of Transvaal, Milner was appointed High Commissioner to South Africa and Lt.-Governor of the Cape in 1897.[5]

In June 1884, Jan Gerrit Bantjes (1843–1914) discovered signs of gold at Vogelstruisfontein (the first gold sold directly to Cecil Rhodes at Bantjes's camp for £3,000) followed in September by the Struben brothers at Wilgespruit near Roodepoort which started the Witwatersrand Gold Rush and modern-day Johannesburg. The first gold mines of the Witwatersrand were the Bantjes Consolidated Mines. By 1886 it was clear that there were massive deposits of gold in the main reef. The huge inflow of Uitlanders (foreigners), mainly from Britain, had come to the region in search of employment and fortune. The discovery of gold made the Transvaal overnight the richest and potentially the most powerful nation in southern Africa, but it attracted so many Uitlanders (in 1896 approximately 60,000) that they quickly outnumbered the Boers (approximately 30,000 white male Boers).

Fearful of the Transvaal's losing independence and becoming a British colony, the Boer government adopted policies of protectionism and exclusion, to include restrictions requiring Uitlanders to be resident for at least four years in the Transvaal to obtain the franchise, or right to vote. They heavily taxed the growing gold mining industry which was predominantly British and American. Due to this taxation, the Uitlanders became increasingly resentful and aggrieved about the lack of representation. President Paul Kruger called a closed council, including Jan Gerritse Bantjes, to discuss the growing problem and it was decided to put a heavy tax on the sale of dynamite to non-Boer residents. Jan G. Bantjes, fluent in both spoken and written Dutch and English, was a close confidant of Paul Kruger with their link dating to the Great Trek days. Jan's father, Jan Gerritze Bantjes, had given Paul Kruger his elementary education during the trek and Jan Gerritse was part of his inner core of associates. This closed council would be the committee which set the Transvaal Republic on a collision course with Great Britain and the Anglo-Boer War 1899-1902 and which set German feelings toward Britain at boiling point by siding with the Boers. Because of this applied dynamite tax, considerable discontent and tensions began to rise. As Johannesburg was largely an Uitlander city, non-boer leaders there began to discuss the proposals for an insurrection.

Cecil Rhodes, Governor of the Cape, had a desire to incorporate the Transvaal and the Orange Free State in a federation under British control. Having combined his commercial mining interests with Alfred Beit to form the De Beers Mining Corporation, the two men also wanted to control the Johannesburg gold mining industry. They played a major role in fomenting Uitlander grievances.

Rhodes later told the journalist W.T. Stead that he feared that a Uitlander rebellion would cause trouble for Britain if not controlled by him:[6]

It seemed to me quite certain that if I did not take a hand in the game the forces on the spot would soon make short work of President Kruger. Then I should be face to face with an American Republic—American in the sense of being intensely hostile to and jealous of Britain—an American Republic largely manned by Americans and Sydney Bulletin Australians who cared nothing for the [Union Jack]. They would have all the Rand at their disposal. The drawing power of the Outlander Republic would have collected round it all the other Colonies. They would have federated with it as a centre, and we should have lost South Africa. To avert this catastrophe, to rope in the Outlanders before it was too late, I did what I did.[6]

In mid-1895, Rhodes planned a raid by an armed column from Rhodesia, the British colony to the north, to support an uprising of Uitlanders with the goal of taking control. The raid soon ran into difficulties, beginning with hesitation by the Uitlander leaders.

Drifts Crisis

In September and October 1895, a dispute between the Transvaal and Cape Colony governments arose over Boer trade protectionism. The Cape Colony had refused to pay the high rates charged by the Transvaal government for use of the Transvaal portion of the railway line to Johannesburg, instead opting to send its goods by wagon train directly across the Vaal River, over a set of fords (known as 'drifts' in South Africa). Transvaal president Paul Kruger responded by closing the drifts, angering the Cape Colony government.[7] While Transvaal eventually relented, relations between the nation and Cape Colony remained strained.

Jameson force and the initiation of the raid

As part of the planning, a force had been placed at Pitsani, on the border of the Transvaal, by the order of Rhodes so as to be able to quickly offer support to the Uitlanders in the uprising. The force was placed under the control of Leander Starr Jameson, the Administrator General of the Chartered Company (of which Cecil Rhodes was the Chairman) for Matabeleland. Among the other commanders was Raleigh Grey. The force was around 600 men, about 400 from the Matabeleland Mounted Police and the remainder other volunteers. It was equipped with rifles, somewhere between eight and sixteen Maxim machine guns, and between three and eleven light artillery pieces.[8][9]

The plan was that Johannesburg would revolt and seize the Boer armoury in Pretoria. Jameson and his force would dash across the border to Johannesburg to "restore order" and with control of Johannesburg would control the gold fields.

However, while Jameson waited for the insurrection to begin, differences arose within the Reform Committee and between Johannesburg Uitlander reformers regarding the form of government to be adopted after the coup. At a point, certain reformers contacted Jameson to inform him of the difficulties and advised him to stand down. Jameson, with 600 restless men and other pressures, became frustrated by the delays and, believing that he could spur the reluctant Johannesburg reformers to act, decided to go ahead. He sent a telegram on 28 December 1895 to Rhodes warning him of his intentions - "Unless I hear definitely to the contrary, shall leave to-morrow evening" - and on the very next day sent a further message, "Shall leave to-night for the Transvaal". However, the transmission of the first telegram was delayed, so that both arrived at the same time on the morning of 29 December, and by then Jameson's men had cut the telegraph wires and there was no way of recalling him.

On 29 December 1895, Jameson's armed column crossed into the Transvaal and headed for Johannesburg. They hoped that this would be a three-day dash to Johannesburg before the Boer commandos could mobilise, and would trigger an uprising by the Uitlanders.

The British Colonial Secretary, Joseph Chamberlain, though sympathetic to the ultimate goals of the raid, realized it would be a mistake since the uitlanders were not supportive. He immediately tried to stop it, remarking that "if this succeeds it will ruin me. I'm going up to London to crush it". He rushed back to London and ordered Sir Hercules Robinson, governor-general of the Cape Colony, to repudiate the actions of Jameson and warned Rhodes that the company's charter would be in danger if it were discovered the Cape Prime Minister was involved in the raid. Chamberlain therefore instructed local British representatives to call on British colonists not to offer any aid to the raiders.[10]

 
Arrest of Jameson after the raid - Petit Parisien 1896

Although Jameson's men had cut the telegraph wires to Cape Town, they had failed to cut the telegraph wires to Pretoria (cutting a fence by mistake). Accordingly, news of his incursion quickly reached Pretoria and Jameson's armed column was tracked by Transvaal forces from the moment that it crossed the border. The Jameson armed column first encountered resistance very early on 1 January when there was a very brief exchange of fire with a Boer outpost. Around noon the Jameson armed column was around twenty miles further on, at Krugersdorp, where a small force of Boer soldiers had blocked the road to Johannesburg and dug in and prepared defensive positions. Jameson's force spent some hours exchanging fire with the Boers, losing several men and many horses in the skirmish. Towards evening the Jameson armed column withdrew and turned south-east attempting to flank the Boer force. The Boers tracked the move overnight and on 2 January, as the light improved, a substantial Boer force with some artillery was waiting for Jameson at Doornkop. The tired raiders initially exchanged fire with the Boers, losing around thirty men before Jameson realized the position was hopeless and surrendered to Commandant Piet Cronjé.[11] The raiders were taken to Pretoria and jailed.

Aftermath

External image
  Gravestones and memorials of the fallen in the Burgershoop Cemetery in Krugersdorp

The Boer government later handed the men over to the British for trial and the British prisoners were returned to London. A few days after the raid, the Kaiser of Germany sent a telegram (the "Kruger telegram") congratulating President Kruger and the Transvaal government on their success "without the help of friendly powers", alluding to potential support by Germany. When this was disclosed in the British press, it raised a storm of anti-German feeling. Dr. Jameson was lionised by the press and London society, inflamed by anti-Boer and anti-German feeling and in a frenzy of jingoism. Jameson was sentenced to 15 months for leading the raid, which he served in Holloway. The Transvaal government was paid almost £1 million in compensation by the British South Africa Company.

For conspiring with Jameson, the members of the Reform Committee (Transvaal), including Colonel Frank Rhodes and John Hays Hammond, were jailed in deplorable conditions, found guilty of high treason, and sentenced to death by hanging. This sentence was later commuted to 15 years’ imprisonment, and in June 1896, all surviving members of the Committee were released on payment of stiff fines. As further punishment for his support of Jameson, the highly decorated Col. Rhodes was placed on the retired list by the British Army and barred from active involvement in army business. After his release from jail, Colonel Rhodes immediately joined his brother Cecil and the British South Africa Company in the Second Matabele War taking place just north of the Transvaal in Matabeleland. Cecil Rhodes was forced to resign as Prime Minister of Cape Colony in 1896 due to his apparent involvement in planning and assisting in the raid; he also, along with Alfred Beit, resigned as a director of the British South Africa Company.[12]

Jameson's raid had depleted Matabeleland of many of its troops and left the whole territory vulnerable. Seizing on this weakness, and a discontent with the British South Africa Company, the Ndebele revolted during March 1896 in what is now celebrated in Zimbabwe as the First War of Independence, the First Chimurenga, but it is better known to most of the world as the Second Matabele War. The Shona joined them soon thereafter. Hundreds of European settlers were killed within the first few weeks of the revolt and many more would die over the next year and a half. With few troops to support them, the settlers had to quickly build a laager in the centre of Bulawayo on their own. Against over 50,000 Ndebele held up in their stronghold of the Matobo Hills the settlers mounted patrols under such people as Burnham, Baden-Powell, and Selous. It would not be until October 1897 that the Ndebele and Shona would finally lay down their arms.

Political impact

In Britain the Liberal Party objected to, and later opposed, the Boer War.[13] Later, Jameson became Prime Minister of the Cape Colony (1904–08) and one of the founders of the Union of South Africa. He was made a baronet in 1911 and returned to England in 1912. On his death in 1917, he was buried next to Cecil Rhodes and the 34 BSAC soldiers of the Shangani Patrol (killed in 1893 in the First Matabele War) in the Matobos Hills, near Bulawayo.

Effect on Anglo-Boer relations

The affair brought Anglo-Boer relations to a dangerous low. Tensions were further exacerbated by the "Kruger telegram" from the German, Kaiser Wilhelm II congratulating Kruger on defeating the "raiders". The German telegram came to be widely interpreted as an offer of military aid to the Boers. Wilhelm was already perceived by many as anti-British after initiating a costly naval arms race between Germany and Britain. As tensions quickly mounted, the Transvaal began importing large quantities of arms and signed an alliance with the Orange Free State in 1897. Jan C. Smuts wrote in 1906 of the Raid, "The Jameson Raid was the real declaration of war... And that is so in spite of the four years of truce that followed... [the] aggressors consolidated their alliance... the defenders on the other hand silently and grimly prepared for the inevitable."

Joseph Chamberlain condemned the raid despite previously having approved Rhodes' plans to send armed assistance in the case of a Johannesburg uprising. In London, despite some condemnation by the print-media, most newspapers used the episode as an opportunity to whip-up anti-Boer feelings. Though they faced criminal charges in London for their actions in South Africa, Jameson and his raiders were treated as heroes by much of the popular public. Chamberlain welcomed the escalation by Transvaal as an opportunity to annex the Boer states.

Modern reactions

To this day, Jameson's involvement in the Jameson Raid remains something of an enigma, being somewhat out-of-character with his prior history, the rest of his life and successful later political career. In 2002, The Van Riebeeck Society published Sir Graham Bower's Secret History of the Jameson Raid and the South African Crisis, 1895–1902 (edited by Deryck Schreuder and Jeffrey Butler, Van Riebeeck Society, Cape Town, Second Series No. 33), adding to growing historical evidence that the imprisonment and judgement upon the Raiders at the time of their trial was unjust,[2] in view of what has appeared, in later historical analysis, to have been the calculated political manoeuvres by Joseph Chamberlain and his staff to hide his own involvement and knowledge of the Raid.

In a 2004 review of Sir Graham Bower's account, Alan Cousins commented that "A number of major themes and concerns emerge" from Bower's history, "perhaps the most poignant being Bower’s accounts of his being made a scapegoat in the aftermath of the raid: 'since a scapegoat was wanted I was willing to serve my country in that capacity'."[citation needed][14]

Cousins writes of Bower that:

a very clear sense of his rigid code of honour is plain, and a conviction that not only unity, peace and happiness in South Africa, but also the peace of Europe would be endangered if he told the truth. He believed that, as he had given Rhodes his word not to divulge certain private conversations, he had to abide by that, while at the same time he was convinced that it would be very damaging to Britain if he said anything to the parliamentary committee to show the close involvement of Sir Hercules Robinson and Joseph Chamberlain in their disreputable encouragement of those plotting an uprising in Johannesburg.

Finally, Cousins states that

in his reflections, Bower has a particularly damning judgement on Chamberlain, whom he accuses of 'brazen lying' to parliament, and of what amounted to forgery in the documents made public for the inquiry. In the report of the committee, Bower was found culpable of complicity, while no blame was attached to Joseph Chamberlain or Robinson. His name was never cleared during his lifetime, and Bower was never reinstated to what he believed should be his proper position in the colonial service: he was, in effect, demoted to the post of Colonial Secretary in Mauritius. The bitterness and sense of betrayal he felt come through very clearly in his comments.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b Fitzpatrick, James Percy (1899). "VI. The Invasion". The Transvaal from Within: A Private Record of Public Affairs. London: William Heinemann.
  2. ^ a b Bower, Graham (2002). Schreuder, D; Butler, J (eds.). Sir Graham Bower's Secret History of the Jameson Raid and the South African Crisis, 1895-1902. Cape Town: The Van Riebeeck Society. ISBN 978-0-9584112-9-5.
  3. ^ a b Trevelyan, Raleigh (13 March 2012). Grand Dukes and Diamonds: The Wernhers of Luton Hoo. Faber & Faber, 2012. ISBN 978-0571290307.
  4. ^ Feingold, Mordechai, ed. (2012). History of universities. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 222. ISBN 978-0199652068.
  5. ^ a b Hammond, Ronnie (2012). White Stones and Little Crosses. Hammond. pp. 3–. ISBN 978-1-4716-1334-0.
  6. ^ a b Stead, W. T. (1901). The Americanization of the World. Horace Markley. pp. 56–57.
  7. ^ "Jameson Raid". South African History Online. Retrieved 26 July 2013.
  8. ^ Davis, Richard Harding (1897). Dr. Jameson's raiders vs. the Johannesburg reformers. New York: R. H. Russell.
  9. ^ Aston, P. E. (1897). "Chapter VI". The raid on the Transvaal by Dr. Jameson. London: Dean. p. 173.
  10. ^ Marsh, Peter T. (1994). Joseph Chamberlain: Entrepreneur in Politics. Yale University Press. pp. 372–387. ISBN 978-0-300-05801-7.
  11. ^ Hammond, John Hays; Ireland, Alleyne (1918). The truth about the Jameson raid. Boston: Marshall Jones company. p. 36.
  12. ^ Rotberg, Robert I. (1988). The Founder: Cecil Rhodes and the Pursuit of Power. Oxford: University Press. p. 547.
  13. ^ Butler, Jeffrey (1968). The Liberal Party and the Jameson Raid. Clarendon Press.
  14. ^ Cousins, Alan (2006). "The Jameson Raid: Politicians, Plots and Scapegoats in South Africa". Historian (90): 20–27.

Further reading

  • Ash, Chris (2012). The If Man: Dr Leander Starr Jameson, the Inspiration for Kipling's Masterpiece. Helion & Company. ISBN 978-1-907677-74-8.
  • Blainey, G. (1965). "Lost Causes of the Jameson Raid". The Economic History Review. 18 (2): 350–366. doi:10.2307/2592099. ISSN 0013-0117. JSTOR 2592099.
  • Gordon, C. T. (1970). The growth of Boer opposition to Kruger, 1890-1895. Oxford: University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-637101-6.
  • Holli, Melvin G. “Joseph Chamberlain and the Jameson Raid: A Bibliographical Survey.” Journal of British Studies 3#2 1964, pp. 152–166. online.
  • Longford, Elizabeth (1982) [1960]. Jameson's Raid: the prelude to the Boer War. Jonathan Ball. ISBN 9780868500379. A revision of Jameson's Raid. Weidenfeld and Nicolson. 1960.
  • Mendelsohn, Richard (2007). "Blainey and the Jameson Raid: the debate renewed" (PDF). Journal of Southern African Studies. 6 (2): 157–170. doi:10.1080/03057078008708012. ISSN 0305-7070.
  • Onselen, Charles van. The Cowboy Capitalist: John Hays Hammond, the American West, and the Jameson Raid(University of Virginia Press, 2018),
  • Porter, Andrew N. (1980). The Origins of the South African War: Joseph Chamberlain and the Diplomacy of Imperialism, 1895-99. Manchester University Press. ISBN 978-0-7190-0763-7.
  • Roberts, Andrew (2000). "Ch. 37". Salisbury: Victorian Titan. Phoenix. ISBN 978-0-7538-1091-0.
  • Rhoodie, D.O. (1967). Conspirators in Conflict: A Study of the Johannesburg Reform Committee and its Role in the Conspiracy Against the South African Republic. Tafelberg-Uiygewers.
  • Van Der Poel, Jean (1951). The Jameson Raid. Oxford: University Press.
  • Van Hartesveldt, Fred R. (2000). The Boer War: Historiography and Annotated Bibliography. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-313-30627-3.

jameson, raid, british, heavy, rock, band, band, december, 1895, january, 1896, botched, raid, against, south, african, republic, commonly, known, transvaal, carried, british, colonial, administrator, leander, starr, jameson, under, employment, cecil, rhodes, . For the British heavy rock band see Jameson Raid band The Jameson Raid 29 December 1895 2 January 1896 was a botched raid against the South African Republic commonly known as the Transvaal carried out by British colonial administrator Leander Starr Jameson under the employment of Cecil Rhodes It involved 500 British South Africa Company police launched from Rhodesia over the New Year weekend of 1895 96 Paul Kruger towards whom Rhodes had a great personal hatred was president of the South African Republic at the time The raid was intended to trigger an uprising by the primarily British expatriate workers known as Uitlanders in the Transvaal but failed to do so The workers were called the Johannesburg conspirators They were expected to recruit an army and prepare for an insurrection however the raid was ineffective and no uprising took place The results included embarrassment of the British government the replacement of Cecil Rhodes as prime minister of the Cape Colony and the strengthening of Boer dominance of the Transvaal and its gold mines The raid was a contributory cause of the Anglo Boer War 1899 1902 Jameson RaidPart of the Boer WarsCecil Rhodes and Alfred Beit instrumental in the Jameson RaidDate29 December 1895 2 January 1896LocationSouth African Republic26 06 S 27 48 E 26 1 S 27 8 E 26 1 27 8ResultSouth African Republic victory see AftermathBelligerents Cape Colony South African RepublicCommanders and leadersLeander Starr Jameson Cecil RhodesPiet CronjeCasualties and losses18 killed40 wounded 1 4 killed5 wounded 1 class notpageimage Location within South Africa Contents 1 Background 1 1 Foundation of the colonies and republics 1 2 Economics 1 3 Discovery of gold 1 4 Drifts Crisis 2 Jameson force and the initiation of the raid 3 Aftermath 4 Political impact 5 Effect on Anglo Boer relations 6 Modern reactions 7 See also 8 Notes 9 Further readingBackground EditWhat later became South Africa was not a single united nation during the late nineteenth century The territory had four distinct entities the two British colonies of Cape Colony and Natal and the two Boer republics of the Orange Free State and the South African Republic more commonly referred to as the Transvaal Foundation of the colonies and republics Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Cape more specifically the small area around present day Cape Town was the first part of South Africa to be settled by Europeans the first immigrants arrived in 1652 These settlers were transported by and long remained under the control of the Dutch East India Company Gradual consolidation and eastward expansion took place over the next 150 years however by the beginning of the nineteenth century Dutch power had substantially waned In 1806 Great Britain took over the Cape to prevent the territory falling to Napoleon and to secure control over the trade routes to the Far East Antipathy towards British control and the introduction of new systems and institutions grew amongst a substantial portion of the Boer community One of the primary causes of friction was policy of the British authorities towards slavery in South Africa In 1828 legislation passed by the British parliament guaranteed equal treatment under the law for all regardless of race In 1830 a new ordinance imposed heavy penalties for harsh treatment of slaves The measure was controversial among some of the population and in 1834 the government abolished slavery in the British Empire altogether The Boers opposed the changes as they believed they needed enslaved labor to make their farms work They believed the slaveholders were compensated too little upon emancipation They were also suspicious of how the government paid for compensation This resentment culminated in the en masse migration of substantial numbers of the Boers into the hitherto unexplored frontier to get beyond the control of British rule The migration became known as the Great Trek This anti British feeling was by no means universal in the Western Cape few Boers felt compelled to move The Trekboers frontier farmers in the East who had been at the front of the colony s eastward expansion were the ones who elected to trek further afield These emigrants or Voortrekkers as they became known first moved east into the territory later known as Natal In 1839 they founded the Natalia Republic as a new homeland for the Boers Other Voortrekker parties moved northwards settling beyond the Orange and Vaal rivers Reluctant to have British subjects moving beyond its control Britain annexed the Natalia Republic in 1843 which became the Crown colony of Natal After 1843 British government policy turned strongly against further expansion in South Africa Although there were some abortive attempts to annex the territories to the north Britain recognised their independence by the Sand River Convention of 1852 and the Orange River Convention of 1854 for the Transvaal and the Orange Free State respectively South East Africa 1887 After the First Anglo Boer War Gladstone s government restored the Transvaal s independence in 1884 by signing the London Convention No one knew there would be the discovery of the colossal gold deposits of the Witwatersrand two years later by Jan Gerrit Bantjes 1843 1911 Economics Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Despite the political divisions the four territories were strongly linked Each was populated by European African emigrants from the Cape many citizens had relatives or friends in other territories As the largest and longest established state in Southern Africa the Cape was economically culturally and socially dominant by comparison the population of Natal and the two Boer republics were mostly pastoralist subsistence farmers The fairly simple agricultural dynamic was upset in 1870 when vast diamond fields were discovered in Griqualand West around modern day Kimberley Although the territory had historically come under the authority of the Orange Free State the Cape government with the assistance of the British government annexed the area taking control of its vast mineral wealth Discovery of gold Edit Beit associate of Rhodes and privy to Jameson s plans financed the revolutionists to the order of 400 000 2 3 and was subsequently censured in the House of Commons and British press 4 Wernher Beit s business partner was not drawn into the investigation and his role at least in the raid s initial stages remains unproven 3 In the raid s aftermath Rhodes was severely censured and had to resign as chairman of the Chartered Company and Cape prime minister 5 To re engineer the subjugation of Transvaal Milner was appointed High Commissioner to South Africa and Lt Governor of the Cape in 1897 5 In June 1884 Jan Gerrit Bantjes 1843 1914 discovered signs of gold at Vogelstruisfontein the first gold sold directly to Cecil Rhodes at Bantjes s camp for 3 000 followed in September by the Struben brothers at Wilgespruit near Roodepoort which started the Witwatersrand Gold Rush and modern day Johannesburg The first gold mines of the Witwatersrand were the Bantjes Consolidated Mines By 1886 it was clear that there were massive deposits of gold in the main reef The huge inflow of Uitlanders foreigners mainly from Britain had come to the region in search of employment and fortune The discovery of gold made the Transvaal overnight the richest and potentially the most powerful nation in southern Africa but it attracted so many Uitlanders in 1896 approximately 60 000 that they quickly outnumbered the Boers approximately 30 000 white male Boers Fearful of the Transvaal s losing independence and becoming a British colony the Boer government adopted policies of protectionism and exclusion to include restrictions requiring Uitlanders to be resident for at least four years in the Transvaal to obtain the franchise or right to vote They heavily taxed the growing gold mining industry which was predominantly British and American Due to this taxation the Uitlanders became increasingly resentful and aggrieved about the lack of representation President Paul Kruger called a closed council including Jan Gerritse Bantjes to discuss the growing problem and it was decided to put a heavy tax on the sale of dynamite to non Boer residents Jan G Bantjes fluent in both spoken and written Dutch and English was a close confidant of Paul Kruger with their link dating to the Great Trek days Jan s father Jan Gerritze Bantjes had given Paul Kruger his elementary education during the trek and Jan Gerritse was part of his inner core of associates This closed council would be the committee which set the Transvaal Republic on a collision course with Great Britain and the Anglo Boer War 1899 1902 and which set German feelings toward Britain at boiling point by siding with the Boers Because of this applied dynamite tax considerable discontent and tensions began to rise As Johannesburg was largely an Uitlander city non boer leaders there began to discuss the proposals for an insurrection Cecil Rhodes Governor of the Cape had a desire to incorporate the Transvaal and the Orange Free State in a federation under British control Having combined his commercial mining interests with Alfred Beit to form the De Beers Mining Corporation the two men also wanted to control the Johannesburg gold mining industry They played a major role in fomenting Uitlander grievances Rhodes later told the journalist W T Stead that he feared that a Uitlander rebellion would cause trouble for Britain if not controlled by him 6 It seemed to me quite certain that if I did not take a hand in the game the forces on the spot would soon make short work of President Kruger Then I should be face to face with an American Republic American in the sense of being intensely hostile to and jealous of Britain an American Republic largely manned by Americans and Sydney Bulletin Australians who cared nothing for the Union Jack They would have all the Rand at their disposal The drawing power of the Outlander Republic would have collected round it all the other Colonies They would have federated with it as a centre and we should have lost South Africa To avert this catastrophe to rope in the Outlanders before it was too late I did what I did 6 In mid 1895 Rhodes planned a raid by an armed column from Rhodesia the British colony to the north to support an uprising of Uitlanders with the goal of taking control The raid soon ran into difficulties beginning with hesitation by the Uitlander leaders Drifts Crisis Edit Main article Drifts Crisis In September and October 1895 a dispute between the Transvaal and Cape Colony governments arose over Boer trade protectionism The Cape Colony had refused to pay the high rates charged by the Transvaal government for use of the Transvaal portion of the railway line to Johannesburg instead opting to send its goods by wagon train directly across the Vaal River over a set of fords known as drifts in South Africa Transvaal president Paul Kruger responded by closing the drifts angering the Cape Colony government 7 While Transvaal eventually relented relations between the nation and Cape Colony remained strained Jameson force and the initiation of the raid Edit Sir Leander Starr Jameson As part of the planning a force had been placed at Pitsani on the border of the Transvaal by the order of Rhodes so as to be able to quickly offer support to the Uitlanders in the uprising The force was placed under the control of Leander Starr Jameson the Administrator General of the Chartered Company of which Cecil Rhodes was the Chairman for Matabeleland Among the other commanders was Raleigh Grey The force was around 600 men about 400 from the Matabeleland Mounted Police and the remainder other volunteers It was equipped with rifles somewhere between eight and sixteen Maxim machine guns and between three and eleven light artillery pieces 8 9 Wikisource has original text related to this article Reform Committee s invitation to Jameson The plan was that Johannesburg would revolt and seize the Boer armoury in Pretoria Jameson and his force would dash across the border to Johannesburg to restore order and with control of Johannesburg would control the gold fields However while Jameson waited for the insurrection to begin differences arose within the Reform Committee and between Johannesburg Uitlander reformers regarding the form of government to be adopted after the coup At a point certain reformers contacted Jameson to inform him of the difficulties and advised him to stand down Jameson with 600 restless men and other pressures became frustrated by the delays and believing that he could spur the reluctant Johannesburg reformers to act decided to go ahead He sent a telegram on 28 December 1895 to Rhodes warning him of his intentions Unless I hear definitely to the contrary shall leave to morrow evening and on the very next day sent a further message Shall leave to night for the Transvaal However the transmission of the first telegram was delayed so that both arrived at the same time on the morning of 29 December and by then Jameson s men had cut the telegraph wires and there was no way of recalling him On 29 December 1895 Jameson s armed column crossed into the Transvaal and headed for Johannesburg They hoped that this would be a three day dash to Johannesburg before the Boer commandos could mobilise and would trigger an uprising by the Uitlanders The British Colonial Secretary Joseph Chamberlain though sympathetic to the ultimate goals of the raid realized it would be a mistake since the uitlanders were not supportive He immediately tried to stop it remarking that if this succeeds it will ruin me I m going up to London to crush it He rushed back to London and ordered Sir Hercules Robinson governor general of the Cape Colony to repudiate the actions of Jameson and warned Rhodes that the company s charter would be in danger if it were discovered the Cape Prime Minister was involved in the raid Chamberlain therefore instructed local British representatives to call on British colonists not to offer any aid to the raiders 10 Arrest of Jameson after the raid Petit Parisien 1896 Although Jameson s men had cut the telegraph wires to Cape Town they had failed to cut the telegraph wires to Pretoria cutting a fence by mistake Accordingly news of his incursion quickly reached Pretoria and Jameson s armed column was tracked by Transvaal forces from the moment that it crossed the border The Jameson armed column first encountered resistance very early on 1 January when there was a very brief exchange of fire with a Boer outpost Around noon the Jameson armed column was around twenty miles further on at Krugersdorp where a small force of Boer soldiers had blocked the road to Johannesburg and dug in and prepared defensive positions Jameson s force spent some hours exchanging fire with the Boers losing several men and many horses in the skirmish Towards evening the Jameson armed column withdrew and turned south east attempting to flank the Boer force The Boers tracked the move overnight and on 2 January as the light improved a substantial Boer force with some artillery was waiting for Jameson at Doornkop The tired raiders initially exchanged fire with the Boers losing around thirty men before Jameson realized the position was hopeless and surrendered to Commandant Piet Cronje 11 The raiders were taken to Pretoria and jailed Aftermath EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message External image Gravestones and memorials of the fallen in the Burgershoop Cemetery in KrugersdorpThe Boer government later handed the men over to the British for trial and the British prisoners were returned to London A few days after the raid the Kaiser of Germany sent a telegram the Kruger telegram congratulating President Kruger and the Transvaal government on their success without the help of friendly powers alluding to potential support by Germany When this was disclosed in the British press it raised a storm of anti German feeling Dr Jameson was lionised by the press and London society inflamed by anti Boer and anti German feeling and in a frenzy of jingoism Jameson was sentenced to 15 months for leading the raid which he served in Holloway The Transvaal government was paid almost 1 million in compensation by the British South Africa Company For conspiring with Jameson the members of the Reform Committee Transvaal including Colonel Frank Rhodes and John Hays Hammond were jailed in deplorable conditions found guilty of high treason and sentenced to death by hanging This sentence was later commuted to 15 years imprisonment and in June 1896 all surviving members of the Committee were released on payment of stiff fines As further punishment for his support of Jameson the highly decorated Col Rhodes was placed on the retired list by the British Army and barred from active involvement in army business After his release from jail Colonel Rhodes immediately joined his brother Cecil and the British South Africa Company in the Second Matabele War taking place just north of the Transvaal in Matabeleland Cecil Rhodes was forced to resign as Prime Minister of Cape Colony in 1896 due to his apparent involvement in planning and assisting in the raid he also along with Alfred Beit resigned as a director of the British South Africa Company 12 Jameson s raid had depleted Matabeleland of many of its troops and left the whole territory vulnerable Seizing on this weakness and a discontent with the British South Africa Company the Ndebele revolted during March 1896 in what is now celebrated in Zimbabwe as the First War of Independence the First Chimurenga but it is better known to most of the world as the Second Matabele War The Shona joined them soon thereafter Hundreds of European settlers were killed within the first few weeks of the revolt and many more would die over the next year and a half With few troops to support them the settlers had to quickly build a laager in the centre of Bulawayo on their own Against over 50 000 Ndebele held up in their stronghold of the Matobo Hills the settlers mounted patrols under such people as Burnham Baden Powell and Selous It would not be until October 1897 that the Ndebele and Shona would finally lay down their arms Political impact EditIn Britain the Liberal Party objected to and later opposed the Boer War 13 Later Jameson became Prime Minister of the Cape Colony 1904 08 and one of the founders of the Union of South Africa He was made a baronet in 1911 and returned to England in 1912 On his death in 1917 he was buried next to Cecil Rhodes and the 34 BSAC soldiers of the Shangani Patrol killed in 1893 in the First Matabele War in the Matobos Hills near Bulawayo Effect on Anglo Boer relations EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message The affair brought Anglo Boer relations to a dangerous low Tensions were further exacerbated by the Kruger telegram from the German Kaiser Wilhelm II congratulating Kruger on defeating the raiders The German telegram came to be widely interpreted as an offer of military aid to the Boers Wilhelm was already perceived by many as anti British after initiating a costly naval arms race between Germany and Britain As tensions quickly mounted the Transvaal began importing large quantities of arms and signed an alliance with the Orange Free State in 1897 Jan C Smuts wrote in 1906 of the Raid The Jameson Raid was the real declaration of war And that is so in spite of the four years of truce that followed the aggressors consolidated their alliance the defenders on the other hand silently and grimly prepared for the inevitable Joseph Chamberlain condemned the raid despite previously having approved Rhodes plans to send armed assistance in the case of a Johannesburg uprising In London despite some condemnation by the print media most newspapers used the episode as an opportunity to whip up anti Boer feelings Though they faced criminal charges in London for their actions in South Africa Jameson and his raiders were treated as heroes by much of the popular public Chamberlain welcomed the escalation by Transvaal as an opportunity to annex the Boer states Modern reactions EditTo this day Jameson s involvement in the Jameson Raid remains something of an enigma being somewhat out of character with his prior history the rest of his life and successful later political career In 2002 The Van Riebeeck Society published Sir Graham Bower s Secret History of the Jameson Raid and the South African Crisis 1895 1902 edited by Deryck Schreuder and Jeffrey Butler Van Riebeeck Society Cape Town Second Series No 33 adding to growing historical evidence that the imprisonment and judgement upon the Raiders at the time of their trial was unjust 2 in view of what has appeared in later historical analysis to have been the calculated political manoeuvres by Joseph Chamberlain and his staff to hide his own involvement and knowledge of the Raid In a 2004 review of Sir Graham Bower s account Alan Cousins commented that A number of major themes and concerns emerge from Bower s history perhaps the most poignant being Bower s accounts of his being made a scapegoat in the aftermath of the raid since a scapegoat was wanted I was willing to serve my country in that capacity citation needed 14 Cousins writes of Bower that a very clear sense of his rigid code of honour is plain and a conviction that not only unity peace and happiness in South Africa but also the peace of Europe would be endangered if he told the truth He believed that as he had given Rhodes his word not to divulge certain private conversations he had to abide by that while at the same time he was convinced that it would be very damaging to Britain if he said anything to the parliamentary committee to show the close involvement of Sir Hercules Robinson and Joseph Chamberlain in their disreputable encouragement of those plotting an uprising in Johannesburg Finally Cousins states that in his reflections Bower has a particularly damning judgement on Chamberlain whom he accuses of brazen lying to parliament and of what amounted to forgery in the documents made public for the inquiry In the report of the committee Bower was found culpable of complicity while no blame was attached to Joseph Chamberlain or Robinson His name was never cleared during his lifetime and Bower was never reinstated to what he believed should be his proper position in the colonial service he was in effect demoted to the post of Colonial Secretary in Mauritius The bitterness and sense of betrayal he felt come through very clearly in his comments See also EditDrifts Crisis Military history of South Africa Second Boer War Second Matabele WarNotes Edit a b Fitzpatrick James Percy 1899 VI The Invasion The Transvaal from Within A Private Record of Public Affairs London William Heinemann a b Bower Graham 2002 Schreuder D Butler J eds Sir Graham Bower s Secret History of the Jameson Raid and the South African Crisis 1895 1902 Cape Town The Van Riebeeck Society ISBN 978 0 9584112 9 5 a b Trevelyan Raleigh 13 March 2012 Grand Dukes and Diamonds The Wernhers of Luton Hoo Faber amp Faber 2012 ISBN 978 0571290307 Feingold Mordechai ed 2012 History of universities Oxford Oxford University Press p 222 ISBN 978 0199652068 a b Hammond Ronnie 2012 White Stones and Little Crosses Hammond pp 3 ISBN 978 1 4716 1334 0 a b Stead W T 1901 The Americanization of the World Horace Markley pp 56 57 Jameson Raid South African History Online Retrieved 26 July 2013 Davis Richard Harding 1897 Dr Jameson s raiders vs the Johannesburg reformers New York R H Russell Aston P E 1897 Chapter VI The raid on the Transvaal by Dr Jameson London Dean p 173 Marsh Peter T 1994 Joseph Chamberlain Entrepreneur in Politics Yale University Press pp 372 387 ISBN 978 0 300 05801 7 Hammond John Hays Ireland Alleyne 1918 The truth about the Jameson raid Boston Marshall Jones company p 36 Rotberg Robert I 1988 The Founder Cecil Rhodes and the Pursuit of Power Oxford University Press p 547 Butler Jeffrey 1968 The Liberal Party and the Jameson Raid Clarendon Press Cousins Alan 2006 The Jameson Raid Politicians Plots and Scapegoats in South Africa Historian 90 20 27 Further reading EditAsh Chris 2012 The If Man Dr Leander Starr Jameson the Inspiration for Kipling s Masterpiece Helion amp Company ISBN 978 1 907677 74 8 Blainey G 1965 Lost Causes of the Jameson Raid The Economic History Review 18 2 350 366 doi 10 2307 2592099 ISSN 0013 0117 JSTOR 2592099 Gordon C T 1970 The growth of Boer opposition to Kruger 1890 1895 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 637101 6 Holli Melvin G Joseph Chamberlain and the Jameson Raid A Bibliographical Survey Journal of British Studies 3 2 1964 pp 152 166 online Longford Elizabeth 1982 1960 Jameson s Raid the prelude to the Boer War Jonathan Ball ISBN 9780868500379 A revision of Jameson s Raid Weidenfeld and Nicolson 1960 Mendelsohn Richard 2007 Blainey and the Jameson Raid the debate renewed PDF Journal of Southern African Studies 6 2 157 170 doi 10 1080 03057078008708012 ISSN 0305 7070 Onselen Charles van The Cowboy Capitalist John Hays Hammond the American West and the Jameson Raid University of Virginia Press 2018 Porter Andrew N 1980 The Origins of the South African War Joseph Chamberlain and the Diplomacy of Imperialism 1895 99 Manchester University Press ISBN 978 0 7190 0763 7 Roberts Andrew 2000 Ch 37 Salisbury Victorian Titan Phoenix ISBN 978 0 7538 1091 0 Rhoodie D O 1967 Conspirators in Conflict A Study of the Johannesburg Reform Committee and its Role in the Conspiracy Against the South African Republic Tafelberg Uiygewers Van Der Poel Jean 1951 The Jameson Raid Oxford University Press Van Hartesveldt Fred R 2000 The Boer War Historiography and Annotated Bibliography Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 313 30627 3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jameson Raid amp oldid 1134384761, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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