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Second Boer War

The Second Boer War (Afrikaans: Tweede Vryheidsoorlog, lit.'Second Freedom War', 11 October 1899 – 31 May 1902), also known as the Boer War, the Anglo–Boer War, or the South African War, was a conflict fought between the British Empire and the two Boer Republics (the South African Republic and the Orange Free State) over the Empire's influence in Southern Africa from 1899 to 1902. Following the discovery of gold deposits in the Boer republics, there was a large influx of "foreigners", mostly British from the Cape Colony. They were not permitted to have a vote, and were regarded as "unwelcome visitors", invaders, and they protested to the British authorities in the Cape. Negotiations failed and, in the opening stages of the war, the Boers launched successful attacks against British outposts before being pushed back by imperial reinforcements. Though the British swiftly occupied the Boer republics, numerous Boers refused to accept defeat and engaged in guerrilla warfare. Eventually, British scorched earth policies, and the poor conditions suffered in concentration camps by Boer women and children who had been displaced by these policies, brought the remaining Boer guerillas to the negotiating table, ending the war.[10][11]

Second Boer War
Part of the Boer Wars during the Scramble for Africa

Clockwise from left: Frederick Roberts entering in Kimberley; Boer militia at the Battle of Spion Kop; Boer women and children in a British concentration camp.
Date11 October 1899 – 31 May 1902 (2 years, 7 months, 20 days)
Location
Southern Africa (present-day South Africa, Lesotho, and Eswatini)[1]
Result

British victory

Territorial
changes
The Boer Republics are absorbed into the British Empire in accordance with the Treaty of Vereeniging
Belligerents
 •  Canada
 • New Zealand
 •  Australia

Boer Republics


Commanders and leaders
Robert Gascoyne-Cecil
Joseph Chamberlain
Alfred Milner
Frederick Roberts
Redvers Buller
Herbert Kitchener
Rudolph Lambart
Robert Baden-Powell
Herbert Plumer
François-Louis Lessard
Walter Tunbridge
Koos de la Rey
Paul Kruger
Louis Botha
Schalk W. Burger
Martinus Steyn
Christiaan de Wet
Piet Cronjé (POW)
Piet Joubert
Strength
British:
347,000
Colonial:
103,000–153,000
African auxiliaries:
100,000[4]
Boer Commandos:
25,000 Transvaal Boers
15,000 Free State Boers
6,000–7,000 Cape Boers[5]: 2–5, 119 
African auxiliaries:
10,000[4]
Foreign volunteers:
5,400+[6]
Casualties and losses
26,092 dead[b]
75,430 returned home sick or wounded[8]: 79 
22,828 wounded
934 missing
Total: ~125,284
6,189 dead[c]
24,000 captured (sent overseas)[6][8]: 79 
Total: ~30,189
Civilian casualties:
46,370 fatalities
26,370 Boer women and children died in concentration camps
20,000+ Africans of the 115,000 interned in separate concentration camps.[9]

The conflict broke out in 1899 after the failure of the Bloemfontein Conference when Boer irregulars and militia attacked colonial settlements in nearby British colonies. Starting in October 1899, the Boers placed Ladysmith, Kimberley, and Mafeking under siege, and won a string of victories at Colenso, Magersfontein and Stormberg. In response to these developments, increased numbers of British Army soldiers were brought to Southern Africa, and mounted largely unsuccessful attacks against the Boers. However, British military fortunes changed when their commanding officer, General Redvers Buller was replaced by Lord Roberts and Lord Kitchener, who relieved the three besieged cities and invaded the two Boer Republics in early 1900 at the head of a 180,000-strong expeditionary force. The Boers, aware they were unable to resist such a large force, chose to refrain from fighting pitched battles, allowing the British to occupy both republics and their capitals, Pretoria and Bloemfontein.[12][13][14]

Boer politicians, including President of the South African Republic Paul Kruger either fled the region or went into hiding; the British Empire officially annexed the two republics in 1900. In Britain, the Conservative ministry led by Lord Salisbury attempted to capitalise on British military successes by calling an early general election, which was dubbed by contemporary observers a "khaki election". However, numerous Boer fighters took to the hills and launched a guerrilla campaign against the British occupational forces, becoming known as bittereinders. Led by prominent generals such as Louis Botha, Jan Smuts, Christiaan de Wet, and Koos de la Rey, Boer guerrillas launched a campaign of hit-and-run attacks and ambushes against the British, which would continue for two years.[15][16]

The Boer guerrilla campaign proved difficult for the British to defeat, due in part to British unfamiliarity with guerrilla tactics and extensive support for the guerrillas among the civilian population in the Boer Republics. In response to continued failures to defeat the Boer guerillas, British high command ordered several scorched earth policies to be implemented as part of a large scale and multi-pronged counterinsurgency campaign; a complex network of nets, blockhouses, strongpoints and barbed wire fences was constructed, virtually partitioning the occupied republics. British troops committed several war crimes and were ordered to destroy farms and slaughter livestock to deny them to Boer guerillas. Over a hundred thousand Boer civilians (mostly women and children) were forcibly relocated into concentration camps, where 26,000 died of various causes, mostly starvation and disease. Black Africans in the same areas were also interned in concentration camps as well to prevent them from supplying the Boers; 20,000 died in the camps as well, largely due to the same causes as in the case of their Boer counterparts.[17]

In addition to these scorched earth policies, British mounted infantry units were deployed to track down and engage individual Boer guerilla units; by this stage of the war, all battles being fought were small-scale skirmishes. Few combatants on either side were killed in action, with most casualties coming via disease. Lord Kitchener began to offer generous terms of surrender to remaining Boer leaders in an effort to bring an end to the conflict. Eager to ensure their fellow Boers were released from the concentration camps, the majority of Boer commanders accepted the British terms in the Treaty of Vereeniging, formally surrendering in May 1902. The former republics were transformed into the British colonies of the Transvaal and Orange River, and in 1910 were merged with the Natal and Cape Colonies to form the Union of South Africa, a self-governing dominion within the British Empire.[18]

British expeditionary efforts were aided significantly by colonial forces from the Cape Colony, the Natal, Rhodesia,[19] as well as large numbers of volunteers from the British Empire worldwide, particularly Australia, Canada, India and New Zealand. Later in the war, Black African recruits contributed increasingly to the British war effort. International public opinion was generally sympathetic to the Boers and hostile to the British. Even within the United Kingdom, there existed significant opposition to the war. As a result, the Boer cause attracted thousands of volunteers from neutral countries all over the world, including the German Empire, United States, Russia and even some parts of the British Empire such as Australia and Ireland.[20] Many consider the Boer War as marking the beginning of the questioning of the British Empire's veneer of impenetrable global dominance; this is due to the war's surprisingly long duration and the unforeseen, discouraging losses suffered by the British fighting the "cobbled-together army" of Boers.[21]

Overview

The war had three phases. In the first phase, the Boers mounted preemptive strikes into British-held territory in Natal and the Cape Colony, besieging the British garrisons of Ladysmith, Mafeking, and Kimberley. The Boers then won a series of tactical victories at Stormberg, Magersfontein, Colenso and Spion Kop.

In the second phase, after the number of British troops greatly increased under the command of Lord Roberts, the British launched another offensive in 1900 to relieve the sieges, this time achieving success. After Natal and the Cape Colony were secure, the British army was able to invade the Transvaal, and the republic's capital, Pretoria, was ultimately captured in June 1900.

In the third and final phase, beginning in March 1900 and lasting a further two years, the Boers conducted a hard-fought guerrilla war, attacking British troop columns, telegraph sites, railways, and storage depots. To deny supplies to the Boer guerrillas, the British, now under the leadership of Lord Kitchener, adopted a scorched earth policy. They cleared vast areas, destroying Boer farms and moving the civilians into concentration camps.[22]

Some parts of the British press and British government expected the campaign to be over within months, and the protracted war gradually became less popular, especially after revelations about the conditions in the concentration camps (where as many as 26,000 Afrikaner women and children died of disease and malnutrition). The Boer forces finally surrendered on Saturday, 31 May 1902, with 54 of the 60 delegates from the Transvaal and Orange Free State voting to accept the terms of the peace treaty.<[23]: 97  This was known as the Treaty of Vereeniging, and under its provisions, the two republics were absorbed into the British Empire, with the promise of self-government in the future. This promise was fulfilled with the creation of the Union of South Africa in 1910.

The war had a lasting effect on the region and on British domestic politics. For Britain, the Second Boer War was the longest, the most expensive (£211 million, £202 billion at 2014 prices), and the bloodiest conflict between 1815 and 1914,[24] lasting three months longer and resulting in more British combat casualties (see sidebar above) than the Crimean War (1853–1856). (Disease took a greater toll in the Crimean War, claiming 17,580 British.)

Name

 
(A typical British soldier) Corporal Alexander Duncan Turnbull of Kitchener's Fighting Scouts

The conflict is commonly referred to simply as “the Boer War” because the First Boer War (December 1880 to March 1881) was a much smaller conflict. Boer (meaning "farmer") is the common name for Afrikaans-speaking white South Africans descended from the Dutch East India Company's original settlers at the Cape of Good Hope. Among some South Africans, it is known as the (Second) Anglo–Boer War. In Afrikaans, it may be called (in order of frequency) the 'Tweede Vryheidsoorlog ("Second Freedom War"), 'Tweede Boereoorlog ("Second Boer War"), Anglo–Boereoorlog ("Anglo–Boer War") or Engelse oorlog ("English War").[25]

In South Africa, it is officially called the South African War.[26] In fact, according to a 2011 BBC report, "most scholars prefer to call the war of 1899–1902 the South African War, thereby acknowledging that all South Africans, white and black, were affected by the war and that many were participants".[27]

Origins

The origins of the war were complex and stemmed from more than a century of conflict between the Boers and Britain. Of immediate importance, however, was the question of who would control and benefit most from the very lucrative Witwatersrand gold mines[28] discovered by Jan Bantjes in June 1884.

The first European settlement in South Africa was founded at the Cape of Good Hope in 1652, and thereafter administered as part of the Dutch Cape Colony.[29] The Cape was governed by the Dutch East India Company, until its bankruptcy in the late 18th century, and was thereafter governed directly by the Netherlands.[30] As a result of political turmoil in the Netherlands, the British occupied the Cape three times during the Napoleonic Wars, and the occupation became permanent after British forces defeated the Dutch at the Battle of Blaauwberg in 1806.[31] At the time, the colony was home to about 26,000 colonists settled under Dutch rule.[32] A relative majority represented old Dutch families brought to the Cape during the late 17th and early 18th centuries; however, close to one-fourth of this demographic was of German origin and one-sixth of French Huguenot descent.[33] Cleavages were likelier to occur along socio-economic rather than ethnic lines. Broadly speaking, the colonists included a number of distinct subgroups, including the Boers.[34] The Boers were itinerant farmers who lived on the colony's frontiers, seeking better pastures for their livestock.[30] Many were dissatisfied with aspects of British administration, in particular with Britain's abolition of slavery on 1 December 1834. Boers who needed forced labor to care for their farms properly would have been unable to collect compensation for their slaves.[35] Between 1836 and 1852, many elected to migrate away from British rule in what became known as the Great Trek.[31]

Around 15,000 trekking Boers departed the Cape Colony and followed the eastern coast towards Natal. After Britain annexed Natal in 1843, they journeyed farther northwards into South Africa's vast eastern interior. There, they established two independent Boer republics: the South African Republic (1852; also known as the Transvaal Republic) and the Orange Free State (1854). Britain recognised the two Boer republics in 1852 and 1854, but attempted British annexation of the Transvaal in 1877 led to the First Boer War in 1880 – 1881. After Britain suffered defeats, particularly at the Battle of Majuba Hill (1881), the independence of the two republics was restored, subject to certain conditions. However, relations remained uneasy.

In 1866, diamonds were discovered at Kimberley, prompting a diamond rush and a massive influx of foreigners to the borders of the Orange Free State. Then, in June 1884, gold was discovered in the Witwatersrand area of the South African Republic by Jan Gerritze Bantjes. Gold made the Transvaal the richest nation in southern Africa; however, the country had neither the manpower nor the industrial base to develop the resource on its own. As a result, the Transvaal reluctantly acquiesced to the immigration of uitlanders (foreigners), mainly English-speaking men from Britain, who came to the Boer region in search of fortune and employment. As a result, the number of uitlanders in the Transvaal threatened to exceed the number of Boers, precipitating confrontations between the Boer settlers and the newer, non-Boer arrivals.

Britain's expansionist ideas (notably propagated by Cecil Rhodes) as well as disputes over uitlander political and economic rights led to the failed Jameson Raid of 1895. Dr. Leander Starr Jameson, who led the raid, intended to encourage an uprising of the uitlanders in Johannesburg. However, the uitlanders did not take up arms in support, and Transvaal government forces surrounded the column and captured Jameson's men before they could reach Johannesburg.[36]

As tensions escalated, political manoeuvrings and negotiations attempted to reach compromise on the issues of uitlanders' rights within the South African Republic, control of the gold mining industry, and Britain's desire to incorporate the Transvaal and the Orange Free State into a federation under British control. Given the British origins of the majority of uitlanders and the ongoing influx of new uitlanders into Johannesburg, the Boers recognised that granting full voting rights to the uitlanders would eventually result in the loss of ethnic Boer control in the South African Republic.

The June 1899 negotiations in Bloemfontein failed, and in September 1899 British Colonial Secretary Joseph Chamberlain demanded full voting rights and representation for the uitlanders residing in the Transvaal. Paul Kruger, the President of the South African Republic, issued an ultimatum on 9 October 1899, giving the British government 48 hours to withdraw all their troops from the borders of both the Transvaal and the Orange Free State, failing which the Transvaal, allied to the Orange Free State, would declare war on the British government. (In fact, Kruger had ordered Commandos to the Natal border in early September, and Britain had only troops in garrison towns far from the border.)[37] The British government rejected the South African Republic's ultimatum, and the South African Republic and Orange Free State declared war on Britain.[37]

Historical background

 
Boer victory over the British at the Battle of Majuba Hill, First Boer War, 1881
 
Extent of the British Empire in 1898, prior to the outbreak of the Second Boer War
 
The geography of the region in 1885, between the First and Second Boer Wars

The southern part of the African continent was dominated in the 19th century by a set of struggles to create within it a single unified state. In 1868, Britain annexed Basutoland in the Drakensberg Mountains, following an appeal from Moshoeshoe I, the king of the Sotho people, who sought British protection against the Boers. While the Berlin Conference of 1884–1885 sought to draw boundaries between the European powers' African possessions, it also set the stage for further scrambles. Britain attempted to annex first the South African Republic in 1880, and then, in 1899, both the South African Republic and the Orange Free State.

In the 1880s, Bechuanaland (modern Botswana) became the object of a dispute between the Germans to the west, the Boers to the east, and Britain's Cape Colony to the south. Although Bechuanaland had no economic value, the "Missionaries Road" passed through it towards territory farther north. After the Germans annexed Damaraland and Namaqualand (modern Namibia) in 1884, Britain annexed Bechuanaland in 1885.

In the First Boer War of 1880–1881 the Boers of the Transvaal Republic proved skilful fighters in resisting Britain's attempt at annexation, causing a series of British defeats. The British government of William Ewart Gladstone was unwilling to become mired in a distant war, requiring substantial troop reinforcement and expense, for what was perceived at the time to be a minimal return. An armistice ended the war, and subsequently a peace treaty was signed with the Transvaal President Paul Kruger.

In 1886, British imperial interests were ignited by the discovery of what would prove to be the world's largest deposit of gold-bearing ore at an outcrop on a large ridge some 69 km (43 mi) south of the Boer capital at Pretoria. The ridge was known locally as the "Witwatersrand" (white water ridge, a watershed). A gold rush to the Transvaal brought thousands of British and other prospectors and settlers from around the globe and over the border from the Cape Colony, which had been under British control since 1806.

The city of Johannesburg sprang up nearly overnight as a shanty town. Uitlanders (foreigners, white outsiders) poured in and settled around the mines. The influx was so rapid that uitlanders quickly outnumbered the Boers in Johannesburg and along the Rand, although they remained a minority in the Transvaal. The Boers, nervous and resentful of the uitlanders' growing presence, sought to contain their influence through requiring lengthy residential qualifying periods before voting rights could be obtained; by imposing taxes on the gold industry; and by introducing controls through licensing, tariffs and administrative requirements. Among the issues giving rise to tension between the Transvaal government on the one hand and the uitlanders and British interests on the other, were

  • Established uitlanders, including the mining magnates, wanted political, social, and economic control over their lives. These rights included a stable constitution, a fair franchise law, an independent judiciary and a better educational system. The Boers, for their part, recognised that the more concessions they made to the uitlanders the greater the likelihood—with approximately 30,000 white male Boer voters and potentially 60,000 white male uitlanders—that their independent control of the Transvaal would be lost and the territory absorbed into the British Empire.
  • The uitlanders resented the taxes levied by the Transvaal government, particularly when this money was not spent on Johannesburg or uitlander interests, but diverted to projects elsewhere in the Transvaal. For example, as the gold-bearing ore sloped away from the outcrop underground to the south, more and more blasting was necessary to extract it, and mines consumed vast quantities of explosives. A box of dynamite costing five pounds included five shillings tax. Not only was this tax perceived as exorbitant, but British interests were offended when President Paul Kruger gave monopoly rights for the manufacture of the explosive to a non-British branch of the Nobel company, which infuriated Britain.[38] The so-called "dynamite monopoly" became a casus belli.
Gold Production on the Witwatersrand
1898 to 1910[39]
Year No. of
Mines
Gold output
(fine ounces)
Value (GB£) Relative 2010
value (GB£)[40]
1898 77 4,295,608 £15,141,376 £6,910,000,000
1899
(Jan–Oct)
85 3,946,545 £14,046,686 £6,300,000,000
1899
(Nov) – 1901 (Apr)
12 574,043 £2,024,278 £908,000,000
1901
(May–Dec)
12 238,994 £1,014,687 £441,000,000
1902 45 1,690,100 £7,179,074 £3,090,000,000
1903 56 2,859,482 £12,146,307 £5,220,000,000
1904 62 3,658,241 £15,539,219 £6,640,000,000
1905 68 4,706,433 £19,991,658 £8,490,000,000

British imperial interests were alarmed when in 1894–1895 Kruger proposed building a railway through Portuguese East Africa to Delagoa Bay, bypassing British-controlled ports in Natal and Cape Town and avoiding British tariffs.[41] At the time, the Prime Minister of the Cape Colony was Cecil Rhodes, a man driven by a vision of a British-controlled Africa extending from the Cape to Cairo. Certain self-appointed uitlanders' representatives and British mine owners became increasingly frustrated and angered by their dealings with the Transvaal government. A Reform Committee (Transvaal) was formed to represent the uitlanders.

Jameson Raid

 
A sketch showing the arrest of Jameson after the failed raid, in 1896

In 1895, a plan to take Johannesburg and end the control of the Transvaal government was hatched with the connivance of the Cape Prime Minister Cecil Rhodes and Johannesburg gold magnate Alfred Beit. A column of 600 armed men was led over the border from Bechuanaland towards Johannesburg by Dr Leander Starr Jameson, the Administrator in Rhodesia of the British South Africa Company, of which Cecil Rhodes was the Chairman. The column, mainly made up of Rhodesian and Bechuanaland British South Africa Policemen, was equipped with Maxim machine guns and some artillery pieces.

The plan was to make a three-day dash to Johannesburg and trigger an uprising by the primarily British expatriate uitlanders, organised by the Johannesburg Reform Committee, before the Boer commandos could mobilise. However, the Transvaal authorities had advance warning of the Jameson Raid and tracked it from the moment it crossed the border. Four days later, the weary and dispirited column was surrounded near Krugersdorp, within sight of Johannesburg. After a brief skirmish in which the column lost 65 killed and wounded—while the Boers lost but one man—Jameson's men surrendered and were arrested by the Boers.[36]

The botched raid had repercussions throughout southern Africa and in Europe. In Rhodesia, the departure of so many policemen enabled the Matabele and Mashona peoples' rising against the British South Africa Company. The rebellion, known as the Second Matabele War, was suppressed only at a great cost.

A few days after the raid, the German Kaiser sent a telegram—known to history as “the Kruger telegram”—congratulating President Kruger and the government of the South African Republic on their success. When the text of this telegram was disclosed in the British press, it generated a storm of anti-German feeling. In the baggage of the raiding column, to the great embarrassment of Britain, the Boers found telegrams from Cecil Rhodes and the other plotters in Johannesburg. British Colonial Secretary Joseph Chamberlain had approved Rhodes' plans to send armed assistance in the case of a Johannesburg uprising, but he quickly moved to condemn the raid. Rhodes was severely censured at the Cape inquiry and the London parliamentary inquiry and was forced to resign as Prime Minister of the Cape and as Chairman of the British South Africa Company, for having sponsored the failed coup d'état.

The Boer government handed their prisoners over to the British for trial. Jameson was tried in England, where the British press and London society, inflamed by anti-Boer and anti-German feeling and in a frenzy of jingoism, lionised him and treated him as a hero. Although sentenced to 15 months imprisonment (which he served in Holloway), Jameson was later rewarded by being named Prime Minister of the Cape Colony (1904–1908) and was ultimately anointed as one of the founders of the Union of South Africa. For conspiring with Jameson, the uitlander members of the Reform Committee (Transvaal) were tried in the Transvaal courts and found guilty of high treason. The four leaders were sentenced to death by hanging, but the next day this sentence was commuted to 15 years' imprisonment. In June 1896, the other members of the committee were released on payment of £2,000 each in fines, all of which were paid by Cecil Rhodes. One Reform Committee member, Frederick Gray, committed suicide while in Pretoria gaol, on 16 May. His death was a factor in softening the Transvaal government's attitude to the surviving prisoners.

Jan C. Smuts wrote, in 1906,

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".[42]

Escalation

The Jameson Raid alienated many Cape Afrikaners from Britain and united the Transvaal Boers behind President Kruger and his government. It also had the effect of drawing the Transvaal and the Orange Free State (led by President Martinus Theunis Steyn) together in opposition to perceived British imperialism. In 1897, the two republics concluded a military pact.

Arming the Boers

In earlier conflicts, the Boers' most common weapon was the British Westley Richards falling-block breech-loader. In his book The First Boer War, Joseph Lehmann offers this comment: "Employing chiefly the very fine breech-loading Westley Richards – calibre 45; paper cartridge; percussion-cap replaced on the nipple manually—they made it exceedingly dangerous for the British to expose themselves on the skyline".[43]

 
Paul Kruger, leader of the South African Republic (Transvaal)
 
Mauser 1895 bolt-action rifle (at the Auckland Museum)

President Paul Kruger re-equipped the Transvaal army, importing 37,000 of the latest 7x57 mm Mauser Model 1895 rifles supplied by Germany,[44] and some 40 to 50 million rounds of ammunition.[45][23]: 80  Some commandos used the Martini-Henry Mark III, because thousands of these had been purchased. Unfortunately, the large puff of white smoke after firing gave away the shooter's position.[46][47] Roughly 7,000 Guedes 1885 rifles had also been purchased a few years earlier, and these were also used during the hostilities.[46]

As the war went on, some commandos relied on captured British rifles, such as the Lee-Metford and the Enfield.[44][27] Indeed, when the ammunition for the Mausers ran out, the Boers relied primarily on the captured Lee-Metfords.[48][49]

Regardless of the rifle, few of the Boers used bayonets.[50][35]

The Boers also purchased the best modern European German Krupp artillery. By October 1899, the Transvaal State Artillery had 73 heavy guns, including four 155 mm Creusot fortress guns[51] and 25 of the 37 mm Maxim Nordenfeldt guns.[23]: 80  The Boers' Maxim, larger than the British Maxims,[52] was a large calibre, belt-fed, water-cooled "auto cannon" that fired explosive rounds (smokeless ammunition) at 450 rounds per minute. It became known as the "Pom Pom".[53]

Aside from weaponry, the tactics used by the Boers were significant. As one modern source states, "Boer soldiers ... were adept at guerrilla warfare—something the British had difficulty countering".[54]

The Transvaal army was transformed: Approximately 25,000 men equipped with modern rifles and artillery could mobilise within two weeks. However, President Kruger's victory in the Jameson Raid incident did nothing to resolve the fundamental problem of finding a formula to conciliate the uitlanders, without surrendering the independence of the Transvaal.

British case for war

The failure to gain improved rights for uitlanders (notably the goldfields dynamite tax) became a pretext for war and a justification for a big military build-up in Cape Colony. The case for war was developed and espoused as far away as the Australian colonies.[55] Cape Colony Governor Sir Alfred Milner; Cape Prime Minister Cecil Rhodes; Colonial Secretary Joseph Chamberlain; and mining syndicate owners such as Alfred Beit, Barney Barnato, and Lionel Phillips, favoured annexation of the Boer republics. Confident that the Boers would be quickly defeated, they planned and organised a short war, citing the uitlanders' grievances as the motivation for the conflict. In contrast, the influence of the war party within the British government was limited. UK Prime Minister, Lord Salisbury, despised jingoism and jingoists.[56] He was also uncertain of the abilities of the British Army. Despite both his moral and practical reservations, Salisbury led the United Kingdom to war in order to preserve the British Empire's prestige, and feeling a sense of obligation to British South Africans.[d] Salisbury also detested the Boers treatment of native Africans, referring to the London Convention of 1884, (following Britain's defeat in the first war), as an agreement "really in the interest of slavery".[57]: 7 [57]: 6  Salisbury was not alone in this concern. Roger Casement, already well on the way to becoming an Irish Nationalist, was nevertheless happy to gather intelligence for the British against the Boers because of their cruelty to Africans.[58]

 
1899 German political cartoon: "War and capitalism transforms human blood in gold"

The British government went against the advice of its generals (including Wolseley) and declined to send substantial reinforcements to South Africa before war broke out. Secretary of State for War Lansdowne did not believe the Boers were preparing for war and that if Britain were to send large numbers of troops to the region it would strike too aggressive a posture and possibly derail a negotiated settlement—or even encourage a Boer attack.[59]

Negotiations fail

President Steyn of the Orange Free State invited Milner and Kruger to attend a conference in Bloemfontein. The conference started on 30 May 1899, but negotiations quickly broke down, as Kruger had no intention of granting meaningful concessions,[60] and Milner had no intention of accepting his normal delaying tactics.[61]

Kruger's ultimatum and war

On the 9th of October 1899, after convincing the Orange Free State to join him and mobilising their forces, Kruger issued an ultimatum giving Britain 48 hours to withdraw all their troops from the border of Transvaal (despite the fact that the only regular British army troops anywhere near the border of either republic were 4 companies of the Loyal North Lancs, who had been deployed to defend Kimberley[62]). Otherwise, the Transvaal, allied with the Orange Free State, would declare war.

News of the ultimatum reached London on the day it expired. Outrage and laughter were the main responses. The editor of the Times purportedly laughed out loud when he read it, saying 'an official document is seldom amusing and useful yet this was both'. The Times denounced the ultimatum as an 'extravagant farce' and The Globe denounced this 'trumpery little state'. Most editorials were similar to the Daily Telegraph's, which declared: 'of course there can only be one answer to this grotesque challenge. Kruger has asked for war and war he must have!'[citation needed]

Such views were far from those of the British government and from those in the army. To most sensible observers, army reform had been a matter of pressing concern since the 1870s, constantly put off because the British public did not want the expense of a larger, more professional army and because a large home army was not politically welcome. Lord Salisbury, the Prime Minister, had to tell a surprised Queen Victoria that 'We have no army capable of meeting even a second-class Continental Power'.[57]: 4 

First phase: The Boer offensive (October–December 1899)

British Army deployed

When war with the Boer republics was imminent in September 1899, a Field Force, referred to as the Army Corps (sometimes 1st Army Corps) was mobilised and sent to Cape Town. It was "about the equivalent of the I Army Corps of the existing mobilization scheme" and was placed under the command of Gen Sir Redvers Buller, GOC in C of Aldershot Command.[63] In South Africa the corps never operated as such and the 1st, 2nd, 3rd divisions were widely dispersed.

Boer organization and skills

War was declared on 11 October 1899 with a Boer offensive into the British-held Natal and Cape Colony areas. The Boers had about 33,000 soldiers, and decisively outnumbered the British, who could move only 13,000 troops to the front line.[64] The Boers had no problems with mobilisation, since the fiercely independent Boers had no regular army units, apart from the Staatsartillerie (Dutch for 'State Artillery') of both republics. As with the First Boer War, since most of the Boers were members of civilian militias, none had adopted uniforms or insignia. Only the members of the Staatsartillerie wore light green uniforms.

 
Boers in a trench at Mafeking, 1899

When danger loomed, all the burgers (citizens) in a district would form a military unit called a commando and would elect officers. A full-time official called a Veldkornet maintained muster rolls, but had no disciplinary powers. Each man brought his own weapon, usually a hunting rifle, and his own horse. Those who could not afford a gun were given one by the authorities.[23]: 80  The Presidents of the Transvaal and Orange Free State simply signed decrees to concentrate within a week, and the Commandos could muster between 30,000 and 40,000 men.[65] The average Boer nevertheless was not thirsty for war. Many did not look forward to fighting against fellow Christians and, by and large, fellow Christian Protestants. Many may have had an overly optimistic sense of what the war would involve, imagining that victory could be achieved as fast and easily as it had been in the First Anglo-Boer War.[23]: 74  Many, including many generals, also had a sense that their cause was holy and just, and blessed by God.[23]: 179 

It rapidly became clear that the Boer forces presented the British forces with a severe tactical challenge. What the Boers presented was a mobile and innovative approach to warfare, drawing on their experiences from the First Boer War. The average Boers who made up their Commandos were farmers who had spent almost all their working life in the saddle, both as farmers and hunters. They depended on the pot, horse and rifle; they were also skilled stalkers and marksmen. As hunters, they had learned to fire from cover; from a prone position and to make the first shot count, knowing that if they missed, the game would either be long gone or could charge and potentially kill them.

At community gatherings, target shooting was a major sport; they practised shooting at targets, such as hens' eggs perched on posts 100 metres (110 yd) away. They made expert mounted infantry, using every scrap of cover, from which they could pour in a destructive fire using modern, smokeless, Mauser rifles. In preparation for hostilities, the Boers had acquired around one hundred of the latest Krupp field guns, all horse-drawn and dispersed among the various Kommando groups and several Le Creusot "Long Tom" siege guns. The Boers' skill in adapting themselves to become first-rate artillerymen shows that they were a versatile adversary.[66] The Transvaal also had an intelligence service that stretched across South Africa and of whose extent and efficiency the British were as yet unaware.[23]: 81 

Boers besiege Ladysmith, Mafeking and Kimberley

 
War theatre in northern Natal

The Boers struck first on 12 October at the Battle of Kraaipan, an attack that heralded the invasion of the Cape Colony and Colony of Natal between October 1899 and January 1900.[67] With speed and surprise, the Boers drove quickly towards the British garrison at Ladysmith and the smaller ones at Mafeking and Kimberley. The quick Boer mobilisation resulted in early military successes against scattered British forces. Sir George Stuart White, commanding the British division at Ladysmith, unwisely allowed Major-General Penn Symons to throw a brigade forward to the coal-mining town of Dundee (also reported as Glencoe), which was surrounded by hills. This became the site of the first engagement of the war, the Battle of Talana Hill. Boer guns began shelling the British camp from the summit of Talana Hill at dawn on 20 October. Penn Symons immediately counter-attacked: His infantry drove the Boers from the hill, for the loss of 446 British casualties, including Penn Symons.

Another Boer force occupied Elandslaagte, which lay between Ladysmith and Dundee. The British under Major General John French and Colonel Ian Hamilton attacked to clear the line of communications to Dundee. The resulting Battle of Elandslaagte was a clear-cut British tactical victory,[68] but Sir George White feared that more Boers were about to attack his main position and so ordered a chaotic retreat from Elandslaagte, throwing away any advantage gained. The detachment from Dundee was compelled to make an exhausting cross-country retreat to rejoin White's main force. As Boers surrounded Ladysmith and opened fire on the town with siege guns, White ordered a major sortie against their positions.[69] The result was a disaster, with 140 men killed and over 1,000 captured. The Siege of Ladysmith began: It was to last several months.

Meanwhile, to the north-west at Mafeking, on the border with Transvaal, Colonel Robert Baden-Powell had raised two regiments of local forces amounting to about 1,200 men in order to attack and create diversions if things went amiss further south. As a railway junction, Mafeking provided good supply facilities and was the obvious place for Baden-Powell to fortify in readiness for such attacks. However, instead of being the aggressor, Baden-Powell was forced to defend Mafeking when 6,000 Boer, commanded by Piet Cronjé, attempted a determined assault on the town. This quickly subsided into a desultory affair, with the Boers prepared to starve the stronghold into submission. So, on 13 October, the 217-day Siege of Mafeking began.

Lastly, over 360 kilometres (220 mi) to the south of Mafeking lay the diamond mining city of Kimberley, which was also subjected to a siege. Although not militarily significant, it nonetheless represented an enclave of British imperialism on the borders of the Orange Free State and was hence an important Boer objective. In early November, about 7,500 Boer began their siege, again content to starve the town into submission. Despite Boer shelling, the 40,000 inhabitants, of which only 5,000 were armed, were under little threat, because the town was well-stocked with provisions. The garrison was commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Robert Kekewich, although Cecil Rhodes was also a prominent figure in the town's defences.

Siege life took its toll on both the defending soldiers and the civilians in the cities of Mafeking, Ladysmith, and Kimberley as food began to grow scarce after a few weeks. In Mafeking, Sol Plaatje wrote, "I saw horseflesh for the first time being treated as a human foodstuff." The cities under siege also dealt with constant artillery bombardment, making the streets a dangerous place. Near the end of the siege of Kimberley, it was expected that the Boers would intensify their bombardment, so Rhodes displayed a notice encouraging people to go down into shafts of the Kimberley Mine for protection. The townspeople panicked, and people surged into the mine-shafts constantly for a 12-hour period. Although the bombardment never came, this did nothing to diminish the anxious civilians' distress. The most well-heeled of the townspeople, including Cecil Rhodes, sheltered in the Sanatorium, site of the present-day McGregor Museum; the poorer residents, notably the black population, did not have any shelter from shelling.

In retrospect, the Boers' decision to commit themselves to sieges (Sitzkrieg) was a mistake and one of the best illustrations of their lack of strategic vision. Historically, it had little in its favour. Of the seven sieges in the First Boer War, the Boers had prevailed in none. More importantly, it handed the initiative back to the British and allowed them time to recover, which they did. Generally speaking, throughout the campaign, the Boers were too defensive and passive, wasting the opportunities they had for victory. Yet that passiveness also testified to the fact that they had no desire to conquer British territory, but only to preserve their ability to rule in their own territory.[23]: 82–85 

First British relief attempts

 
General Redvers Henry Buller launched an offensive against the Boers in the early phases of the war but after several defeats, culminating at the Battle of Colenso, he was replaced by Earl Roberts.

On the 31st October 1899, General Sir Redvers Henry Buller, a much respected commander, arrived in South Africa with the Army Corps, made up of the 1st, 2nd and 3rd divisions. Buller originally intended an offensive straight up the railway line leading from Cape Town through Bloemfontein to Pretoria. Finding on arrival that the British troops already in South Africa were under siege, he split his army corps into detachments to relieve the besieged garrisons. One division, led by Lieutenant General Lord Methuen, was to follow the Western Railway to the north and relieve Kimberley and Mafeking. A smaller force of about 3,000, led by Major General William Gatacre, was to push north towards the railway junction at Stormberg and secure the Cape Midlands District from Boer raids and local rebellions by Boer inhabitants. Buller led the major part of the army corps to relieve Ladysmith to the east.

The initial results of this offensive were mixed, with Methuen winning several bloody skirmishes in the Battle of Belmont on 23 November, the Battle of Graspan on 25 November, and at a larger engagement, the Battle of Modder River, on 28 November resulting in British losses of 71 dead and over 400 wounded. British commanders had been trained on the lessons of the Crimean War and were adept at battalion and regimental set pieces, with columns manoeuvring in jungles, deserts and mountainous regions. What British generals failed to comprehend was the impact of destructive fire from trench positions and the mobility of cavalry raids. The British troops went to war with what would prove to be antiquated tactics—and in some cases antiquated weapons—against the mobile Boer forces with the destructive fire of their modern Mausers, the latest Krupp field guns and their novel tactics.[70]

The middle of December was disastrous for the British Army. In a period known as Black Week (10–15 December 1899), the British suffered defeats on each of the three fronts. On 10 December, General Gatacre tried to recapture Stormberg railway junction about 80 kilometres (50 mi) south of the Orange River. Gatacre's attack was marked by administrative and tactical blunders and the Battle of Stormberg ended in a British defeat, with 135 killed and wounded and two guns and over 600 troops captured.

At the Battle of Magersfontein on 11 December, Methuen's 14,000 British troops attempted to capture a Boer position in a dawn attack to relieve Kimberley. This too turned into a disaster when the Highland Brigade became pinned down by accurate Boer fire. After suffering from intense heat and thirst for nine hours, they eventually broke in ill-disciplined retreat. The Boer commanders, Koos de la Rey and Piet Cronjé, had ordered trenches to be dug in an unconventional place to fool the British and to give their riflemen a greater firing range. The plan worked, and this tactic helped to write the doctrine of the supremacy of the defensive position, using modern small arms and trench fortifications.[71][citation needed] The British lost 120 killed and 690 wounded and were prevented from relieving Kimberley and Mafeking. A British soldier said of the defeat:

 
Lord Roberts's arrival at Cape Town

Such was the day for our regiment
Dread the revenge we will take.
Dearly we paid for the blunder –
A drawing-room General's mistake.
Why weren't we told of the trenches?
Why weren't we told of the wire?
Why were we marched up in column,
May Tommy Atkins enquire ...

— Private Smith[72]

The nadir of Black Week was the Battle of Colenso on 15 December, where 21,000 British troops, commanded by Buller, attempted to cross the Tugela River to relieve Ladysmith, where 8,000 Transvaal Boers under the command of Louis Botha were waiting for them. Through a combination of artillery and accurate rifle fire and better use of the ground, the Boers repelled all British attempts to cross the river. After his first attacks failed, Buller broke off the battle and ordered a retreat, abandoning many wounded men, several isolated units and ten field guns to be captured by Botha's men. Buller's forces lost 145 men killed and 1,200 missing or wounded and the Boers suffered only 40 casualties, including 8 killed.[57]: 12 

Second phase: The British offensive of January to September 1900

[The hotel] lay now calm and innocent, with its open windows looking out upon a smiling garden; but death lurked at the windows and death in the garden, and the little dark man who stood by the door, peering through his glass at the approaching column, was the minister of death, the dangerous Cronje.

Arthur Conan Doyle, The Great Boer War, 1900

 
British casualties lie dead on the battlefield after the Battle of Spion Kop, 24 January 1900.

The British government took these defeats badly and with the sieges still continuing was compelled to send two more divisions plus large numbers of colonial volunteers. By January 1900 this would become the largest force Britain had ever sent overseas, amounting to some 180,000 men with further reinforcements being sought.[14]

While watching for these reinforcements, Buller made another bid to relieve Ladysmith by crossing the Tugela west of Colenso. Buller's subordinate, Major General Charles Warren, successfully crossed the river, but was then faced with a fresh defensive position centred on a prominent hill known as Spion Kop. In the resulting Battle of Spion Kop, British troops captured the summit by surprise during the early hours of 24 January 1900, but as the early morning fog lifted they realised too late that they were overlooked by Boer gun emplacements on the surrounding hills. The rest of the day resulted in a disaster caused by poor communication between Buller and his commanders. Between them they issued contradictory orders, on the one hand ordering men off the hill, while other officers ordered fresh reinforcements to defend it. The result was 350 men killed and nearly 1,000 wounded and a retreat across the Tugela River into British territory. There were nearly 300 Boer casualties.

Buller attacked Louis Botha again on 5 February at Vaal Krantz and was again defeated. Buller withdrew early when it appeared that the British would be isolated in an exposed bridgehead across the Tugela, for which he was nicknamed "Sir Reverse" by some of his officers.

Buller replaced

 
Boer General Piet de Wet, 1900

By taking command in person in Natal, Buller had allowed the overall direction of the war to drift. Because of concerns about his performance and negative reports from the field, he was replaced as Commander in Chief by Field Marshal Lord Roberts. Roberts quickly assembled an entirely new team for headquarters staff and he chose military men from far and wide: Lord Kitchener (Chief of Staff) from the Sudan; Frederick Russell Burnham (Chief of Scouts), the American scout, from the Klondike; George Henderson from the Staff College; Neville Bowles Chamberlain from Afghanistan; and William Nicholson (Military Secretary) from Calcutta.[citation needed] Like Buller, Roberts first intended to attack directly along the Cape Town–Pretoria railway but, again like Buller, was forced to relieve the beleaguered garrisons. Leaving Buller in command in Natal, Roberts massed his main force near the Orange River and along the Western Railway behind Methuen's force at the Modder River, and prepared to make a wide outflanking move to relieve Kimberley.

 
Lance Thackeray: Soldiers of the Royal Inniskilling Regiment (left) are storming Hart's Hill defended by Boer military (right) during the Battle of the Tugela Heights. Artist's impression.

Except in Natal, the war had stagnated. Other than a single attempt to storm Ladysmith, the Boers made no attempt to capture the besieged towns. In the Cape Midlands, the Boers did not exploit the British defeat at Stormberg, and were prevented from capturing the railway junction at Colesberg. In the dry summer, the grazing on the veld became parched, weakening the Boers' horses and draught oxen, and many Boer families joined their menfolk in the siege lines and laagers (encampments), fatally encumbering Cronjé's army.

Roberts relieves the sieges

Roberts launched his main attack on 10 February 1900 and although hampered by a long supply route, managed to outflank the Boers defending Magersfontein. On 14 February, a cavalry division under Major General John French launched a major attack to relieve Kimberley. Although encountering severe fire, a massed cavalry charge split the Boer defences on 15 February, opening the way for French to enter Kimberley that evening, ending its 124 days' siege.

Meanwhile, Roberts pursued Piet Cronjé's 7,000-strong force, which had abandoned Magersfontein to head for Bloemfontein. General French's cavalry was ordered to assist in the pursuit by embarking on an epic 50 km (31 mi) drive towards Paardeberg where Cronjé was attempting to cross the Modder River. At the Battle of Paardeberg from 18 to 27 February, Roberts then surrounded General Piet Cronjé's retreating Boer army. On 17 February, a pincer movement involving both French's cavalry and the main British force attempted to take the entrenched position, but the frontal attacks were uncoordinated and so were repulsed by the Boers. Finally, Roberts resorted to bombarding Cronjé into submission. It took ten days, and when the British troops used the polluted Modder River as water supply, typhoid killed many troops. General Cronjé was forced to surrender at Surrender Hill with 4,000 men.

 
The Relief of Ladysmith. Sir George Stuart White greets Major Hubert Gough on 28 February. Painting by John Henry Frederick Bacon (1868–1914).

In Natal, the Battle of the Tugela Heights, which started on 14 February was Buller's fourth attempt to relieve Ladysmith. The losses Buller's troops had sustained convinced Buller to adopt Boer tactics "in the firing line—to advance in small rushes, covered by rifle fire from behind; to use the tactical support of artillery; and above all, to use the ground, making rock and earth work for them as it did for the enemy." Despite reinforcements his progress was painfully slow against stiff opposition. However, on 26 February, after much deliberation, Buller used all his forces in one all-out attack for the first time and at last succeeded in forcing a crossing of the Tugela to defeat Botha's outnumbered forces north of Colenso. After a siege lasting 118 days, the Relief of Ladysmith was effected, the day after Cronjé surrendered, but at a total cost of 7,000 British casualties. Buller's troops marched into Ladysmith on 28 February.[73]

After a succession of defeats, the Boers realised that against such overwhelming numbers of troops, they had little chance of defeating the British and so became demoralised. Roberts then advanced into the Orange Free State from the west, putting the Boers to flight at the Battle of Poplar Grove and capturing Bloemfontein, the capital, unopposed on 13 March with the Boer defenders escaping and scattering. Meanwhile, he detached a small force to relieve Baden-Powell. The Relief of Mafeking on 18 May 1900 provoked riotous celebrations in Britain, the origin of the Edwardian slang word "mafficking". On 28 May, the Orange Free State was annexed and renamed the Orange River Colony.

Capture of Pretoria

After being forced to delay for several weeks at Bloemfontein by a shortage of supplies, an outbreak of typhoid at Paardeberg, and poor medical care, Roberts finally resumed his advance.[74] He was forced to halt again at Kroonstad for 10 days, due once again to the collapse of his medical and supply systems, but finally captured Johannesburg on 31 May and the capital of the Transvaal, Pretoria, on 5 June. The first into Pretoria was Lt. William Watson of the New South Wales Mounted Rifles, who persuaded the Boers to surrender the capital.[75] Before the war, the Boers had constructed several forts south of Pretoria, but the artillery had been removed from the forts for use in the field, and in the event they abandoned Pretoria without a fight. Having won the principal cities, Roberts declared the war over on 3 September 1900; and the South African Republic was formally annexed.

British observers believed the war to be all but over after the capture of the two capital cities. However, the Boers had earlier met at the temporary new capital of the Orange Free State, Kroonstad, and planned a guerrilla campaign to hit the British supply and communication lines. The first engagement of this new form of warfare was at Sanna's Post on 31 March where 1,500 Boers under the command of Christiaan de Wet attacked Bloemfontein's waterworks about 37 kilometres (23 mi) east of the city, and ambushed a heavily escorted convoy, which caused 155 British casualties and the capture of seven guns, 117 wagons, and 428 British troops.[76]

 
General Piet Cronjé as a prisoner of war in Saint Helena, 1900–02. He was captured, along with 4,000 soldiers, after the loss of the Battle of Paardeberg.

After the fall of Pretoria, one of the last formal battles was at Diamond Hill on 11–12 June, where Roberts attempted to drive the remnants of the Boer field army under Botha beyond striking distance of Pretoria. Although Roberts drove the Boers from the hill, Botha did not regard it as a defeat, for he inflicted 162 casualties on the British while suffering only around 50 casualties.

Boers retreat

The set-piece period of the war now largely gave way to a mobile guerrilla war, but one final operation remained. President Kruger and what remained of the Transvaal government had retreated to eastern Transvaal. Roberts, joined by troops from Natal under Buller, advanced against them, and broke their last defensive position at Bergendal on 26 August. As Roberts and Buller followed up along the railway line to Komatipoort, Kruger sought asylum in Portuguese East Africa (modern Mozambique). Some dispirited Boers did likewise, and the British gathered up much war material. However, the core of the Boer fighters under Botha easily broke back through the Drakensberg Mountains into the Transvaal highveld after riding north through the bushveld.

As Roberts's army occupied Pretoria, the Boer fighters in the Orange Free State retreated into the Brandwater Basin, a fertile area in the north-east of the Republic. This offered only temporary sanctuary, as the mountain passes leading to it could be occupied by the British, trapping the Boers. A force under General Archibald Hunter set out from Bloemfontein to achieve this in July 1900. The hard core of the Free State Boers under De Wet, accompanied by President Steyn, left the basin early. Those remaining fell into confusion and most failed to break out before Hunter trapped them. 4,500 Boers surrendered and much equipment was captured but as with Roberts's drive against Kruger at the same time, these losses were of relatively little consequence, as the hard core of the Boer armies and their most determined and active leaders remained at large.

From the Basin, Christiaan de Wet headed west. Although hounded by British columns, he succeeded in crossing the Vaal into western Transvaal, to allow Steyn to travel to meet their leaders. There was much sympathy for the Boers on mainland Europe. In October, President Kruger and members of the Transvaal government left Portuguese East Africa on the Dutch warship De Gelderland, sent by the Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands. Paul Kruger's wife, however, was too ill to travel and remained in South Africa where she died on 20 July 1901 without seeing her husband again. President Kruger first went to Marseille and then on to the Netherlands, where he stayed for a while before moving finally to Clarens, Switzerland, where he died in exile on 14 July 1904.

Prisoners of war sent overseas

The first sizeable batch of Boer prisoners of war taken by the British consisted of those captured at the Battle of Elandslaagte on 21 October 1899. At first, many were put on ships, but as numbers grew, the British decided they did not want them kept locally. The capture of 400 POWs in February 1900 was a key event, which made the British realise they could not accommodate all POWs in South Africa.[77] The British feared they could be freed by sympathetic locals. Moreover, they already had trouble supplying their own troops in South Africa, and did not want the added burden of sending supplies for the POWs. Britain therefore chose to send many POWs overseas.

 
A Transit camp for Prisoners of War near Cape Town during the war. Prisoners were then transferred for internment in other parts of the British Empire.

The first overseas (off African mainland) camps were opened in Saint Helena, which ultimately received about 5,000 POWs.[78] About 5,000 POWs were sent to Ceylon.[79] Other POWs were sent to Bermuda and India.[77]

In all, nearly 26,000 POWs were sent overseas.[80]

Oath of neutrality

On 15 March 1900, Lord Roberts proclaimed an amnesty for all burghers, except leaders, who took an oath of neutrality and returned quietly to their homes.[81] It is estimated that between 12,000 and 14,000 burghers took this oath between March and June 1900.[82]

Third phase: Guerrilla war (September 1900 – May 1902)

 
Kitchener succeeded Roberts in November 1900 and launched anti-guerrilla campaigns. 1898 photograph in 1910 magazine.

By September 1900, the British were nominally in control of both Republics, with the exception of the northern part of Transvaal. However, they soon discovered that they only controlled the territory their columns physically occupied. Despite the loss of their two capital cities and half of their army, the Boer commanders adopted guerrilla warfare tactics, primarily conducting raids against railways, resource and supply targets, all aimed at disrupting the operational capacity of the British Army. They avoided pitched battles and casualties were light.

Each Boer commando unit was sent to the district from which its members had been recruited, which meant that they could rely on local support and personal knowledge of the terrain and the towns within the district thereby enabling them to live off the land. Their orders were simply to act against the British whenever possible. Their tactics were to strike fast and hard causing as much damage to the enemy as possible, and then to withdraw and vanish before enemy reinforcements could arrive. The vast distances of the Republics allowed the Boer commandos considerable freedom to move about and made it nearly impossible for the 250,000 British troops to control the territory effectively using columns alone. As soon as a British column left a town or district, British control of that area faded away.

 
A surviving blockhouse in South Africa. Blockhouses were constructed by the British to secure supply routes from Boer raids during the war.

The Boer commandos were especially effective during the initial guerrilla phase of the war because Roberts had assumed that the war would end with the capture of the Boer capitals and the dispersal of the main Boer armies. Many British troops were therefore redeployed out of the area, and had been replaced by lower-quality contingents of Imperial Yeomanry and locally raised irregular corps.

From late May 1900, the first successes of the Boer guerrilla strategy were at Lindley (where 500 Yeomanry surrendered), and at Heilbron (where a large convoy and its escort were captured) and other skirmishes resulting in 1,500 British casualties in less than ten days. In December 1900, De la Rey and Christiaan Beyers attacked and mauled a British brigade at Nooitgedacht. As a result of these and other Boer successes, the British, led by Lord Kitchener, mounted three extensive searches for Christiaan de Wet, but without success. However, the very nature of the Boer guerrilla war and the Boer raids on British camps were sporadic, poorly planned, and had little overall long-term objective, with the exception to simply harass the British. This led to a disorganised pattern of scattered engagements between the British and the Boers throughout the region.

Use of Blockhouses

The British were forced to quickly revise their tactics. They concentrated on restricting the freedom of movement of the Boer commandos and depriving them of local support. The railway lines had provided vital lines of communication and supply, and as the British had advanced across South Africa, they had used armoured trains and had established fortified blockhouses at key points.[83] They now built additional blockhouses (each housing 6–8 soldiers) and fortified these to protect supply routes against Boer raiders. Eventually some 8,000 such blockhouses were built across the two South African republics, radiating from the larger towns along principal routes. Each blockhouse cost between £800 to £1,000 and took about three months to build. They proved very effective; not one bridge at which a blockhouse was sited and manned was blown.[83]

The blockhouse system required an enormous number of troops to garrison. Well over 50,000 British troops, or 50 battalions, were involved in blockhouse duty, greater than the approximately 30,000 Boers in the field during the guerrilla phase. In addition, up to 16,000 Africans were used both as armed guards and to patrol the line at night.[83] The Army linked the blockhouses with barbed wire fences to parcel up the wide veld into smaller areas. "New Model" drives were mounted under which a continuous line of troops could sweep an area of veld bounded by blockhouse lines, unlike the earlier inefficient scouring of the countryside by scattered columns.

Scorched earth campaign against civilians

 
One British response to the guerrilla war was a 'scorched earth' policy to deny the guerrillas supplies and refuge. In this image Boer civilians watch their house as it is burned.

The British also implemented a "scorched earth" policy under which they targeted everything within the controlled areas that could give sustenance to the Boer guerrillas with a view to making it harder for the Boers to survive. As British troops swept the countryside, they systematically destroyed crops, burned homesteads and farms and interned Boer and African men, women, children and workers in concentration camps. Finally, the British also established their own mounted raiding columns in support of the sweeper columns. These were used to rapidly follow and relentlessly harass the Boers with a view to delaying them and cutting off escape, while the sweeper units caught up. Many of the 90 or so mobile columns formed by the British to participate in such drives were a mixture of British and colonial troops, but they also had a large minority of armed Africans. The total number of armed Africans serving with these columns has been estimated at approximately 20,000.

The British Army also made use of Boer auxiliaries who had been persuaded to change sides and enlist as "National Scouts". Serving under the command of General Andries Cronjé, the National Scouts were despised as joiners but came to number a fifth of the fighting Afrikaners by the end of the War.[84]

The British utilised armoured trains throughout the war to deliver rapid reaction forces much more quickly to incidents (such as Boer attacks on blockhouses and columns) or to drop them off ahead of retreating Boer columns.

Peace committees

Among those Burghers who had stopped fighting, it was decided to form peace committees to persuade those who were still fighting to desist. In December 1900 Lord Kitchener gave permission that a central Burgher Peace Committee be inaugurated in Pretoria. By the end of 1900 some thirty envoys were sent out to the various districts to form local peace committees to persuade burghers to give up the fight. Previous leaders of the Boers, like Generals Piet de Wet and Andries Cronjé were involved in the organisation. Meyer de Kock was the only emissary of a peace committee to be convicted of high treason and executed by firing squad.[85]

Joiners

Some burghers joined the British in their fight against the Boers. By the end of hostilities in May 1902, there were no fewer than 5,464 burghers working for the British.[86]

Orange Free State

 
Christiaan De Wet was the most formidable leader of the Boer guerrillas. He successfully evaded capture on numerous occasions and was later involved in the negotiations for a peace settlement.

After having conferred with the Transvaal leaders, Christiaan de Wet returned to the Orange Free State, where he inspired a series of successful attacks and raids from the hitherto quiet western part of the country, though he suffered a rare defeat at Bothaville in November 1900. Many Boers who had earlier returned to their farms, sometimes giving formal parole to the British, took up arms again. In late January 1901, De Wet led a renewed invasion of Cape Colony. This was less successful, because there was no general uprising among the Cape Boers, and De Wet's men were hampered by bad weather and relentlessly pursued by British forces. They narrowly escaped across the Orange River.

From then until the final days of the war, De Wet remained comparatively quiet, partly because the Orange Free State was effectively left desolate by British sweeps. In late 1901, De Wet overran an isolated British detachment at Groenkop, inflicting heavy casualties. This prompted Kitchener to launch the first of the "New Model" drives against him. De Wet escaped the first such drive, but lost 300 of his fighters. This was a severe loss, and a portent of further attrition, although the subsequent attempts to round up De Wet were badly handled, and De Wet's forces avoided capture.

Western Transvaal

The Boer commandos in the Western Transvaal were very active after September 1901. Several battles of importance were fought here between September 1901 and March 1902. At Moedwil on 30 September 1901 and again at Driefontein on 24 October, General Koos De La Rey's forces attacked the British, but were forced to withdraw after the British offered strong resistance.

A time of relative quiet descended thereafter on the western Transvaal. February 1902 saw the next major battle in that region. On 25 February, Koos De La Rey attacked a British column under Lieutenant-Colonel S. B. von Donop at Ysterspruit near Wolmaransstad. De La Rey succeeded in capturing many men and a large amount of ammunition. The Boer attacks prompted Lord Methuen, the British second-in-command after Lord Kitchener, to move his column from Vryburg to Klerksdorp to deal with De La Rey. On the morning of 7 March 1902, the Boers attacked the rear guard of Methuen's moving column at Tweebosch. Confusion reigned in British ranks and Methuen was wounded and captured by the Boers.

The Boer victories in the west led to stronger action by the British. In the second half of March 1902, large British reinforcements were sent to the Western Transvaal under the direction of Ian Hamilton. The opportunity the British were waiting for arose on 11 April 1902 at Rooiwal, where a commando led by General Jan Kemp and Commandant Potgieter attacked a superior force under Kekewich. The British soldiers were well positioned on the hillside and inflicted severe casualties on the Boers charging on horseback over a large distance, beating them back. This was the end of the war in the Western Transvaal and also the last major battle of the war.

Eastern Transvaal

Two Boer forces fought in this area, one under Botha in the south east and a second under Ben Viljoen in the north east around Lydenburg. Botha's forces were particularly active, raiding railways and British supply convoys, and even mounting a renewed invasion of Natal in September 1901. After defeating British mounted infantry in the Battle of Blood River Poort near Dundee, Botha was forced to withdraw by heavy rains that made movement difficult and crippled his horses. Back on the Transvaal territory around his home district of Vryheid, Botha attacked a British raiding column at Bakenlaagte, using an effective mounted charge. One of the most active British units was effectively destroyed in this engagement. This made Botha's forces the target of increasingly large scorched earth drives by British forces, in which the British made particular use of native scouts and informers. Eventually, Botha had to abandon the high veld and retreat to a narrow enclave bordering Swaziland.

To the north, Ben Viljoen grew steadily less active. His forces mounted comparatively few attacks and as a result, the Boer enclave around Lydenburg was largely unmolested. Viljoen was eventually captured.

Cape Colony

In parts of Cape Colony, particularly the Cape Midlands District where Boers formed a majority of the white inhabitants, the British had always feared a general uprising against them. In fact, no such uprising took place, even in the early days of the war when Boer armies had advanced across the Orange. The cautious conduct of some of the elderly Orange Free State generals had been one factor that discouraged the Cape Boers from siding with the Boer republics. Nevertheless, there was widespread pro-Boer sympathy. Some of the Cape Dutch volunteered to help the British, but a much larger number volunteered to help the other side. The political factor was more important than the military: the Cape Dutch, according to Milner 90 percent of whom favoured the rebels, controlled the provincial legislature, and it's authorities forbade the British Army to burn farms or to force Boer civilians into concentration camps.[87] The British had more limited options to suppress the insurgency in the Cape Colony as result.

After he escaped across the Orange in March 1901, Christiaan de Wet had left forces under Cape rebels Kritzinger and Gideon Scheepers to maintain a guerrilla campaign in the Cape Midlands. The campaign here was one of the least chivalrous of the war, with intimidation by both sides of each other's civilian sympathisers. In one of many skirmishes, Commandant Lotter's small commando was tracked down by a much-superior British column and wiped out at Groenkloof. Several captured rebels, including Lotter and Scheepers, who was captured when he fell ill with appendicitis, were executed by the British for treason or for capital crimes such as the murder of prisoners or of unarmed civilians. Some of the executions took place in public, to deter further disaffection.

Fresh Boer forces under Jan Christiaan Smuts, joined by the surviving rebels under Kritzinger, made another attack on the Cape in September 1901. They suffered severe hardships and were hard pressed by British columns, but eventually rescued themselves by routing some of their pursuers at the Battle of Elands River and capturing their equipment. From then until the end of the war, Smuts increased his forces from among Cape rebels until they numbered 3,000. However, no general uprising took place, and the situation in the Cape remained stalemated.

In January 1902, Boer leader Manie Maritz was implicated in the Leliefontein massacre in the far Northern Cape.

Boer foreign volunteers

While no other government actively supported the Boer cause, individuals from several countries volunteered and formed Foreign Volunteer Units. These primarily came from Europe, particularly the Netherlands, Germany and Sweden-Norway. Other countries such as France, Italy, Ireland (then part of the United Kingdom), and restive areas of the Russian Empire, including Poland and Georgia, also formed smaller volunteer corps. Finns fought in the Scandinavian Corps. Two volunteers, George Henri Anne-Marie Victor de Villebois-Mareuil of France and Yevgeny Maximov of Russia, became veggeneraals (fighting generals) of the South African Republic.[88]

Conclusion

 
The end result of the Boer War was the annexation of the Boer Republics to the British Empire in 1902
 
Peace conference at Vereeniging
 
C Company returns from Boer War, pictured here in King Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Towards the end of the war, British tactics of containment, denial, and harassment began to yield results against the guerrillas. The sourcing and co-ordination of intelligence became increasingly efficient with regular reporting from observers in the blockhouses, from units patrolling the fences and conducting "sweeper" operations, and from native Africans in rural areas who increasingly supplied intelligence, as the Scorched Earth policy took effect and they found themselves competing with the Boers for food supplies. Kitchener's forces at last began to seriously affect the Boers' fighting strength and freedom of manoeuvre, and made it harder for the Boers and their families to survive. Despite this success, almost half the Boer fighting strength, 15,000 men were still in the field fighting. Kitchener's tactics were very costly: Britain was running out of time and money and needed to change tack.[89]

The British offered terms of peace on various occasions, notably in March 1901, but were rejected by Botha and the "Bitter-enders" among the Boers. They pledged to fight until the bitter end and rejected the demand for compromise made by the "Hands-uppers." Their reasons included hatred of the British, loyalty to their dead comrades, solidarity with fellow commandos, an intense desire for independence, religious arguments, and fear of captivity or punishment. On the other hand, their women and children were dying every day and independence seemed impossible.[90] The last of the Boers finally surrendered in May 1902 and the war ended with the Treaty of Vereeniging signed on 31 May 1902. After a period of obstinacy, the British reneged and offered the Boers generous terms of conditional surrender in order to bring the war to a victorious conclusion. The Boers were given £3,000,000 for reconstruction and were promised eventual limited self-government, which was granted in 1906 and 1907. The treaty ended the existence of the Transvaal and Orange Free State as independent Boer republics and placed them within the British Empire. The Union of South Africa was established as a dominion of the British Empire in 1910.

Nonwhite roles

The policy on both sides was to minimise the role of nonwhites, but the need for manpower continuously stretched those resolves. At the battle of Spion Kop in Ladysmith, Mohandas K. Gandhi with 300 free burgher Indians and 800 indentured Indian labourers started the Ambulance Corps serving the British side. As the war raged across African farms and their homes were destroyed, many became refugees and they, like the Boers, moved to the towns where the British hastily created internment camps. Subsequently, the British scorched earth policies were applied to both Boers and Africans. Although most black Africans were not considered by the British to be hostile, many tens of thousands were also forcibly removed from Boer areas and also placed in concentration camps. Africans were held separately from Boer internees. Eventually there were a total of 64 tented camps for Africans. Conditions were as bad as in the camps for the Boers, but even though, after the Fawcett Commission report, conditions improved in the Boer camps, "improvements were much slower in coming to the black camps"; 20,000 died there.[91]

The Boers and the British both feared the consequences of arming Africans. The memories of the Zulu and other tribal conflicts were still fresh, and they recognised that whoever won would have to deal with the consequences of a mass militarisation of the tribes. There was therefore an unwritten agreement that this war would be a "white man's war." At the outset, British officials instructed all white magistrates in the Natal Colony to appeal to Zulu amakhosi (chiefs) to remain neutral, and President Kruger sent emissaries asking them to stay out of it. However, in some cases there were old scores to be settled, and some Africans, such as the Swazis, were eager to enter the war with the specific aim of reclaiming land won by the Boers. As the war went on there was greater involvement of Africans, and in particular large numbers became embroiled in the conflict on the British side, either voluntarily or involuntarily. By the end of the war, many Africans had been armed and had shown conspicuous gallantry in roles such as scouts, messengers, watchmen in blockhouses, and auxiliaries.

And there were more flash-points outside of the war. On 6 May 1902 at Holkrantz in the southeastern Transvaal, a Zulu faction had their cattle stolen and their women and children tortured by the Boers as a punishment for assisting the British. The local Boer officer then sent an insulting message to the tribe, challenging them to take back their cattle. The Zulus attacked at night, and in a mutual bloodbath, the Boers lost 56 killed and 3 wounded, while the Africans suffered 52 killed and 48 wounded.[92]

About 10,000 black men were attached to Boer units where they performed camp duties; a handful unofficially fought in combat. The British Army employed over 14,000 Africans as wagon drivers. Even more had combatant roles as spies, guides, and eventually as soldiers. By 1902 there were about 30,000 armed Africans in the British Army.[93]

Concentration camps

 
Tents in the Bloemfontein concentration camp

The term "concentration camp" was used to describe camps operated by the British in South Africa during this conflict in the years 1900–1902, and the term grew in prominence during this period.

The camps had originally been set up by the British Army as "refugee camps" to provide refuge for civilian families who had been forced to abandon their homes for whatever reason related to the war. However, when Kitchener took over in late 1900, he introduced new tactics in an attempt to break the guerrilla campaign and the influx of civilians grew dramatically as a result. Disease and starvation killed thousands.[17][94][95] Kitchener initiated plans to

... flush out guerrillas in a series of systematic drives, organised like a sporting shoot, with success defined in a weekly 'bag' of killed, captured and wounded, and to sweep the country bare of everything that could give sustenance to the guerrillas, including women and children ... It was the clearance of civilians—uprooting a whole nation—that would come to dominate the last phase of the war.
— Pakenham, The Boer War[96]
 
Lizzie van Zyl, a Boer child, visited by Emily Hobhouse in a British concentration camp

As Boer farms were destroyed by the British under their "Scorched Earth" policy—including the systematic destruction of crops and slaughtering of livestock, the burning down of homesteads and farms —to prevent the Boers from resupplying from a home base, many tens of thousands of women and children were forcibly moved into the concentration camps. This was not the first appearance of internment camps, as the Spanish had used internment in Cuba in the Ten Years' War, but the Boer War concentration camp system was the first time that a whole nation had been systematically targeted, and the first in which whole regions had been depopulated.

Eventually, there were a total of 45 tented camps built for Boer internees and 64 for black Africans. Of the 28,000 Boer men captured as prisoners of war, 25,630 were sent overseas to prisoner-of-war camps throughout the British Empire. The vast majority of Boers remaining in the local camps were women and children. Around 26,370 Boer women and children were to perish in these concentration camps.[97] Of the more than 120,000 Blacks (and Coloureds) imprisoned too, around 20,000 died.[98][95][99]

The camps were poorly administered from the outset and became increasingly overcrowded when Kitchener's troops implemented the internment strategy on a vast scale. Conditions were terrible for the health of the internees, mainly due to neglect, poor hygiene and bad sanitation. The supply of all items was unreliable, partly because of the constant disruption of communication lines by the Boers. The food rations were meager and there was a two-tier allocation policy, whereby families of men who were still fighting were routinely given smaller rations than others.[100] The inadequate shelter, poor diet, bad hygiene and overcrowding led to malnutrition and endemic contagious diseases such as measles, typhoid, and dysentery, to which the children were particularly vulnerable.[101] Coupled with a shortage of modern medical facilities, many of the internees died. While much of the British press, including The Times, played down the problems in the camps, Emily Hobhouse helped raise public awareness in Britain of the atrocious conditions, as well as being instrumental in bringing relief to the concentration camps.[102]

Cost of the war

It is estimated that the total cost of the war to the British government was £211,156, 000[103] (equivalent to £19.9bn in 2022).

Cost of War over its entire course
Year Cost at the time[104] Relative value in 2022[105]
1899–1900 £23,000,000 £2,180,000,000
1900–1901 £63,737,000 £6,000,000,000
1901–1902 £67,670,000 £6,410,000,000
1902–1903 £47,500,000 £4,450,000,000
Sub-total £201,907,000 £19,040,000,000
Interest £9,249,000 £866,000,000
Grand total £211,156,000 £19,906,000,000

Aftermath and analysis

 
Memorial to soldiers from Quebec who fell in the Second Boer War, Quebec City

The Second Boer War cast long shadows over the history of the South African region. The predominantly agrarian society of the former Boer republics was profoundly and fundamentally affected by the scorched earth policy of Roberts and Kitchener. The devastation of both Boer and black African populations in the concentration camps and through war and exile were to have a lasting effect on the demography and quality of life in the region. Many exiles and prisoners were unable to return to their farms at all; others attempted to do so but were forced to abandon the farms as unworkable given the damage caused by farm burning in the course of the scorched earth policy. Destitute Boers and black Africans swelled the ranks of the unskilled urban poor competing with the "uitlanders" in the mines.[106]

The postwar reconstruction administration was presided over by Lord Milner and his largely Oxford trained Milner's Kindergarten. This small group of civil servants had a profound effect on the region, eventually leading to the Union of South Africa.

In the aftermath of the war, an imperial administration freed from accountability to a domestic electorate set about reconstructing an economy that was by then predicated unambiguously on gold. At the same time, British civil servants, municipal officials, and their cultural adjuncts were hard at work in the heartland of the former Boer Republics helping to forge new identities—first as 'British South Africans' and then, later still, as 'white South Africans'.

Some scholars, for good reasons, identify these new identities as partly underpinning the act of union that followed in 1910. Although challenged by a Boer rebellion only four years later, they did much to shape South African politics between the two world wars and right up to the present day.[107]

 
Alfred, Lord Milner, was the British High Commissioner of Southern Africa. He was involved from the start of the war and had a role in the peace process and the creation of the Union of South Africa.

The counterinsurgency techniques and lessons (the restriction of movement, the containment of space, the ruthless targeting of anything, everything and anyone that could give sustenance to guerrillas, the relentless harassment through sweeper groups coupled with rapid reaction forces, the sourcing and co-ordination of intelligence, and the nurturing of native allies) learned during the Boer War were used by the British (and other forces) in future guerrilla campaigns including to counter Malayan communist rebels during the Malayan Emergency. In World War II the British also adopted some of the concepts of raiding from the Boer commandos when, after the fall of France, they set up their special raiding forces, and in acknowledgement of their erstwhile enemies, chose the name British Commandos.

Many of the Boers referred to the war as the second of the Freedom Wars. The most resistant of Boers wanted to continue the fight and were known as "Bittereinders" (or irreconcilables) and at the end of the war a number of Boer fighters such as Deneys Reitz chose exile rather than sign an oath, such as the following, to pledge allegiance to Britain:[108]

The bearer, <prisoner name> has been released from prison of war camp <Camp name> on signing that he acknowledge terms of surrender and becomes a British subject.

Over the following decade, many returned to South Africa and never signed the pledge. Some, like Reitz, eventually reconciled themselves to the new status quo, but others did not.

Union of South Africa

One of the most important events in the decade after the end of the war was the creation of the Union of South Africa (later the Republic of South Africa). It proved a key ally to Britain as a Dominion of the British Empire during the World Wars. At the start of the First World War a crisis ensued when the South African government led by Louis Botha and other former Boer fighters, such as Jan Smuts, declared support for Britain and agreed to send troops to take over the German colony of German South-West Africa (Namibia).

Many Boers were opposed to fighting for Britain, especially against Germany, which had been sympathetic to their struggle. A number of bittereinders and their allies took part in a revolt known as the Maritz Rebellion. This was quickly suppressed, and in 1916 the leading Boer rebels in the Maritz Rebellion escaped lightly (especially compared with the fate of leading Irish rebels of the Easter Rising), with terms of imprisonment of six and seven years and heavy fines. Two years later, they were released from prison, as Louis Botha recognised the value of reconciliation. Thereafter the bittereinders concentrated on political organisation within the constitutional system and built up what later became the National Party, which took power in 1948 and dominated the politics of South Africa from the late 1940s until the early 1990s, under the apartheid system.

Effect of the war on domestic British politics

 
Memorial window from St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin by An Túr Gloine. Much of the Irish public sympathised with the Boer side,[citation needed], rather than the British side on which fought the Royal Irish Regiment.

Many Irish nationalists sympathised with the Boers, viewing them to be a people oppressed by British imperialism, much like they viewed themselves. Irish miners already in the Transvaal at the start of the war formed the nucleus of two Irish commandos. The Second Irish Brigade was headed up by an Australian of Irish parents, Colonel Arthur Lynch. In addition, small groups of Irish volunteers went to South Africa to fight with the Boers—this despite the fact that there were many Irish troops fighting in the British army, including the Royal Dublin Fusiliers.[e] In Britain, the "Pro-Boer" campaign expanded,[f] with writers often idealising the Boer society.

The war also highlighted the dangers of Britain's policy of non-alignment and deepened her isolation. The 1900 UK general election, also known as the "Khaki election", was called by the Prime Minister, Lord Salisbury, on the back of recent British victories. There was much enthusiasm for the war at this point, resulting in a victory for the Conservative government.

However, public support quickly waned as it became apparent that the war would not be easy and it dragged on, partially contributing to the Conservatives' spectacular defeat in 1906. There was public outrage at the use of scorched earth tactics and at the conditions in the concentration camps. It also became apparent that there were serious problems with public health in Britain since up to 40% of recruits in Britain were unfit for military service and suffered from medical problems such as rickets and other poverty-related illnesses. That came at a time of increasing concern for the state of the poor in Britain.

Having taken the country into a prolonged war, the Conservative government was rejected by the electorate at the first general election after the war was over. Balfour succeeded his uncle, Lord Salisbury in 1903, immediately after the war, took over a Conservative Party that had won two successive landslide majorities but led it to a landslide defeat in 1906.

The 2nd Anglo-Boer War was a victory that costed British taxpayers more than £200m; 22,000 Empire troops, and more than 400,000 army horses, donkeys and mules were killed. Britain had expected a swift victory against a mostly unmilitarised and predominantly agricultural-based opponent. However, the conflict dragged on into the 20th century and the reign of a new monarch.[109] At the time, Britain was world’s most technologically advanced military. The results caused many both domestically and internationally to question the dominance of the British Empire, especially as nations like the United States, Germany, and Japan had started to become major powers.

Horses

 
A horse destined to serve in the war, being offloaded in Port Elizabeth

The number of horses killed in the war was at the time unprecedented in modern warfare. For example, in the Relief of Kimberley, French's cavalry rode 500 horses to their deaths in a single day. The wastage was particularly heavy among British forces for several reasons: overloading of horses with unnecessary equipment and saddlery, failure to rest and acclimatise horses after long sea voyages and, later in the war, poor management by inexperienced mounted troops and distant control by unsympathetic staffs.[110] [111] The average life expectancy of a British horse, from the time of its arrival in Port Elizabeth, was around six weeks.[112]

Horses were slaughtered for their meat when needed. During the Siege of Kimberley and Siege of Ladysmith, horses were consumed as food once the regular sources of meat were depleted.[113] The besieged British forces in Ladysmith also produced chevril, a Bovril-like paste, by boiling down the horse meat to a jelly paste and serving it like beef tea.[114][115]

The Horse Memorial in Port Elizabeth is a tribute to the 300,000 horses that died during the conflict.[116]

Imperial involvement

The vast majority of troops fighting for the British army came from Great Britain. Yet a significant number came from other parts of the British Empire. These countries had their own internal disputes over whether they should remain tied to London, or have full independence, which carried over into the debate around the sending of forces to assist the war. Though not fully independent on foreign affairs, these countries did have local say over how much support to provide, and the manner it was provided. Ultimately, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and British South African Company-administered Rhodesia all sent volunteers to aid the United Kingdom. Troops were also raised to fight with the British from the Cape Colony and the Colony of Natal. Some Boer fighters, such as Jan Smuts and Louis Botha, were technically British subjects as they came from the Cape Colony and Colony of Natal, respectively.[citation needed]

There were also many volunteers from the Empire who were not selected for the official contingents from their countries and travelled privately to South Africa to form private units, such as the Canadian Scouts and Doyle's Australian Scouts. There were also some European volunteer units from British India and British Ceylon, though the British Government refused offers of non-white troops from the Empire. Some Cape Coloureds also volunteered early in the war, but later some of them were effectively conscripted and kept in segregated units. As a community, they received comparatively little reward for their services. In many ways, the war set the pattern for the Empire's later involvement in the two World Wars. Specially raised units, consisting mainly of volunteers, were dispatched overseas to serve with forces from elsewhere in the British Empire.

The United States stayed neutral in the conflict, but some American citizens were eager to participate. Early in the war Lord Roberts cabled the American Frederick Russell Burnham, a veteran of both Matabele wars but at that very moment prospecting in the Klondike, to serve on his personal staff as Chief of Scouts. Burnham went on to receive the highest awards of any American who served in the war, but American mercenaries participated on both sides.[117]

Australia

 
British and Australian officers in South Africa, c. 1900

From 1899 to 1901 the six separate self-governing colonies in Australia sent their own contingents to serve in the Boer War. That much of the population of the colonies had originated from Great Britain explains a general desire to support Britain during the conflict. After the colonies formed the Commonwealth of Australia in 1901, the new Government of Australia sent "Commonwealth" contingents to the war.[118] The Boer War was thus the first war in which the Commonwealth of Australia fought. A few Australians fought on the Boer side.[119] The most famous and colourful character was Colonel Arthur Alfred Lynch, formerly of Ballarat, Victoria, who raised the Second Irish Brigade.

 
A memorial in Queanbeyan, New South Wales, unveiled in 1903, dedicated to Australians who served in the conflict (over 20,000)

The Australian climate and geography were far closer to that of South Africa than most other parts of the empire, so Australians adapted quickly to the environment, with troops serving mostly among the army's "mounted rifles." Enlistment in all official Australian contingents totalled 16,463.[120] Another five to seven thousand Australians served in "irregular" regiments raised in South Africa. Perhaps five hundred Australian irregulars were killed. In total 20,000 or more Australians served and about 1,000 were killed. A total of 267 died from disease, 251 were killed in action or died from wounds sustained in battle. A further 43 men were reported missing.[121]

When the war began some Australians, like some Britons, opposed it. As the war dragged on some Australians became disenchanted, in part because of the sufferings of Boer civilians reported in the press. In an interesting twist (for Australians), when the British missed capturing President Paul Kruger, as he escaped Pretoria during its fall in June 1900, a Melbourne Punch, 21 June 1900, cartoon depicted how the War could be won, using the Kelly Gang.[122]

The convictions and executions of two Australian lieutenants, Harry Harbord Morant, colloquially known as 'The Breaker' for his skill with horses, and Peter Handcock in 1902, and the imprisonment of a third, George Witton, had minimal impact on the Australian public at the time despite later legend[citation needed]. The controversial court-martial saw the three convicted of executing Boer prisoners under their authority. After the war, though, Australians joined an empire-wide campaign that saw Witton released from jail. Much later,[citation needed] some Australians came to see the execution of Morant and Handcock as instances of wrongfully executed Australians, as illustrated in the 1980 Australian film Breaker Morant.

It is believed that up to 50 Aboriginal Australians served in the Boer War as trackers. According to Dale Kerwin, an Indigenous research fellow at Griffith University, such is the lack of information that is available about the trackers it is even uncertain as to whether they returned to Australia at the end of the war. He has claimed that at the end of the war in 1902 when the Australian contingents returned the trackers may not have been allowed back to Australia due to the White Australia Policy.[123]

Canada

 
The unveiling of the South African War Memorial in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, in 1908

A total of around 8000 Canadians arrived in South Africa to fight for Britain. These arrived in two contingents: the first on 30 October 1899, the second on 21 January 1900. A third contongent of cavalry (Strathcona's Horse) embarked for South Africa on 16/17 March 1900.[124] They remained until May 1902.[125] With approximately 7,368[126] soldiers in a combat situation, the conflict became the largest military engagement involving Canadian soldiers from the time of Confederation until the Great War.[125] Eventually, 270 of these soldiers died in the course of the Boer War.[125]

The Canadian public was initially divided on the decision to go to war as some citizens did not want Canada to become Britain's 'tool' for engaging in armed conflicts. Many Anglophone citizens were pro-Empire, and wanted the prime minister, Sir Wilfrid Laurier, to support the British in their conflict. On the other hand, many Francophone citizens felt threatened by the continuation of British imperialism to their national sovereignty.[127]

In the end, to appease the citizens who wanted war and to avoid angering those who oppose it, Laurier sent 1,000 volunteers under the command of Lieutenant Colonel William Otter to aid the confederation in its war to 'liberate' the peoples of the Boer controlled states in South Africa. The volunteers were provided to the British if the latter paid costs of the battalion after it arrived in South Africa.[128]

The supporters of the war claimed that it "pitted British Freedom, justice and civilization against Boer backwardness".[citation needed][129] The French Canadians' opposition to the Canadian involvement in a British 'colonial venture' eventually led to a three-day riot in various areas of Quebec.[126]

 
Harold Lothrop Borden – son of the National Minister of Defence and the most famous Canadian casualty of the war

Commonwealth involvement in the Boer War can be summarised into three parts. The first part (October 1899 – December 1899) was characterised by questionable decisions and blunders from the Commonwealth leadership which affected its soldiers greatly. The soldiers of the Commonwealth were shocked at the number of Afrikaner soldiers who were willing to oppose the British. The Afrikaner troops were very willing to fight for their country, and were armed with modern weaponry and were highly mobile soldiers.[127] This was one of the best examples of Guerrilla style warfare, which would be employed throughout the twentieth century after set piece fighting was seen as a hindrance by certain groups.[125] The Boer soldiers would evade capture and secure provisions from their enemies therefore they were able to exist as a fighting entity for an indeterminate period of time.[130]

The end of the First part was the period in mid-December, referred to as the "Black Week". During the week of 10–17 December 1899, the British suffered three major defeats at the hands of the Boers at the battlefields of Stormberg, Magersfontein and Colenso. Afterwards, the British called upon more volunteers to take part in the war from the Commonwealth.[131]

The second part of the war (February–April 1900) was the opposite of the first. After the British reorganised and reinforced under new leadership, they began to experience success against the Boer soldiers. Commonwealth soldiers resorted to using blockhouses, farm burning and concentration camps to 'persuade' the resisting Boers into submission.[132]

The final phase of the war was the guerrilla phase in which many Boer soldiers turned to guerrilla tactics such as raiding infrastructure or communications lines. Many Canadian soldiers did not actually see combat after they had been shipped over to South Africa since many arrived around the time of the signing of the Treaty of Vereeniging on 31 May 1902.[133]

Notable Canadian Engagements
Battle Description
Paardeberg A British-led attack trapped a Boer Army in Central South Africa on the banks of the Modder River from 18–27 February 1900. Over 800 Canadian soldiers from Otter's 2nd Special Service Battalion were attached to the British attack force. This was the first major attack involving the Canadians in the Boer War, as well as the first major victory for Commonwealth soldiers. The Canadian soldiers perched on a hill above the Boer camp and were credited with being the main reason that the Boers under General Cronjé surrendered.[128]
Zand River On 6 May 1900, the Commonwealth's northwards advance to the capital of Pretoria was well on its way. However, the British soldiers encountered a position of Boer soldiers on the Zand River. The British commander felt that the best course of action was to use cavalry to envelop the Boers on their left flank and infantry would therefore march on the Boer right flank to secure a crossing. The Canadian 2nd Battalion was the lead unit advancing on the right flank. However, due to disease and casualties from earlier encounters, the 2nd battalion was reduced to approximately half of its initial strength. The Canadian battalion came under fire from the Boers who were occupying protected positions. The battle continued for several hours until the British cavalry was able to flank the Boers and force a retreat. Canadian casualties were two killed and two wounded. The skirmishes around the Zand River would continue and more soldiers from various Commonwealth countries would become involved.[134]
Doornkop On the days of 28–29 May 1900, both the Canadian 2nd battalion and the 1st Mounted Infantry Brigade fought together on the same battlefield for the first, and only, time. The Mounted Brigade, which encompassed units such as the Canadian Mounted Rifles and the Royal Canadian Dragoons were given the task to establish a beachhead across a river which the Boers had fortified in an attempt to halt the advancing Commonwealth before they could reach the city of Johannesburg.[135]

Since the Boers were mounting a heavy resistance to the advancing mounted units, the Commonwealth infantry units were tasked with holding the Boer units while the mounted units found another route across the river with less resistance.[135] Even after the cavalry made it across to the other side of the river further down the line, the infantry had to advance onto the town of Doornkop as they were the ones who were tasked with its capture. The Canadians suffered very minimal casualties and achieved their objective after the Boer soldiers retreated from their positions.[135] Although the Canadians suffered minimal casualties, the lead British unit in the infantry advance, the Gordon Highlanders, did sustain heavy casualties in their march from the riflemen of the Boer force.[136]

Leliefontein On 7 November 1900, a British-Canadian force was searching for a unit of Boer commandos which were known to be operating around the town of Belfast, South Africa. After the British Commander reached the farm of Leliefontein, he began to fear that his line had expanded too far and ordered a withdrawal of the front line troops. The rear guard, consisting of the Royal Canadian Dragoons and two 12 pound guns from D section of the Canadian artillery, were tasked with covering the retreat.[137] The Boers mounted a heavy assault against the Canadians with the intention of capturing the two 12 pound artillery pieces. During this battle, the Afrikaners outnumbered the Canadians almost three to one.[138] A small group of the Dragoons interposed themselves between the Boers and the artillery in order to allow the guns and their crews time to escape. The Dragoons won three Victoria Crosses[137] for their actions during the battle of Leliefontein, the most in any battle with the exception of the Battle of Vimy Ridge in World War I.[138]

India

 
Natal Indian Ambulance Corps with future leader Mohandas K. Gandhi (Middle row, 5th from left)
 
Indian Monument at Observatory Ridge

British garrisons in India contributed 18,534 British officers and men, as well as an estimated 10,000 Indian auxiliaries deployed to assist them. India also sent 7,000 horses, ponies and mules.[139]

Indian auxiliaries were only employed in non-combatant roles.[140]

The Natal Indian Ambulance Corps, created by Mohandas K. Gandhi and financed by the local Indian community, served at Colenso and Spion Kop.[139]

New Zealand

 
New Zealand troops marching down Wellesley Street, Auckland, to embark for South Africa
 
The top of the Dunedin Boer War Memorial. The memorial reaffirms New Zealand's dedication to the Empire. As McLean and Phillips said, the New Zealand Boer War Memorials are "tributes to the Empire and outpourings of pride about New Zealand’s place” in the Empire.

When the Second Boer War seemed imminent, New Zealand offered its support. On 28 September 1899, Prime Minister Richard Seddon asked Parliament to approve the offer to the imperial government of a contingent of mounted rifles, thus becoming the first British Colony to send troops to the Boer War. The British position in the dispute with the Transvaal was "moderate and righteous," he maintained. He stressed the "crimson tie" of Empire that bound New Zealand to the mother-country and the importance of a strong British Empire for the colony's security.[141]

By the time peace was concluded two and a half years later, 10 contingents of volunteers, totalling nearly 6,500 men from New Zealand, with 8,000 horses had fought in the conflict, along with doctors, nurses, veterinary surgeons and a small number of school teachers.[142] Some 70 New Zealanders died from enemy action, with another 158 killed accidentally or by disease.[143] The first New Zealander to be killed was Farrier G.R. Bradford at Jasfontein Farm on 18 December 1899.[144] The Boer War was greeted with extraordinary enthusiasm when the war was over, and peace was greeted with patriotism and national pride.[145] This is best shown by the fact that the Third, Fourth and Fifth contingents from New Zealand were funded by public conscription.[144]

Rhodesia

Rhodesian military units such as the British South Africa Police, Rhodesia Regiment and Southern Rhodesian Volunteers served in the Second Boer War.

South Africa

During the war, the British army also included substantial contingents from South Africa itself. There were large communities of English-speaking immigrants and settlers in Natal and Cape Colony (especially around Cape Town and Grahamstown), which formed volunteer units that took the field, or local "town guards." At one stage of the war, a "Colonial Division," consisting of five light horse and infantry units under Brigadier General Edward Brabant, took part in the invasion of the Orange Free State. Part of it withstood a siege by Christiaan de Wet at Wepener on the borders of Basutoland. Another large source of volunteers was the uitlander community, many of whom hastily left Johannesburg in the days immediately preceding the war.

 
Rhodesian volunteers leaving Salisbury for service in the Second Boer War, 1899

Later during the war, Lord Kitchener attempted to form a Boer Police Force, as part of his efforts to pacify the occupied areas and effect a reconciliation with the Boer community. The members of this force were despised as traitors by the Boers still in the field. Those Boers who attempted to remain neutral after giving their parole to British forces were derided as "hensoppers" (hands-uppers) and were often coerced into giving support to the Boer guerrillas (which formed one of the reasons for the British decision to launch scorched earth campaigns throughout the countryside and detain Boers in concentration camps in order to deny anything of use to the Boer guerillas).[citation needed]

Like the Canadian and particularly the Australian and New Zealand contingents, many of the volunteer units formed by South Africans were "light horse" or mounted infantry, well suited to the countryside and manner of warfare. Some regular British officers scorned their comparative lack of formal discipline, but the light horse units were hardier and more suited to the demands of campaigning than the overloaded British cavalry, who were still obsessed with the charge by lance or sabre.[g] At their peak, 24,000 South Africans (including volunteers from the Empire) served in the field in various "colonial" units. Notable units (in addition to the Imperial Light Horse) were the South African Light Horse, Rimington's Guides, Kitchener's Horse and the Imperial Light Infantry.[citation needed]

Notable participants

Boer leaders

United Kingdom and empire

Military leaders

Civilains and other combatants

Harold Lothrop Borden – Only son of Canada's Canadian Minister of Defence and Militia, Frederick William Borden. Serving in the Royal Canadian Dragoons, he became the most famous Canadian casualty of the Second Boer War.[146] Queen Victoria asked F. W. Borden for a photograph of his son, Prime Minister Wilfrid Laurier praised his services, tributes arrived from across Canada, and in his home town Canning, Nova Scotia, there is a monument (by Hamilton MacCarthy) erected to his memory.[146]

 
Memorial at Plymouth, by Emil Fuchs

Sam Hughes – Senior Militia officer and later a Federally elected cabinet minister. As a very patriotic individual, Hughes became involved in the Boer war as a member of Brigadier-General Herbert Settle's expedition after Hughes unsuccessfully tried to raise his own brigade of soldiers.[132] Hughes was noted by his colleagues for having a dislike of professional soldiers and he was noted for being an exceptional leader of irregular soldiers, whom he preferred to lead in combat.[147] However, Hughes was dismissed and was sent home in the summer of 1900 for; sending letters back home which were published outlining British command incompetence, his impatience and boastfulness and his providing surrendering enemies favourable conditions. When he arrived back in Canada, Hughes became very active politically, and he would eventually start his political career with the Conservatives. When he became a Member of Parliament (Canada) (MP), Hughes would be in the position to become the Canadian Minister of Defence and Militia in 1911, just prior the outbreak of World War I. This was a position that Hughes would be dismissed from in 1916, due once again to his impatience, among other reasons.[147]

John McCrae – Best known as the author of the World War I poem In Flanders Fields, McCrae started his active military service in the Boer War as an artillery officer. After completing several major campaigns, McCrae's artillery unit was sent home to Canada in 1901 with what would be referred to today as an 'honourable discharge'. McCrae ended up becoming a special professor in the University of Vermont for pathology and he would later serve in World War I as a Medical officer until his death from pneumonia while on active duty in 1918.[148]

Harry "Breaker" Morant – Australian soldier, bush-poet, and horse-breaker hence his nickname, who as a commanding officer is accused of participation in summary executions of Boer prisoners – under orders from Kitchener it was argued by Morant and co-accused during his court-martial, although this is still debated due to the lack of British military papers being released for examination by Australian military historians – and the killing of a German missionary who had been a witness to the shootings. Morant was found guilty along with Peter Handcock and George Witton at their court-martial, with the two former being executed and the latter's sentence commuted, and later released from British prison to return to Australia after sustained public pressure to do so.[149] This entire affair is still extremely controversial in Australian military history, predominantly regarding Australian officers under the command of British officers being tried by the British instead of by fellow Australians, as Federation occurred during the Boer War.

 
A group of British prisoners, with Winston Churchill on the right

Winston Churchill – Best known as the prime minister of Britain during the main part of the Second World War, Churchill worked as a war correspondent for The Morning Post. At the age of twenty-six,[150] he was captured and held prisoner in a camp in Pretoria from which he escaped and rejoined the British army. He received a commission in the South African Light Horse (still working as a correspondent) and witnessed the capture of Ladysmith and Pretoria.[151]

Mahatma Gandhi – Best known as the leader of the independence movement in India, he lived in South Africa 1893–1915 where he worked on behalf of Indians. He volunteered in 1900 to help the British by forming teams of ambulance drivers and raising 1100 Indian volunteer medics. At Spioenkop Gandhi and his bearers had to carry wounded soldiers for miles to a field hospital because the terrain was too rough for the ambulances. General Redvers Buller mentioned the courage of the Indians in his dispatch. Gandhi and thirty-seven other Indians received the War Medal.[152]

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle– Author and creator of Sherlock Holmes. Served as a volunteer doctor in the Langman Field Hospital at Bloemfontein between March and June 1900. In his widely distributed and translated pamphlet 'The War in South Africa: Its Cause and Conduct' he justified both the reasonings behind the war and handling of the conflict itself. In response to complaints about concentration camps he pointed out that over 14,000 British soldiers had died of disease during the conflict (as opposed to 8,000 killed in combat) and at the height of epidemics he was seeing 50–60 British soldiers dying each day in a single ill-equipped and overwhelmed military hospital.[153]

James Craig, 1st Viscount Craigavon – Future Prime Minister of Northern Ireland. Served as a Captain in the 3rd Battalion of the Royal Irish Rifles and as part of the 13th battalion of the Imperial Yeomanry. He was captured in 1900 but released due to a perforated colon and served as a deputy assistant director of the Imperial Military Railways until being evacuated to the UK due to ill-health.[154][155][156][157][158]

Canadian Victoria Cross recipients

The Victoria Cross, is the highest military medal available to soldiers of the Brirush Empire, including those fighting for in Commonwealth armies and those of former British Territories. It is awarded based on exemplary bravery and valour in the presence of danger.[159]

Four Canadian soldiers who fought in the Second Boer War were awarded the Victoria Cross:

  • Lieutenant Hampden Zane Churchill Cockburn – of the Royal Canadian Dragoons, Cockburn received his Victoria Cross on 7 November 1900 when his unit was the rear guard at Leliefontein. Cockburn, along with fellow Victoria Cross recipient Lieutenant R.E.W. Turner, held off an advancing group of Boer soldiers in order to allow two Canadian Field guns to escape along with their crews. Cockburn was wounded and captured by the Boer soldiers.[138]
  • Lieutenant Richard Ernest William Turner – of the Royal Canadian Dragoons. Turner received his Victoria Cross in the same engagement as Cockburn.[138] Though wounded, Turner was still able to escape capture, unlike Cockburn. Turner would later become a high-ranking officer in the Canadian army in World War I.
  • Sergeant Edward James Gibson Holland – of the Royal Canadian Dragoons. Holland received the Victoria Cross for valor during a rear-guard action at the same battle as Cockburn and Turner. Holland held off the advancing Boers with a carriage-mounted Colt machine gun, despite the position's becoming increasingly dangerous due to the proximity of the enemy Holland remained at his position until his gun jammed. In order to prevent it from falling into enemy hands, Holland removed the Colt from the carriage and retreated on horseback, gun in hand.[138]

Final overview

 
Wounded British soldiers

The Second Boer War was the harbinger of a new type of combat which would persevere throughout the twentieth century, guerrilla warfare.[125] After the war was over, the entire British army underwent a period of reform which was focused on lessening the emphasis placed on mounted units in combat.[160] It was determined that the traditional role of cavalry was antiquated and improperly used on the battlefield in the modern warfare of the Boer War, and that the First World War was the final proof that mounted attacks had no place in twentieth century combat.[160] Cavalry was put to better use after the reforms in the theatres of the Middle East and World War I, and the idea of mounted infantry was useful in the times when the war was more mobile.[160] An example was during the First World War during the Battle of Mons in which the British cavalry held the Belgian town against an initial German assault. Another was the use of mounted infantry at the Battle of Megiddo (1918) in which Allenby's force routed the enemy owing to speed and dexterity of arms.[161]

The Canadian units of the Royal Canadian Dragoons and the Royal Canadian Mounted Rifles fought in the First World War in the same role as the Boer War. However, during, and after, the Second World War the regiments swapped their horses for mechanised vehicles.[162] It was also the beginning of types of conflict involving machine guns, shrapnel and observation balloons which were all used extensively in the First World War.[125] To the Canadians however, attrition was the leading cause of death in the second Boer war, with disease being the cause of approximately half of the Canadian deaths.[163]

 
Canadian soldiers en route to South Africa in 1899

Canadians ended the war with four Victoria Crosses to its soldiers and two more Victoria Crosses were given to Canadian doctors attached to British Medical Corps units, Lieutenant H.E.M. Douglas (1899, Magersfontein) and Lieutenant W.H.S. Nickerson (1900, Wakkerstroom).[132] Not all soldiers saw action since many landed in South Africa after the hostilities ended while others (including the 3rd Special Service Battalion, The Royal Canadian Regiment) performed garrison duty in Halifax, Nova Scotia so that their British counterparts could join at the front lines. Later on, contingents of Canadians served with the paramilitary South Africa Constabulary. Both sides used a scorched Earth policy to deprive the marching enemy of food. And both had to corral civilians into makeshift huts by 'concentrating' them into camps.[127] For example, at Buffelspoort, British soldiers were held in captivity in Boer encampments after surrendering their arms, and civilians were often mixed in with service personnel because the Boers did not have the resources to do otherwise. A total of 116,000 women, children and Boer soldiers were confined to the Commonwealth concentration camps, of which at least 28,000, mainly women and children, would die.[138] The lack of food, water, and sanitary provisions was a feature of 20th-century warfare for both civilians and armed services personnel, yet one consequence of the Boer War and investigative commissions was the implementation of The Hague Convention (1899) and Geneva Convention (1904); of which there were many further agreements thereafter.

Views on British tactics

The British saw their tactics of scorched earth and concentration camps as a legitimate way of depriving the Boer guerrillas of supplies and safe havens.[164] The Boers saw them as a British attempt to coerce the Boers into surrender,[165] with the camp inmates – mainly families of Boer fighters – seen as deliberately kept in poor conditions to encourage high death rates.[166] Even in 2019, the controversy around the British tactics continued to make headlines.[167]

Commemorations

The Australian National Boer War Memorial Committee organises events to mark the war on 31 May each year. In Canberra, a commemorative service is usually held at the Saint John the Baptist Anglican Church in Reid. Floral tributes are laid for the dead.[168]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Larger numbers of volunteers came from the Netherlands, Germany and Sweden-Norway. Smaller forces came from Ireland, Australia, Italy, Congress Poland, France, Belgium, Russia, the United States, Denmark and Austria-Hungary.
  2. ^ 5,774 killed in battle; 2,107 died of wounds; 18,211 died of disease[7]: 309 
  3. ^ 3,990 killed in battle; 157 died in accidents; 924 of wounds and disease; 1,118 while prisoners of war.[8]: 79 
  4. ^ Salisbury felt that the Transvaal, the Orange Free State, and Cape Boers aspired to a "Dutch South Africa". The achievement of such a state would damage British imperial prestige
  5. ^ "Although some 30,000 Irishmen served in the British Army under Irish General Lord Frederick Roberts, who had been Commander of Chief of British Forces in Ireland prior to his transfer to South Africa, some historians argue that the sympathies of many of their compatriots lay with the Boers. Nationalist-controlled local authorities passed pro-Boer resolutions and there were proposals to confer civic honours on Boer leader, Paul Kruger." (Irish Ambassador Daniel Mulhall written for History Ireland, 2004.)
  6. ^ Lloyd George and Keir Hardie were members of the Stop the War Committee (See the founder's biography: William T. Stead's.) Many British authors gave their "Pro-Boer" opinions in British press, such as G. K. Chesterton's writing to 1905 – (see Rice University
  7. ^ British cavalry travelled light compared with earlier campaigns, but were still expected to carry all kit with them on campaign owing to distances covered on the Veldt.

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Historiography

  • Krebs, Paula M. Gender, Race, and the Writing of Empire: Public Discourse and the Boer War (Cambridge UP, 1999) online
  • Seibold, Birgit. Emily Hobhouse and the Reports on the Concentration Camps during the Boer War, 1899–1902: Two Different Perspectives (Columbia UP, 2011).
  • Van Hartesveldt, Fred R. The Boer War: Historiography and Annotated Bibliography (Greenwood, 2000) online

Further reading

  • Gooch, John (ed.). The Boer War: Direction, Experience and Image. London: Cass. p. 179. – an anthology frequently cited in this article.
  • Murray, Nicholas (2013). The Rocky Road to the Great War: the Evolution of Trench Warfare to 1914. Dulles, Virginia, Potomac Books.
  • Ockerbloom, John Mark, ed. (2017). "South African War, 1899–1902". The Online Books Page. – a Boer War bibliography of on-line books.
  • British War Office; Maurice, Sir John Frederick; Grant, Maurice Harold (1906–1910). History of the war in South Africa, 1899–1902 (1st in four volumes ed.). – detailed official British history
    • volume 1, maps volume 1 (1906)
    • volume 2, maps volume 2 (1907)
    • volume 3, maps volume 3 (1908)
    • volume 4, maps volume 4 (1910)
  • Reitz, Deneys (1929). Commando: A Boer Journal of the Boer War. OCLC 801364049.
  • "SOUTH AFRICAN WAR—CONCENTRATION CAMPS. HC Deb 04 March 1902 vol 104 cc402-67".Hansard, Parliament of the United Kingdom

External links

second, boer, boer, redirects, here, other, uses, boer, disambiguation, afrikaans, tweede, vryheidsoorlog, second, freedom, october, 1899, 1902, also, known, boer, anglo, boer, south, african, conflict, fought, between, british, empire, boer, republics, south,. Boer War redirects here For other uses see Boer War disambiguation The Second Boer War Afrikaans Tweede Vryheidsoorlog lit Second Freedom War 11 October 1899 31 May 1902 also known as the Boer War the Anglo Boer War or the South African War was a conflict fought between the British Empire and the two Boer Republics the South African Republic and the Orange Free State over the Empire s influence in Southern Africa from 1899 to 1902 Following the discovery of gold deposits in the Boer republics there was a large influx of foreigners mostly British from the Cape Colony They were not permitted to have a vote and were regarded as unwelcome visitors invaders and they protested to the British authorities in the Cape Negotiations failed and in the opening stages of the war the Boers launched successful attacks against British outposts before being pushed back by imperial reinforcements Though the British swiftly occupied the Boer republics numerous Boers refused to accept defeat and engaged in guerrilla warfare Eventually British scorched earth policies and the poor conditions suffered in concentration camps by Boer women and children who had been displaced by these policies brought the remaining Boer guerillas to the negotiating table ending the war 10 11 Second Boer WarPart of the Boer Wars during the Scramble for AfricaClockwise from left Frederick Roberts entering in Kimberley Boer militia at the Battle of Spion Kop Boer women and children in a British concentration camp Date11 October 1899 31 May 1902 2 years 7 months 20 days LocationSouthern Africa present day South Africa Lesotho and Eswatini 1 ResultBritish victory Conquest and dissolution of the South African Republic and Orange Free State 2 147 58 3 Treaty of VereenigingTerritorialchangesThe Boer Republics are absorbed into the British Empire in accordance with the Treaty of VereenigingBelligerents United Kingdom Cape ColonyNatal ColonyBasutolandBechuanalandRhodesia India Ceylon Canada New Zealand Australia Before Federation in 1901 Australian involvement in the war consisted of forces from the following separate colonies New South WalesWestern AustraliaTasmaniaSouth AustraliaVictoriaQueenslandBoer Republics South African Republic Orange Free State Cape BoersForeign volunteers a Netherlands GermanySweden NorwayIreland Australia ItalyPoland France Belgium Russia United States Denmark Austria HungaryCommanders and leadersRobert Gascoyne Cecil Joseph Chamberlain Alfred Milner Frederick Roberts Redvers Buller Herbert Kitchener Rudolph Lambart Robert Baden Powell Herbert PlumerFrancois Louis Lessard Walter TunbridgeKoos de la Rey Paul Kruger Louis Botha Schalk W Burger Martinus Steyn Christiaan de Wet Piet Cronje POW Piet JoubertStrengthBritish 347 000Colonial 103 000 153 000African auxiliaries 100 000 4 Boer Commandos 25 000 Transvaal Boers15 000 Free State Boers6 000 7 000 Cape Boers 5 2 5 119 African auxiliaries 10 000 4 Foreign volunteers 5 400 6 Casualties and losses26 092 dead b 75 430 returned home sick or wounded 8 79 22 828 wounded934 missingTotal 125 2846 189 dead c 24 000 captured sent overseas 6 8 79 Total 30 189Civilian casualties 46 370 fatalities26 370 Boer women and children died in concentration camps20 000 Africans of the 115 000 interned in separate concentration camps 9 The conflict broke out in 1899 after the failure of the Bloemfontein Conference when Boer irregulars and militia attacked colonial settlements in nearby British colonies Starting in October 1899 the Boers placed Ladysmith Kimberley and Mafeking under siege and won a string of victories at Colenso Magersfontein and Stormberg In response to these developments increased numbers of British Army soldiers were brought to Southern Africa and mounted largely unsuccessful attacks against the Boers However British military fortunes changed when their commanding officer General Redvers Buller was replaced by Lord Roberts and Lord Kitchener who relieved the three besieged cities and invaded the two Boer Republics in early 1900 at the head of a 180 000 strong expeditionary force The Boers aware they were unable to resist such a large force chose to refrain from fighting pitched battles allowing the British to occupy both republics and their capitals Pretoria and Bloemfontein 12 13 14 Boer politicians including President of the South African Republic Paul Kruger either fled the region or went into hiding the British Empire officially annexed the two republics in 1900 In Britain the Conservative ministry led by Lord Salisbury attempted to capitalise on British military successes by calling an early general election which was dubbed by contemporary observers a khaki election However numerous Boer fighters took to the hills and launched a guerrilla campaign against the British occupational forces becoming known as bittereinders Led by prominent generals such as Louis Botha Jan Smuts Christiaan de Wet and Koos de la Rey Boer guerrillas launched a campaign of hit and run attacks and ambushes against the British which would continue for two years 15 16 The Boer guerrilla campaign proved difficult for the British to defeat due in part to British unfamiliarity with guerrilla tactics and extensive support for the guerrillas among the civilian population in the Boer Republics In response to continued failures to defeat the Boer guerillas British high command ordered several scorched earth policies to be implemented as part of a large scale and multi pronged counterinsurgency campaign a complex network of nets blockhouses strongpoints and barbed wire fences was constructed virtually partitioning the occupied republics British troops committed several war crimes and were ordered to destroy farms and slaughter livestock to deny them to Boer guerillas Over a hundred thousand Boer civilians mostly women and children were forcibly relocated into concentration camps where 26 000 died of various causes mostly starvation and disease Black Africans in the same areas were also interned in concentration camps as well to prevent them from supplying the Boers 20 000 died in the camps as well largely due to the same causes as in the case of their Boer counterparts 17 In addition to these scorched earth policies British mounted infantry units were deployed to track down and engage individual Boer guerilla units by this stage of the war all battles being fought were small scale skirmishes Few combatants on either side were killed in action with most casualties coming via disease Lord Kitchener began to offer generous terms of surrender to remaining Boer leaders in an effort to bring an end to the conflict Eager to ensure their fellow Boers were released from the concentration camps the majority of Boer commanders accepted the British terms in the Treaty of Vereeniging formally surrendering in May 1902 The former republics were transformed into the British colonies of the Transvaal and Orange River and in 1910 were merged with the Natal and Cape Colonies to form the Union of South Africa a self governing dominion within the British Empire 18 British expeditionary efforts were aided significantly by colonial forces from the Cape Colony the Natal Rhodesia 19 as well as large numbers of volunteers from the British Empire worldwide particularly Australia Canada India and New Zealand Later in the war Black African recruits contributed increasingly to the British war effort International public opinion was generally sympathetic to the Boers and hostile to the British Even within the United Kingdom there existed significant opposition to the war As a result the Boer cause attracted thousands of volunteers from neutral countries all over the world including the German Empire United States Russia and even some parts of the British Empire such as Australia and Ireland 20 Many consider the Boer War as marking the beginning of the questioning of the British Empire s veneer of impenetrable global dominance this is due to the war s surprisingly long duration and the unforeseen discouraging losses suffered by the British fighting the cobbled together army of Boers 21 Contents 1 Overview 1 1 Name 1 2 Origins 2 Historical background 2 1 Jameson Raid 2 2 Escalation 2 3 Arming the Boers 2 4 British case for war 2 5 Negotiations fail 2 6 Kruger s ultimatum and war 3 First phase The Boer offensive October December 1899 3 1 British Army deployed 3 2 Boer organization and skills 3 3 Boers besiege Ladysmith Mafeking and Kimberley 3 4 First British relief attempts 4 Second phase The British offensive of January to September 1900 4 1 Buller replaced 4 2 Roberts relieves the sieges 4 3 Capture of Pretoria 4 4 Boers retreat 4 5 Prisoners of war sent overseas 4 6 Oath of neutrality 5 Third phase Guerrilla war September 1900 May 1902 5 1 Use of Blockhouses 5 2 Scorched earth campaign against civilians 5 3 Peace committees 5 4 Joiners 5 5 Orange Free State 5 6 Western Transvaal 5 7 Eastern Transvaal 5 8 Cape Colony 6 Boer foreign volunteers 7 Conclusion 8 Nonwhite roles 9 Concentration camps 9 1 Cost of the war 10 Aftermath and analysis 10 1 Union of South Africa 10 2 Effect of the war on domestic British politics 10 3 Horses 11 Imperial involvement 11 1 Australia 11 2 Canada 11 3 India 11 4 New Zealand 11 5 Rhodesia 11 6 South Africa 12 Notable participants 12 1 Boer leaders 12 2 United Kingdom and empire 12 2 1 Military leaders 12 2 2 Civilains and other combatants 12 2 3 Canadian Victoria Cross recipients 13 Final overview 13 1 Views on British tactics 14 Commemorations 15 See also 16 Notes 17 References 17 1 Citations 17 2 Sources 18 Historiography 19 Further reading 20 External linksOverview EditThe war had three phases In the first phase the Boers mounted preemptive strikes into British held territory in Natal and the Cape Colony besieging the British garrisons of Ladysmith Mafeking and Kimberley The Boers then won a series of tactical victories at Stormberg Magersfontein Colenso and Spion Kop In the second phase after the number of British troops greatly increased under the command of Lord Roberts the British launched another offensive in 1900 to relieve the sieges this time achieving success After Natal and the Cape Colony were secure the British army was able to invade the Transvaal and the republic s capital Pretoria was ultimately captured in June 1900 In the third and final phase beginning in March 1900 and lasting a further two years the Boers conducted a hard fought guerrilla war attacking British troop columns telegraph sites railways and storage depots To deny supplies to the Boer guerrillas the British now under the leadership of Lord Kitchener adopted a scorched earth policy They cleared vast areas destroying Boer farms and moving the civilians into concentration camps 22 Some parts of the British press and British government expected the campaign to be over within months and the protracted war gradually became less popular especially after revelations about the conditions in the concentration camps where as many as 26 000 Afrikaner women and children died of disease and malnutrition The Boer forces finally surrendered on Saturday 31 May 1902 with 54 of the 60 delegates from the Transvaal and Orange Free State voting to accept the terms of the peace treaty lt 23 97 This was known as the Treaty of Vereeniging and under its provisions the two republics were absorbed into the British Empire with the promise of self government in the future This promise was fulfilled with the creation of the Union of South Africa in 1910 The war had a lasting effect on the region and on British domestic politics For Britain the Second Boer War was the longest the most expensive 211 million 202 billion at 2014 prices and the bloodiest conflict between 1815 and 1914 24 lasting three months longer and resulting in more British combat casualties see sidebar above than the Crimean War 1853 1856 Disease took a greater toll in the Crimean War claiming 17 580 British Name Edit A typical British soldier Corporal Alexander Duncan Turnbull of Kitchener s Fighting Scouts The conflict is commonly referred to simply as the Boer War because the First Boer War December 1880 to March 1881 was a much smaller conflict Boer meaning farmer is the common name for Afrikaans speaking white South Africans descended from the Dutch East India Company s original settlers at the Cape of Good Hope Among some South Africans it is known as the Second Anglo Boer War In Afrikaans it may be called in order of frequency the Tweede Vryheidsoorlog Second Freedom War Tweede Boereoorlog Second Boer War Anglo Boereoorlog Anglo Boer War or Engelse oorlog English War 25 In South Africa it is officially called the South African War 26 In fact according to a 2011 BBC report most scholars prefer to call the war of 1899 1902 the South African War thereby acknowledging that all South Africans white and black were affected by the war and that many were participants 27 Origins Edit The origins of the war were complex and stemmed from more than a century of conflict between the Boers and Britain Of immediate importance however was the question of who would control and benefit most from the very lucrative Witwatersrand gold mines 28 discovered by Jan Bantjes in June 1884 The first European settlement in South Africa was founded at the Cape of Good Hope in 1652 and thereafter administered as part of the Dutch Cape Colony 29 The Cape was governed by the Dutch East India Company until its bankruptcy in the late 18th century and was thereafter governed directly by the Netherlands 30 As a result of political turmoil in the Netherlands the British occupied the Cape three times during the Napoleonic Wars and the occupation became permanent after British forces defeated the Dutch at the Battle of Blaauwberg in 1806 31 At the time the colony was home to about 26 000 colonists settled under Dutch rule 32 A relative majority represented old Dutch families brought to the Cape during the late 17th and early 18th centuries however close to one fourth of this demographic was of German origin and one sixth of French Huguenot descent 33 Cleavages were likelier to occur along socio economic rather than ethnic lines Broadly speaking the colonists included a number of distinct subgroups including the Boers 34 The Boers were itinerant farmers who lived on the colony s frontiers seeking better pastures for their livestock 30 Many were dissatisfied with aspects of British administration in particular with Britain s abolition of slavery on 1 December 1834 Boers who needed forced labor to care for their farms properly would have been unable to collect compensation for their slaves 35 Between 1836 and 1852 many elected to migrate away from British rule in what became known as the Great Trek 31 Around 15 000 trekking Boers departed the Cape Colony and followed the eastern coast towards Natal After Britain annexed Natal in 1843 they journeyed farther northwards into South Africa s vast eastern interior There they established two independent Boer republics the South African Republic 1852 also known as the Transvaal Republic and the Orange Free State 1854 Britain recognised the two Boer republics in 1852 and 1854 but attempted British annexation of the Transvaal in 1877 led to the First Boer War in 1880 1881 After Britain suffered defeats particularly at the Battle of Majuba Hill 1881 the independence of the two republics was restored subject to certain conditions However relations remained uneasy In 1866 diamonds were discovered at Kimberley prompting a diamond rush and a massive influx of foreigners to the borders of the Orange Free State Then in June 1884 gold was discovered in the Witwatersrand area of the South African Republic by Jan Gerritze Bantjes Gold made the Transvaal the richest nation in southern Africa however the country had neither the manpower nor the industrial base to develop the resource on its own As a result the Transvaal reluctantly acquiesced to the immigration of uitlanders foreigners mainly English speaking men from Britain who came to the Boer region in search of fortune and employment As a result the number of uitlanders in the Transvaal threatened to exceed the number of Boers precipitating confrontations between the Boer settlers and the newer non Boer arrivals Britain s expansionist ideas notably propagated by Cecil Rhodes as well as disputes over uitlander political and economic rights led to the failed Jameson Raid of 1895 Dr Leander Starr Jameson who led the raid intended to encourage an uprising of the uitlanders in Johannesburg However the uitlanders did not take up arms in support and Transvaal government forces surrounded the column and captured Jameson s men before they could reach Johannesburg 36 As tensions escalated political manoeuvrings and negotiations attempted to reach compromise on the issues of uitlanders rights within the South African Republic control of the gold mining industry and Britain s desire to incorporate the Transvaal and the Orange Free State into a federation under British control Given the British origins of the majority of uitlanders and the ongoing influx of new uitlanders into Johannesburg the Boers recognised that granting full voting rights to the uitlanders would eventually result in the loss of ethnic Boer control in the South African Republic The June 1899 negotiations in Bloemfontein failed and in September 1899 British Colonial Secretary Joseph Chamberlain demanded full voting rights and representation for the uitlanders residing in the Transvaal Paul Kruger the President of the South African Republic issued an ultimatum on 9 October 1899 giving the British government 48 hours to withdraw all their troops from the borders of both the Transvaal and the Orange Free State failing which the Transvaal allied to the Orange Free State would declare war on the British government In fact Kruger had ordered Commandos to the Natal border in early September and Britain had only troops in garrison towns far from the border 37 The British government rejected the South African Republic s ultimatum and the South African Republic and Orange Free State declared war on Britain 37 Historical background Edit Boer victory over the British at the Battle of Majuba Hill First Boer War 1881 Extent of the British Empire in 1898 prior to the outbreak of the Second Boer War The geography of the region in 1885 between the First and Second Boer Wars The southern part of the African continent was dominated in the 19th century by a set of struggles to create within it a single unified state In 1868 Britain annexed Basutoland in the Drakensberg Mountains following an appeal from Moshoeshoe I the king of the Sotho people who sought British protection against the Boers While the Berlin Conference of 1884 1885 sought to draw boundaries between the European powers African possessions it also set the stage for further scrambles Britain attempted to annex first the South African Republic in 1880 and then in 1899 both the South African Republic and the Orange Free State In the 1880s Bechuanaland modern Botswana became the object of a dispute between the Germans to the west the Boers to the east and Britain s Cape Colony to the south Although Bechuanaland had no economic value the Missionaries Road passed through it towards territory farther north After the Germans annexed Damaraland and Namaqualand modern Namibia in 1884 Britain annexed Bechuanaland in 1885 In the First Boer War of 1880 1881 the Boers of the Transvaal Republic proved skilful fighters in resisting Britain s attempt at annexation causing a series of British defeats The British government of William Ewart Gladstone was unwilling to become mired in a distant war requiring substantial troop reinforcement and expense for what was perceived at the time to be a minimal return An armistice ended the war and subsequently a peace treaty was signed with the Transvaal President Paul Kruger In 1886 British imperial interests were ignited by the discovery of what would prove to be the world s largest deposit of gold bearing ore at an outcrop on a large ridge some 69 km 43 mi south of the Boer capital at Pretoria The ridge was known locally as the Witwatersrand white water ridge a watershed A gold rush to the Transvaal brought thousands of British and other prospectors and settlers from around the globe and over the border from the Cape Colony which had been under British control since 1806 The city of Johannesburg sprang up nearly overnight as a shanty town Uitlanders foreigners white outsiders poured in and settled around the mines The influx was so rapid that uitlanders quickly outnumbered the Boers in Johannesburg and along the Rand although they remained a minority in the Transvaal The Boers nervous and resentful of the uitlanders growing presence sought to contain their influence through requiring lengthy residential qualifying periods before voting rights could be obtained by imposing taxes on the gold industry and by introducing controls through licensing tariffs and administrative requirements Among the issues giving rise to tension between the Transvaal government on the one hand and the uitlanders and British interests on the other were Established uitlanders including the mining magnates wanted political social and economic control over their lives These rights included a stable constitution a fair franchise law an independent judiciary and a better educational system The Boers for their part recognised that the more concessions they made to the uitlanders the greater the likelihood with approximately 30 000 white male Boer voters and potentially 60 000 white male uitlanders that their independent control of the Transvaal would be lost and the territory absorbed into the British Empire The uitlanders resented the taxes levied by the Transvaal government particularly when this money was not spent on Johannesburg or uitlander interests but diverted to projects elsewhere in the Transvaal For example as the gold bearing ore sloped away from the outcrop underground to the south more and more blasting was necessary to extract it and mines consumed vast quantities of explosives A box of dynamite costing five pounds included five shillings tax Not only was this tax perceived as exorbitant but British interests were offended when President Paul Kruger gave monopoly rights for the manufacture of the explosive to a non British branch of the Nobel company which infuriated Britain 38 The so called dynamite monopoly became a casus belli Gold Production on the Witwatersrand 1898 to 1910 39 Year No of Mines Gold output fine ounces Value GB Relative 2010 value GB 40 1898 77 4 295 608 15 141 376 6 910 000 0001899 Jan Oct 85 3 946 545 14 046 686 6 300 000 0001899 Nov 1901 Apr 12 574 043 2 024 278 908 000 0001901 May Dec 12 238 994 1 014 687 441 000 0001902 45 1 690 100 7 179 074 3 090 000 0001903 56 2 859 482 12 146 307 5 220 000 0001904 62 3 658 241 15 539 219 6 640 000 0001905 68 4 706 433 19 991 658 8 490 000 000British imperial interests were alarmed when in 1894 1895 Kruger proposed building a railway through Portuguese East Africa to Delagoa Bay bypassing British controlled ports in Natal and Cape Town and avoiding British tariffs 41 At the time the Prime Minister of the Cape Colony was Cecil Rhodes a man driven by a vision of a British controlled Africa extending from the Cape to Cairo Certain self appointed uitlanders representatives and British mine owners became increasingly frustrated and angered by their dealings with the Transvaal government A Reform Committee Transvaal was formed to represent the uitlanders Jameson Raid Edit Main article Jameson Raid A sketch showing the arrest of Jameson after the failed raid in 1896 In 1895 a plan to take Johannesburg and end the control of the Transvaal government was hatched with the connivance of the Cape Prime Minister Cecil Rhodes and Johannesburg gold magnate Alfred Beit A column of 600 armed men was led over the border from Bechuanaland towards Johannesburg by Dr Leander Starr Jameson the Administrator in Rhodesia of the British South Africa Company of which Cecil Rhodes was the Chairman The column mainly made up of Rhodesian and Bechuanaland British South Africa Policemen was equipped with Maxim machine guns and some artillery pieces The plan was to make a three day dash to Johannesburg and trigger an uprising by the primarily British expatriate uitlanders organised by the Johannesburg Reform Committee before the Boer commandos could mobilise However the Transvaal authorities had advance warning of the Jameson Raid and tracked it from the moment it crossed the border Four days later the weary and dispirited column was surrounded near Krugersdorp within sight of Johannesburg After a brief skirmish in which the column lost 65 killed and wounded while the Boers lost but one man Jameson s men surrendered and were arrested by the Boers 36 The botched raid had repercussions throughout southern Africa and in Europe In Rhodesia the departure of so many policemen enabled the Matabele and Mashona peoples rising against the British South Africa Company The rebellion known as the Second Matabele War was suppressed only at a great cost A few days after the raid the German Kaiser sent a telegram known to history as the Kruger telegram congratulating President Kruger and the government of the South African Republic on their success When the text of this telegram was disclosed in the British press it generated a storm of anti German feeling In the baggage of the raiding column to the great embarrassment of Britain the Boers found telegrams from Cecil Rhodes and the other plotters in Johannesburg British Colonial Secretary Joseph Chamberlain had approved Rhodes plans to send armed assistance in the case of a Johannesburg uprising but he quickly moved to condemn the raid Rhodes was severely censured at the Cape inquiry and the London parliamentary inquiry and was forced to resign as Prime Minister of the Cape and as Chairman of the British South Africa Company for having sponsored the failed coup d etat The Boer government handed their prisoners over to the British for trial Jameson was tried in England where the British press and London society inflamed by anti Boer and anti German feeling and in a frenzy of jingoism lionised him and treated him as a hero Although sentenced to 15 months imprisonment which he served in Holloway Jameson was later rewarded by being named Prime Minister of the Cape Colony 1904 1908 and was ultimately anointed as one of the founders of the Union of South Africa For conspiring with Jameson the uitlander members of the Reform Committee Transvaal were tried in the Transvaal courts and found guilty of high treason The four leaders were sentenced to death by hanging but the next day this sentence was commuted to 15 years imprisonment In June 1896 the other members of the committee were released on payment of 2 000 each in fines all of which were paid by Cecil Rhodes One Reform Committee member Frederick Gray committed suicide while in Pretoria gaol on 16 May His death was a factor in softening the Transvaal government s attitude to the surviving prisoners Jan C Smuts wrote in 1906 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 42 Escalation Edit The Jameson Raid alienated many Cape Afrikaners from Britain and united the Transvaal Boers behind President Kruger and his government It also had the effect of drawing the Transvaal and the Orange Free State led by President Martinus Theunis Steyn together in opposition to perceived British imperialism In 1897 the two republics concluded a military pact Arming the Boers Edit In earlier conflicts the Boers most common weapon was the British Westley Richards falling block breech loader In his book The First Boer War Joseph Lehmann offers this comment Employing chiefly the very fine breech loading Westley Richards calibre 45 paper cartridge percussion cap replaced on the nipple manually they made it exceedingly dangerous for the British to expose themselves on the skyline 43 Paul Kruger leader of the South African Republic Transvaal Mauser 1895 bolt action rifle at the Auckland Museum President Paul Kruger re equipped the Transvaal army importing 37 000 of the latest 7x57 mm Mauser Model 1895 rifles supplied by Germany 44 and some 40 to 50 million rounds of ammunition 45 23 80 Some commandos used the Martini Henry Mark III because thousands of these had been purchased Unfortunately the large puff of white smoke after firing gave away the shooter s position 46 47 Roughly 7 000 Guedes 1885 rifles had also been purchased a few years earlier and these were also used during the hostilities 46 As the war went on some commandos relied on captured British rifles such as the Lee Metford and the Enfield 44 27 Indeed when the ammunition for the Mausers ran out the Boers relied primarily on the captured Lee Metfords 48 49 Regardless of the rifle few of the Boers used bayonets 50 35 The Boers also purchased the best modern European German Krupp artillery By October 1899 the Transvaal State Artillery had 73 heavy guns including four 155 mm Creusot fortress guns 51 and 25 of the 37 mm Maxim Nordenfeldt guns 23 80 The Boers Maxim larger than the British Maxims 52 was a large calibre belt fed water cooled auto cannon that fired explosive rounds smokeless ammunition at 450 rounds per minute It became known as the Pom Pom 53 Aside from weaponry the tactics used by the Boers were significant As one modern source states Boer soldiers were adept at guerrilla warfare something the British had difficulty countering 54 The Transvaal army was transformed Approximately 25 000 men equipped with modern rifles and artillery could mobilise within two weeks However President Kruger s victory in the Jameson Raid incident did nothing to resolve the fundamental problem of finding a formula to conciliate the uitlanders without surrendering the independence of the Transvaal British case for war Edit The failure to gain improved rights for uitlanders notably the goldfields dynamite tax became a pretext for war and a justification for a big military build up in Cape Colony The case for war was developed and espoused as far away as the Australian colonies 55 Cape Colony Governor Sir Alfred Milner Cape Prime Minister Cecil Rhodes Colonial Secretary Joseph Chamberlain and mining syndicate owners such as Alfred Beit Barney Barnato and Lionel Phillips favoured annexation of the Boer republics Confident that the Boers would be quickly defeated they planned and organised a short war citing the uitlanders grievances as the motivation for the conflict In contrast the influence of the war party within the British government was limited UK Prime Minister Lord Salisbury despised jingoism and jingoists 56 He was also uncertain of the abilities of the British Army Despite both his moral and practical reservations Salisbury led the United Kingdom to war in order to preserve the British Empire s prestige and feeling a sense of obligation to British South Africans d Salisbury also detested the Boers treatment of native Africans referring to the London Convention of 1884 following Britain s defeat in the first war as an agreement really in the interest of slavery 57 7 57 6 Salisbury was not alone in this concern Roger Casement already well on the way to becoming an Irish Nationalist was nevertheless happy to gather intelligence for the British against the Boers because of their cruelty to Africans 58 1899 German political cartoon War and capitalism transforms human blood in gold The British government went against the advice of its generals including Wolseley and declined to send substantial reinforcements to South Africa before war broke out Secretary of State for War Lansdowne did not believe the Boers were preparing for war and that if Britain were to send large numbers of troops to the region it would strike too aggressive a posture and possibly derail a negotiated settlement or even encourage a Boer attack 59 Negotiations fail Edit President Steyn of the Orange Free State invited Milner and Kruger to attend a conference in Bloemfontein The conference started on 30 May 1899 but negotiations quickly broke down as Kruger had no intention of granting meaningful concessions 60 and Milner had no intention of accepting his normal delaying tactics 61 Kruger s ultimatum and war Edit On the 9th of October 1899 after convincing the Orange Free State to join him and mobilising their forces Kruger issued an ultimatum giving Britain 48 hours to withdraw all their troops from the border of Transvaal despite the fact that the only regular British army troops anywhere near the border of either republic were 4 companies of the Loyal North Lancs who had been deployed to defend Kimberley 62 Otherwise the Transvaal allied with the Orange Free State would declare war News of the ultimatum reached London on the day it expired Outrage and laughter were the main responses The editor of the Times purportedly laughed out loud when he read it saying an official document is seldom amusing and useful yet this was both The Times denounced the ultimatum as an extravagant farce and The Globe denounced this trumpery little state Most editorials were similar to the Daily Telegraph s which declared of course there can only be one answer to this grotesque challenge Kruger has asked for war and war he must have citation needed Such views were far from those of the British government and from those in the army To most sensible observers army reform had been a matter of pressing concern since the 1870s constantly put off because the British public did not want the expense of a larger more professional army and because a large home army was not politically welcome Lord Salisbury the Prime Minister had to tell a surprised Queen Victoria that We have no army capable of meeting even a second class Continental Power 57 4 First phase The Boer offensive October December 1899 EditBritish Army deployed Edit When war with the Boer republics was imminent in September 1899 a Field Force referred to as the Army Corps sometimes 1st Army Corps was mobilised and sent to Cape Town It was about the equivalent of the I Army Corps of the existing mobilization scheme and was placed under the command of Gen Sir Redvers Buller GOC in C of Aldershot Command 63 In South Africa the corps never operated as such and the 1st 2nd 3rd divisions were widely dispersed Boer organization and skills Edit War was declared on 11 October 1899 with a Boer offensive into the British held Natal and Cape Colony areas The Boers had about 33 000 soldiers and decisively outnumbered the British who could move only 13 000 troops to the front line 64 The Boers had no problems with mobilisation since the fiercely independent Boers had no regular army units apart from the Staatsartillerie Dutch for State Artillery of both republics As with the First Boer War since most of the Boers were members of civilian militias none had adopted uniforms or insignia Only the members of the Staatsartillerie wore light green uniforms Boers in a trench at Mafeking 1899 When danger loomed all the burgers citizens in a district would form a military unit called a commando and would elect officers A full time official called a Veldkornet maintained muster rolls but had no disciplinary powers Each man brought his own weapon usually a hunting rifle and his own horse Those who could not afford a gun were given one by the authorities 23 80 The Presidents of the Transvaal and Orange Free State simply signed decrees to concentrate within a week and the Commandos could muster between 30 000 and 40 000 men 65 The average Boer nevertheless was not thirsty for war Many did not look forward to fighting against fellow Christians and by and large fellow Christian Protestants Many may have had an overly optimistic sense of what the war would involve imagining that victory could be achieved as fast and easily as it had been in the First Anglo Boer War 23 74 Many including many generals also had a sense that their cause was holy and just and blessed by God 23 179 It rapidly became clear that the Boer forces presented the British forces with a severe tactical challenge What the Boers presented was a mobile and innovative approach to warfare drawing on their experiences from the First Boer War The average Boers who made up their Commandos were farmers who had spent almost all their working life in the saddle both as farmers and hunters They depended on the pot horse and rifle they were also skilled stalkers and marksmen As hunters they had learned to fire from cover from a prone position and to make the first shot count knowing that if they missed the game would either be long gone or could charge and potentially kill them At community gatherings target shooting was a major sport they practised shooting at targets such as hens eggs perched on posts 100 metres 110 yd away They made expert mounted infantry using every scrap of cover from which they could pour in a destructive fire using modern smokeless Mauser rifles In preparation for hostilities the Boers had acquired around one hundred of the latest Krupp field guns all horse drawn and dispersed among the various Kommando groups and several Le Creusot Long Tom siege guns The Boers skill in adapting themselves to become first rate artillerymen shows that they were a versatile adversary 66 The Transvaal also had an intelligence service that stretched across South Africa and of whose extent and efficiency the British were as yet unaware 23 81 Boers besiege Ladysmith Mafeking and Kimberley Edit War theatre in northern Natal The Boers struck first on 12 October at the Battle of Kraaipan an attack that heralded the invasion of the Cape Colony and Colony of Natal between October 1899 and January 1900 67 With speed and surprise the Boers drove quickly towards the British garrison at Ladysmith and the smaller ones at Mafeking and Kimberley The quick Boer mobilisation resulted in early military successes against scattered British forces Sir George Stuart White commanding the British division at Ladysmith unwisely allowed Major General Penn Symons to throw a brigade forward to the coal mining town of Dundee also reported as Glencoe which was surrounded by hills This became the site of the first engagement of the war the Battle of Talana Hill Boer guns began shelling the British camp from the summit of Talana Hill at dawn on 20 October Penn Symons immediately counter attacked His infantry drove the Boers from the hill for the loss of 446 British casualties including Penn Symons Another Boer force occupied Elandslaagte which lay between Ladysmith and Dundee The British under Major General John French and Colonel Ian Hamilton attacked to clear the line of communications to Dundee The resulting Battle of Elandslaagte was a clear cut British tactical victory 68 but Sir George White feared that more Boers were about to attack his main position and so ordered a chaotic retreat from Elandslaagte throwing away any advantage gained The detachment from Dundee was compelled to make an exhausting cross country retreat to rejoin White s main force As Boers surrounded Ladysmith and opened fire on the town with siege guns White ordered a major sortie against their positions 69 The result was a disaster with 140 men killed and over 1 000 captured The Siege of Ladysmith began It was to last several months Meanwhile to the north west at Mafeking on the border with Transvaal Colonel Robert Baden Powell had raised two regiments of local forces amounting to about 1 200 men in order to attack and create diversions if things went amiss further south As a railway junction Mafeking provided good supply facilities and was the obvious place for Baden Powell to fortify in readiness for such attacks However instead of being the aggressor Baden Powell was forced to defend Mafeking when 6 000 Boer commanded by Piet Cronje attempted a determined assault on the town This quickly subsided into a desultory affair with the Boers prepared to starve the stronghold into submission So on 13 October the 217 day Siege of Mafeking began Lastly over 360 kilometres 220 mi to the south of Mafeking lay the diamond mining city of Kimberley which was also subjected to a siege Although not militarily significant it nonetheless represented an enclave of British imperialism on the borders of the Orange Free State and was hence an important Boer objective In early November about 7 500 Boer began their siege again content to starve the town into submission Despite Boer shelling the 40 000 inhabitants of which only 5 000 were armed were under little threat because the town was well stocked with provisions The garrison was commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Robert Kekewich although Cecil Rhodes was also a prominent figure in the town s defences Siege life took its toll on both the defending soldiers and the civilians in the cities of Mafeking Ladysmith and Kimberley as food began to grow scarce after a few weeks In Mafeking Sol Plaatje wrote I saw horseflesh for the first time being treated as a human foodstuff The cities under siege also dealt with constant artillery bombardment making the streets a dangerous place Near the end of the siege of Kimberley it was expected that the Boers would intensify their bombardment so Rhodes displayed a notice encouraging people to go down into shafts of the Kimberley Mine for protection The townspeople panicked and people surged into the mine shafts constantly for a 12 hour period Although the bombardment never came this did nothing to diminish the anxious civilians distress The most well heeled of the townspeople including Cecil Rhodes sheltered in the Sanatorium site of the present day McGregor Museum the poorer residents notably the black population did not have any shelter from shelling In retrospect the Boers decision to commit themselves to sieges Sitzkrieg was a mistake and one of the best illustrations of their lack of strategic vision Historically it had little in its favour Of the seven sieges in the First Boer War the Boers had prevailed in none More importantly it handed the initiative back to the British and allowed them time to recover which they did Generally speaking throughout the campaign the Boers were too defensive and passive wasting the opportunities they had for victory Yet that passiveness also testified to the fact that they had no desire to conquer British territory but only to preserve their ability to rule in their own territory 23 82 85 First British relief attempts Edit General Redvers Henry Buller launched an offensive against the Boers in the early phases of the war but after several defeats culminating at the Battle of Colenso he was replaced by Earl Roberts On the 31st October 1899 General Sir Redvers Henry Buller a much respected commander arrived in South Africa with the Army Corps made up of the 1st 2nd and 3rd divisions Buller originally intended an offensive straight up the railway line leading from Cape Town through Bloemfontein to Pretoria Finding on arrival that the British troops already in South Africa were under siege he split his army corps into detachments to relieve the besieged garrisons One division led by Lieutenant General Lord Methuen was to follow the Western Railway to the north and relieve Kimberley and Mafeking A smaller force of about 3 000 led by Major General William Gatacre was to push north towards the railway junction at Stormberg and secure the Cape Midlands District from Boer raids and local rebellions by Boer inhabitants Buller led the major part of the army corps to relieve Ladysmith to the east The initial results of this offensive were mixed with Methuen winning several bloody skirmishes in the Battle of Belmont on 23 November the Battle of Graspan on 25 November and at a larger engagement the Battle of Modder River on 28 November resulting in British losses of 71 dead and over 400 wounded British commanders had been trained on the lessons of the Crimean War and were adept at battalion and regimental set pieces with columns manoeuvring in jungles deserts and mountainous regions What British generals failed to comprehend was the impact of destructive fire from trench positions and the mobility of cavalry raids The British troops went to war with what would prove to be antiquated tactics and in some cases antiquated weapons against the mobile Boer forces with the destructive fire of their modern Mausers the latest Krupp field guns and their novel tactics 70 The middle of December was disastrous for the British Army In a period known as Black Week 10 15 December 1899 the British suffered defeats on each of the three fronts On 10 December General Gatacre tried to recapture Stormberg railway junction about 80 kilometres 50 mi south of the Orange River Gatacre s attack was marked by administrative and tactical blunders and the Battle of Stormberg ended in a British defeat with 135 killed and wounded and two guns and over 600 troops captured At the Battle of Magersfontein on 11 December Methuen s 14 000 British troops attempted to capture a Boer position in a dawn attack to relieve Kimberley This too turned into a disaster when the Highland Brigade became pinned down by accurate Boer fire After suffering from intense heat and thirst for nine hours they eventually broke in ill disciplined retreat The Boer commanders Koos de la Rey and Piet Cronje had ordered trenches to be dug in an unconventional place to fool the British and to give their riflemen a greater firing range The plan worked and this tactic helped to write the doctrine of the supremacy of the defensive position using modern small arms and trench fortifications 71 citation needed The British lost 120 killed and 690 wounded and were prevented from relieving Kimberley and Mafeking A British soldier said of the defeat Lord Roberts s arrival at Cape Town Such was the day for our regimentDread the revenge we will take Dearly we paid for the blunder A drawing room General s mistake Why weren t we told of the trenches Why weren t we told of the wire Why were we marched up in column May Tommy Atkins enquire Private Smith 72 The nadir of Black Week was the Battle of Colenso on 15 December where 21 000 British troops commanded by Buller attempted to cross the Tugela River to relieve Ladysmith where 8 000 Transvaal Boers under the command of Louis Botha were waiting for them Through a combination of artillery and accurate rifle fire and better use of the ground the Boers repelled all British attempts to cross the river After his first attacks failed Buller broke off the battle and ordered a retreat abandoning many wounded men several isolated units and ten field guns to be captured by Botha s men Buller s forces lost 145 men killed and 1 200 missing or wounded and the Boers suffered only 40 casualties including 8 killed 57 12 Second phase The British offensive of January to September 1900 EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Second Boer War news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message The hotel lay now calm and innocent with its open windows looking out upon a smiling garden but death lurked at the windows and death in the garden and the little dark man who stood by the door peering through his glass at the approaching column was the minister of death the dangerous Cronje Arthur Conan Doyle The Great Boer War 1900 British casualties lie dead on the battlefield after the Battle of Spion Kop 24 January 1900 The British government took these defeats badly and with the sieges still continuing was compelled to send two more divisions plus large numbers of colonial volunteers By January 1900 this would become the largest force Britain had ever sent overseas amounting to some 180 000 men with further reinforcements being sought 14 While watching for these reinforcements Buller made another bid to relieve Ladysmith by crossing the Tugela west of Colenso Buller s subordinate Major General Charles Warren successfully crossed the river but was then faced with a fresh defensive position centred on a prominent hill known as Spion Kop In the resulting Battle of Spion Kop British troops captured the summit by surprise during the early hours of 24 January 1900 but as the early morning fog lifted they realised too late that they were overlooked by Boer gun emplacements on the surrounding hills The rest of the day resulted in a disaster caused by poor communication between Buller and his commanders Between them they issued contradictory orders on the one hand ordering men off the hill while other officers ordered fresh reinforcements to defend it The result was 350 men killed and nearly 1 000 wounded and a retreat across the Tugela River into British territory There were nearly 300 Boer casualties Buller attacked Louis Botha again on 5 February at Vaal Krantz and was again defeated Buller withdrew early when it appeared that the British would be isolated in an exposed bridgehead across the Tugela for which he was nicknamed Sir Reverse by some of his officers Buller replaced Edit Boer General Piet de Wet 1900 By taking command in person in Natal Buller had allowed the overall direction of the war to drift Because of concerns about his performance and negative reports from the field he was replaced as Commander in Chief by Field Marshal Lord Roberts Roberts quickly assembled an entirely new team for headquarters staff and he chose military men from far and wide Lord Kitchener Chief of Staff from the Sudan Frederick Russell Burnham Chief of Scouts the American scout from the Klondike George Henderson from the Staff College Neville Bowles Chamberlain from Afghanistan and William Nicholson Military Secretary from Calcutta citation needed Like Buller Roberts first intended to attack directly along the Cape Town Pretoria railway but again like Buller was forced to relieve the beleaguered garrisons Leaving Buller in command in Natal Roberts massed his main force near the Orange River and along the Western Railway behind Methuen s force at the Modder River and prepared to make a wide outflanking move to relieve Kimberley Lance Thackeray Soldiers of the Royal Inniskilling Regiment left are storming Hart s Hill defended by Boer military right during the Battle of the Tugela Heights Artist s impression Except in Natal the war had stagnated Other than a single attempt to storm Ladysmith the Boers made no attempt to capture the besieged towns In the Cape Midlands the Boers did not exploit the British defeat at Stormberg and were prevented from capturing the railway junction at Colesberg In the dry summer the grazing on the veld became parched weakening the Boers horses and draught oxen and many Boer families joined their menfolk in the siege lines and laagers encampments fatally encumbering Cronje s army Roberts relieves the sieges Edit Roberts launched his main attack on 10 February 1900 and although hampered by a long supply route managed to outflank the Boers defending Magersfontein On 14 February a cavalry division under Major General John French launched a major attack to relieve Kimberley Although encountering severe fire a massed cavalry charge split the Boer defences on 15 February opening the way for French to enter Kimberley that evening ending its 124 days siege Meanwhile Roberts pursued Piet Cronje s 7 000 strong force which had abandoned Magersfontein to head for Bloemfontein General French s cavalry was ordered to assist in the pursuit by embarking on an epic 50 km 31 mi drive towards Paardeberg where Cronje was attempting to cross the Modder River At the Battle of Paardeberg from 18 to 27 February Roberts then surrounded General Piet Cronje s retreating Boer army On 17 February a pincer movement involving both French s cavalry and the main British force attempted to take the entrenched position but the frontal attacks were uncoordinated and so were repulsed by the Boers Finally Roberts resorted to bombarding Cronje into submission It took ten days and when the British troops used the polluted Modder River as water supply typhoid killed many troops General Cronje was forced to surrender at Surrender Hill with 4 000 men The Relief of Ladysmith Sir George Stuart White greets Major Hubert Gough on 28 February Painting by John Henry Frederick Bacon 1868 1914 In Natal the Battle of the Tugela Heights which started on 14 February was Buller s fourth attempt to relieve Ladysmith The losses Buller s troops had sustained convinced Buller to adopt Boer tactics in the firing line to advance in small rushes covered by rifle fire from behind to use the tactical support of artillery and above all to use the ground making rock and earth work for them as it did for the enemy Despite reinforcements his progress was painfully slow against stiff opposition However on 26 February after much deliberation Buller used all his forces in one all out attack for the first time and at last succeeded in forcing a crossing of the Tugela to defeat Botha s outnumbered forces north of Colenso After a siege lasting 118 days the Relief of Ladysmith was effected the day after Cronje surrendered but at a total cost of 7 000 British casualties Buller s troops marched into Ladysmith on 28 February 73 After a succession of defeats the Boers realised that against such overwhelming numbers of troops they had little chance of defeating the British and so became demoralised Roberts then advanced into the Orange Free State from the west putting the Boers to flight at the Battle of Poplar Grove and capturing Bloemfontein the capital unopposed on 13 March with the Boer defenders escaping and scattering Meanwhile he detached a small force to relieve Baden Powell The Relief of Mafeking on 18 May 1900 provoked riotous celebrations in Britain the origin of the Edwardian slang word mafficking On 28 May the Orange Free State was annexed and renamed the Orange River Colony Capture of Pretoria Edit After being forced to delay for several weeks at Bloemfontein by a shortage of supplies an outbreak of typhoid at Paardeberg and poor medical care Roberts finally resumed his advance 74 He was forced to halt again at Kroonstad for 10 days due once again to the collapse of his medical and supply systems but finally captured Johannesburg on 31 May and the capital of the Transvaal Pretoria on 5 June The first into Pretoria was Lt William Watson of the New South Wales Mounted Rifles who persuaded the Boers to surrender the capital 75 Before the war the Boers had constructed several forts south of Pretoria but the artillery had been removed from the forts for use in the field and in the event they abandoned Pretoria without a fight Having won the principal cities Roberts declared the war over on 3 September 1900 and the South African Republic was formally annexed British observers believed the war to be all but over after the capture of the two capital cities However the Boers had earlier met at the temporary new capital of the Orange Free State Kroonstad and planned a guerrilla campaign to hit the British supply and communication lines The first engagement of this new form of warfare was at Sanna s Post on 31 March where 1 500 Boers under the command of Christiaan de Wet attacked Bloemfontein s waterworks about 37 kilometres 23 mi east of the city and ambushed a heavily escorted convoy which caused 155 British casualties and the capture of seven guns 117 wagons and 428 British troops 76 General Piet Cronje as a prisoner of war in Saint Helena 1900 02 He was captured along with 4 000 soldiers after the loss of the Battle of Paardeberg After the fall of Pretoria one of the last formal battles was at Diamond Hill on 11 12 June where Roberts attempted to drive the remnants of the Boer field army under Botha beyond striking distance of Pretoria Although Roberts drove the Boers from the hill Botha did not regard it as a defeat for he inflicted 162 casualties on the British while suffering only around 50 casualties Boers retreat Edit The set piece period of the war now largely gave way to a mobile guerrilla war but one final operation remained President Kruger and what remained of the Transvaal government had retreated to eastern Transvaal Roberts joined by troops from Natal under Buller advanced against them and broke their last defensive position at Bergendal on 26 August As Roberts and Buller followed up along the railway line to Komatipoort Kruger sought asylum in Portuguese East Africa modern Mozambique Some dispirited Boers did likewise and the British gathered up much war material However the core of the Boer fighters under Botha easily broke back through the Drakensberg Mountains into the Transvaal highveld after riding north through the bushveld As Roberts s army occupied Pretoria the Boer fighters in the Orange Free State retreated into the Brandwater Basin a fertile area in the north east of the Republic This offered only temporary sanctuary as the mountain passes leading to it could be occupied by the British trapping the Boers A force under General Archibald Hunter set out from Bloemfontein to achieve this in July 1900 The hard core of the Free State Boers under De Wet accompanied by President Steyn left the basin early Those remaining fell into confusion and most failed to break out before Hunter trapped them 4 500 Boers surrendered and much equipment was captured but as with Roberts s drive against Kruger at the same time these losses were of relatively little consequence as the hard core of the Boer armies and their most determined and active leaders remained at large From the Basin Christiaan de Wet headed west Although hounded by British columns he succeeded in crossing the Vaal into western Transvaal to allow Steyn to travel to meet their leaders There was much sympathy for the Boers on mainland Europe In October President Kruger and members of the Transvaal government left Portuguese East Africa on the Dutch warship De Gelderland sent by the Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands Paul Kruger s wife however was too ill to travel and remained in South Africa where she died on 20 July 1901 without seeing her husband again President Kruger first went to Marseille and then on to the Netherlands where he stayed for a while before moving finally to Clarens Switzerland where he died in exile on 14 July 1904 Prisoners of war sent overseas Edit The first sizeable batch of Boer prisoners of war taken by the British consisted of those captured at the Battle of Elandslaagte on 21 October 1899 At first many were put on ships but as numbers grew the British decided they did not want them kept locally The capture of 400 POWs in February 1900 was a key event which made the British realise they could not accommodate all POWs in South Africa 77 The British feared they could be freed by sympathetic locals Moreover they already had trouble supplying their own troops in South Africa and did not want the added burden of sending supplies for the POWs Britain therefore chose to send many POWs overseas A Transit camp for Prisoners of War near Cape Town during the war Prisoners were then transferred for internment in other parts of the British Empire The first overseas off African mainland camps were opened in Saint Helena which ultimately received about 5 000 POWs 78 About 5 000 POWs were sent to Ceylon 79 Other POWs were sent to Bermuda and India 77 In all nearly 26 000 POWs were sent overseas 80 Oath of neutrality Edit On 15 March 1900 Lord Roberts proclaimed an amnesty for all burghers except leaders who took an oath of neutrality and returned quietly to their homes 81 It is estimated that between 12 000 and 14 000 burghers took this oath between March and June 1900 82 Third phase Guerrilla war September 1900 May 1902 Edit Kitchener succeeded Roberts in November 1900 and launched anti guerrilla campaigns 1898 photograph in 1910 magazine By September 1900 the British were nominally in control of both Republics with the exception of the northern part of Transvaal However they soon discovered that they only controlled the territory their columns physically occupied Despite the loss of their two capital cities and half of their army the Boer commanders adopted guerrilla warfare tactics primarily conducting raids against railways resource and supply targets all aimed at disrupting the operational capacity of the British Army They avoided pitched battles and casualties were light Each Boer commando unit was sent to the district from which its members had been recruited which meant that they could rely on local support and personal knowledge of the terrain and the towns within the district thereby enabling them to live off the land Their orders were simply to act against the British whenever possible Their tactics were to strike fast and hard causing as much damage to the enemy as possible and then to withdraw and vanish before enemy reinforcements could arrive The vast distances of the Republics allowed the Boer commandos considerable freedom to move about and made it nearly impossible for the 250 000 British troops to control the territory effectively using columns alone As soon as a British column left a town or district British control of that area faded away A surviving blockhouse in South Africa Blockhouses were constructed by the British to secure supply routes from Boer raids during the war The Boer commandos were especially effective during the initial guerrilla phase of the war because Roberts had assumed that the war would end with the capture of the Boer capitals and the dispersal of the main Boer armies Many British troops were therefore redeployed out of the area and had been replaced by lower quality contingents of Imperial Yeomanry and locally raised irregular corps From late May 1900 the first successes of the Boer guerrilla strategy were at Lindley where 500 Yeomanry surrendered and at Heilbron where a large convoy and its escort were captured and other skirmishes resulting in 1 500 British casualties in less than ten days In December 1900 De la Rey and Christiaan Beyers attacked and mauled a British brigade at Nooitgedacht As a result of these and other Boer successes the British led by Lord Kitchener mounted three extensive searches for Christiaan de Wet but without success However the very nature of the Boer guerrilla war and the Boer raids on British camps were sporadic poorly planned and had little overall long term objective with the exception to simply harass the British This led to a disorganised pattern of scattered engagements between the British and the Boers throughout the region Use of Blockhouses Edit The British were forced to quickly revise their tactics They concentrated on restricting the freedom of movement of the Boer commandos and depriving them of local support The railway lines had provided vital lines of communication and supply and as the British had advanced across South Africa they had used armoured trains and had established fortified blockhouses at key points 83 They now built additional blockhouses each housing 6 8 soldiers and fortified these to protect supply routes against Boer raiders Eventually some 8 000 such blockhouses were built across the two South African republics radiating from the larger towns along principal routes Each blockhouse cost between 800 to 1 000 and took about three months to build They proved very effective not one bridge at which a blockhouse was sited and manned was blown 83 The blockhouse system required an enormous number of troops to garrison Well over 50 000 British troops or 50 battalions were involved in blockhouse duty greater than the approximately 30 000 Boers in the field during the guerrilla phase In addition up to 16 000 Africans were used both as armed guards and to patrol the line at night 83 The Army linked the blockhouses with barbed wire fences to parcel up the wide veld into smaller areas New Model drives were mounted under which a continuous line of troops could sweep an area of veld bounded by blockhouse lines unlike the earlier inefficient scouring of the countryside by scattered columns Scorched earth campaign against civilians Edit One British response to the guerrilla war was a scorched earth policy to deny the guerrillas supplies and refuge In this image Boer civilians watch their house as it is burned The British also implemented a scorched earth policy under which they targeted everything within the controlled areas that could give sustenance to the Boer guerrillas with a view to making it harder for the Boers to survive As British troops swept the countryside they systematically destroyed crops burned homesteads and farms and interned Boer and African men women children and workers in concentration camps Finally the British also established their own mounted raiding columns in support of the sweeper columns These were used to rapidly follow and relentlessly harass the Boers with a view to delaying them and cutting off escape while the sweeper units caught up Many of the 90 or so mobile columns formed by the British to participate in such drives were a mixture of British and colonial troops but they also had a large minority of armed Africans The total number of armed Africans serving with these columns has been estimated at approximately 20 000 The British Army also made use of Boer auxiliaries who had been persuaded to change sides and enlist as National Scouts Serving under the command of General Andries Cronje the National Scouts were despised as joiners but came to number a fifth of the fighting Afrikaners by the end of the War 84 The British utilised armoured trains throughout the war to deliver rapid reaction forces much more quickly to incidents such as Boer attacks on blockhouses and columns or to drop them off ahead of retreating Boer columns Peace committees Edit Among those Burghers who had stopped fighting it was decided to form peace committees to persuade those who were still fighting to desist In December 1900 Lord Kitchener gave permission that a central Burgher Peace Committee be inaugurated in Pretoria By the end of 1900 some thirty envoys were sent out to the various districts to form local peace committees to persuade burghers to give up the fight Previous leaders of the Boers like Generals Piet de Wet and Andries Cronje were involved in the organisation Meyer de Kock was the only emissary of a peace committee to be convicted of high treason and executed by firing squad 85 Joiners Edit Some burghers joined the British in their fight against the Boers By the end of hostilities in May 1902 there were no fewer than 5 464 burghers working for the British 86 Orange Free State Edit Christiaan De Wet was the most formidable leader of the Boer guerrillas He successfully evaded capture on numerous occasions and was later involved in the negotiations for a peace settlement After having conferred with the Transvaal leaders Christiaan de Wet returned to the Orange Free State where he inspired a series of successful attacks and raids from the hitherto quiet western part of the country though he suffered a rare defeat at Bothaville in November 1900 Many Boers who had earlier returned to their farms sometimes giving formal parole to the British took up arms again In late January 1901 De Wet led a renewed invasion of Cape Colony This was less successful because there was no general uprising among the Cape Boers and De Wet s men were hampered by bad weather and relentlessly pursued by British forces They narrowly escaped across the Orange River From then until the final days of the war De Wet remained comparatively quiet partly because the Orange Free State was effectively left desolate by British sweeps In late 1901 De Wet overran an isolated British detachment at Groenkop inflicting heavy casualties This prompted Kitchener to launch the first of the New Model drives against him De Wet escaped the first such drive but lost 300 of his fighters This was a severe loss and a portent of further attrition although the subsequent attempts to round up De Wet were badly handled and De Wet s forces avoided capture Western Transvaal Edit The Boer commandos in the Western Transvaal were very active after September 1901 Several battles of importance were fought here between September 1901 and March 1902 At Moedwil on 30 September 1901 and again at Driefontein on 24 October General Koos De La Rey s forces attacked the British but were forced to withdraw after the British offered strong resistance A time of relative quiet descended thereafter on the western Transvaal February 1902 saw the next major battle in that region On 25 February Koos De La Rey attacked a British column under Lieutenant Colonel S B von Donop at Ysterspruit near Wolmaransstad De La Rey succeeded in capturing many men and a large amount of ammunition The Boer attacks prompted Lord Methuen the British second in command after Lord Kitchener to move his column from Vryburg to Klerksdorp to deal with De La Rey On the morning of 7 March 1902 the Boers attacked the rear guard of Methuen s moving column at Tweebosch Confusion reigned in British ranks and Methuen was wounded and captured by the Boers The Boer victories in the west led to stronger action by the British In the second half of March 1902 large British reinforcements were sent to the Western Transvaal under the direction of Ian Hamilton The opportunity the British were waiting for arose on 11 April 1902 at Rooiwal where a commando led by General Jan Kemp and Commandant Potgieter attacked a superior force under Kekewich The British soldiers were well positioned on the hillside and inflicted severe casualties on the Boers charging on horseback over a large distance beating them back This was the end of the war in the Western Transvaal and also the last major battle of the war Eastern Transvaal Edit Boer commandos Two Boer forces fought in this area one under Botha in the south east and a second under Ben Viljoen in the north east around Lydenburg Botha s forces were particularly active raiding railways and British supply convoys and even mounting a renewed invasion of Natal in September 1901 After defeating British mounted infantry in the Battle of Blood River Poort near Dundee Botha was forced to withdraw by heavy rains that made movement difficult and crippled his horses Back on the Transvaal territory around his home district of Vryheid Botha attacked a British raiding column at Bakenlaagte using an effective mounted charge One of the most active British units was effectively destroyed in this engagement This made Botha s forces the target of increasingly large scorched earth drives by British forces in which the British made particular use of native scouts and informers Eventually Botha had to abandon the high veld and retreat to a narrow enclave bordering Swaziland To the north Ben Viljoen grew steadily less active His forces mounted comparatively few attacks and as a result the Boer enclave around Lydenburg was largely unmolested Viljoen was eventually captured Cape Colony Edit In parts of Cape Colony particularly the Cape Midlands District where Boers formed a majority of the white inhabitants the British had always feared a general uprising against them In fact no such uprising took place even in the early days of the war when Boer armies had advanced across the Orange The cautious conduct of some of the elderly Orange Free State generals had been one factor that discouraged the Cape Boers from siding with the Boer republics Nevertheless there was widespread pro Boer sympathy Some of the Cape Dutch volunteered to help the British but a much larger number volunteered to help the other side The political factor was more important than the military the Cape Dutch according to Milner 90 percent of whom favoured the rebels controlled the provincial legislature and it s authorities forbade the British Army to burn farms or to force Boer civilians into concentration camps 87 The British had more limited options to suppress the insurgency in the Cape Colony as result After he escaped across the Orange in March 1901 Christiaan de Wet had left forces under Cape rebels Kritzinger and Gideon Scheepers to maintain a guerrilla campaign in the Cape Midlands The campaign here was one of the least chivalrous of the war with intimidation by both sides of each other s civilian sympathisers In one of many skirmishes Commandant Lotter s small commando was tracked down by a much superior British column and wiped out at Groenkloof Several captured rebels including Lotter and Scheepers who was captured when he fell ill with appendicitis were executed by the British for treason or for capital crimes such as the murder of prisoners or of unarmed civilians Some of the executions took place in public to deter further disaffection Fresh Boer forces under Jan Christiaan Smuts joined by the surviving rebels under Kritzinger made another attack on the Cape in September 1901 They suffered severe hardships and were hard pressed by British columns but eventually rescued themselves by routing some of their pursuers at the Battle of Elands River and capturing their equipment From then until the end of the war Smuts increased his forces from among Cape rebels until they numbered 3 000 However no general uprising took place and the situation in the Cape remained stalemated In January 1902 Boer leader Manie Maritz was implicated in the Leliefontein massacre in the far Northern Cape Boer foreign volunteers EditMain article Boer foreign volunteers While no other government actively supported the Boer cause individuals from several countries volunteered and formed Foreign Volunteer Units These primarily came from Europe particularly the Netherlands Germany and Sweden Norway Other countries such as France Italy Ireland then part of the United Kingdom and restive areas of the Russian Empire including Poland and Georgia also formed smaller volunteer corps Finns fought in the Scandinavian Corps Two volunteers George Henri Anne Marie Victor de Villebois Mareuil of France and Yevgeny Maximov of Russia became veggeneraals fighting generals of the South African Republic 88 Conclusion Edit The end result of the Boer War was the annexation of the Boer Republics to the British Empire in 1902 Peace conference at Vereeniging C Company returns from Boer War pictured here in King Street Toronto Ontario Canada Towards the end of the war British tactics of containment denial and harassment began to yield results against the guerrillas The sourcing and co ordination of intelligence became increasingly efficient with regular reporting from observers in the blockhouses from units patrolling the fences and conducting sweeper operations and from native Africans in rural areas who increasingly supplied intelligence as the Scorched Earth policy took effect and they found themselves competing with the Boers for food supplies Kitchener s forces at last began to seriously affect the Boers fighting strength and freedom of manoeuvre and made it harder for the Boers and their families to survive Despite this success almost half the Boer fighting strength 15 000 men were still in the field fighting Kitchener s tactics were very costly Britain was running out of time and money and needed to change tack 89 The British offered terms of peace on various occasions notably in March 1901 but were rejected by Botha and the Bitter enders among the Boers They pledged to fight until the bitter end and rejected the demand for compromise made by the Hands uppers Their reasons included hatred of the British loyalty to their dead comrades solidarity with fellow commandos an intense desire for independence religious arguments and fear of captivity or punishment On the other hand their women and children were dying every day and independence seemed impossible 90 The last of the Boers finally surrendered in May 1902 and the war ended with the Treaty of Vereeniging signed on 31 May 1902 After a period of obstinacy the British reneged and offered the Boers generous terms of conditional surrender in order to bring the war to a victorious conclusion The Boers were given 3 000 000 for reconstruction and were promised eventual limited self government which was granted in 1906 and 1907 The treaty ended the existence of the Transvaal and Orange Free State as independent Boer republics and placed them within the British Empire The Union of South Africa was established as a dominion of the British Empire in 1910 Nonwhite roles EditThe policy on both sides was to minimise the role of nonwhites but the need for manpower continuously stretched those resolves At the battle of Spion Kop in Ladysmith Mohandas K Gandhi with 300 free burgher Indians and 800 indentured Indian labourers started the Ambulance Corps serving the British side As the war raged across African farms and their homes were destroyed many became refugees and they like the Boers moved to the towns where the British hastily created internment camps Subsequently the British scorched earth policies were applied to both Boers and Africans Although most black Africans were not considered by the British to be hostile many tens of thousands were also forcibly removed from Boer areas and also placed in concentration camps Africans were held separately from Boer internees Eventually there were a total of 64 tented camps for Africans Conditions were as bad as in the camps for the Boers but even though after the Fawcett Commission report conditions improved in the Boer camps improvements were much slower in coming to the black camps 20 000 died there 91 The Boers and the British both feared the consequences of arming Africans The memories of the Zulu and other tribal conflicts were still fresh and they recognised that whoever won would have to deal with the consequences of a mass militarisation of the tribes There was therefore an unwritten agreement that this war would be a white man s war At the outset British officials instructed all white magistrates in the Natal Colony to appeal to Zulu amakhosi chiefs to remain neutral and President Kruger sent emissaries asking them to stay out of it However in some cases there were old scores to be settled and some Africans such as the Swazis were eager to enter the war with the specific aim of reclaiming land won by the Boers As the war went on there was greater involvement of Africans and in particular large numbers became embroiled in the conflict on the British side either voluntarily or involuntarily By the end of the war many Africans had been armed and had shown conspicuous gallantry in roles such as scouts messengers watchmen in blockhouses and auxiliaries And there were more flash points outside of the war On 6 May 1902 at Holkrantz in the southeastern Transvaal a Zulu faction had their cattle stolen and their women and children tortured by the Boers as a punishment for assisting the British The local Boer officer then sent an insulting message to the tribe challenging them to take back their cattle The Zulus attacked at night and in a mutual bloodbath the Boers lost 56 killed and 3 wounded while the Africans suffered 52 killed and 48 wounded 92 About 10 000 black men were attached to Boer units where they performed camp duties a handful unofficially fought in combat The British Army employed over 14 000 Africans as wagon drivers Even more had combatant roles as spies guides and eventually as soldiers By 1902 there were about 30 000 armed Africans in the British Army 93 Concentration camps EditMain article Second Boer War concentration camps Tents in the Bloemfontein concentration camp The term concentration camp was used to describe camps operated by the British in South Africa during this conflict in the years 1900 1902 and the term grew in prominence during this period The camps had originally been set up by the British Army as refugee camps to provide refuge for civilian families who had been forced to abandon their homes for whatever reason related to the war However when Kitchener took over in late 1900 he introduced new tactics in an attempt to break the guerrilla campaign and the influx of civilians grew dramatically as a result Disease and starvation killed thousands 17 94 95 Kitchener initiated plans to flush out guerrillas in a series of systematic drives organised like a sporting shoot with success defined in a weekly bag of killed captured and wounded and to sweep the country bare of everything that could give sustenance to the guerrillas including women and children It was the clearance of civilians uprooting a whole nation that would come to dominate the last phase of the war Pakenham The Boer War 96 Lizzie van Zyl a Boer child visited by Emily Hobhouse in a British concentration camp As Boer farms were destroyed by the British under their Scorched Earth policy including the systematic destruction of crops and slaughtering of livestock the burning down of homesteads and farms to prevent the Boers from resupplying from a home base many tens of thousands of women and children were forcibly moved into the concentration camps This was not the first appearance of internment camps as the Spanish had used internment in Cuba in the Ten Years War but the Boer War concentration camp system was the first time that a whole nation had been systematically targeted and the first in which whole regions had been depopulated Eventually there were a total of 45 tented camps built for Boer internees and 64 for black Africans Of the 28 000 Boer men captured as prisoners of war 25 630 were sent overseas to prisoner of war camps throughout the British Empire The vast majority of Boers remaining in the local camps were women and children Around 26 370 Boer women and children were to perish in these concentration camps 97 Of the more than 120 000 Blacks and Coloureds imprisoned too around 20 000 died 98 95 99 The camps were poorly administered from the outset and became increasingly overcrowded when Kitchener s troops implemented the internment strategy on a vast scale Conditions were terrible for the health of the internees mainly due to neglect poor hygiene and bad sanitation The supply of all items was unreliable partly because of the constant disruption of communication lines by the Boers The food rations were meager and there was a two tier allocation policy whereby families of men who were still fighting were routinely given smaller rations than others 100 The inadequate shelter poor diet bad hygiene and overcrowding led to malnutrition and endemic contagious diseases such as measles typhoid and dysentery to which the children were particularly vulnerable 101 Coupled with a shortage of modern medical facilities many of the internees died While much of the British press including The Times played down the problems in the camps Emily Hobhouse helped raise public awareness in Britain of the atrocious conditions as well as being instrumental in bringing relief to the concentration camps 102 Cost of the war Edit It is estimated that the total cost of the war to the British government was 211 156 000 103 equivalent to 19 9bn in 2022 Cost of War over its entire courseYear Cost at the time 104 Relative value in 2022 105 1899 1900 23 000 000 2 180 000 0001900 1901 63 737 000 6 000 000 0001901 1902 67 670 000 6 410 000 0001902 1903 47 500 000 4 450 000 000Sub total 201 907 000 19 040 000 000Interest 9 249 000 866 000 000Grand total 211 156 000 19 906 000 000Aftermath and analysis Edit Memorial to soldiers from Quebec who fell in the Second Boer War Quebec City The Second Boer War cast long shadows over the history of the South African region The predominantly agrarian society of the former Boer republics was profoundly and fundamentally affected by the scorched earth policy of Roberts and Kitchener The devastation of both Boer and black African populations in the concentration camps and through war and exile were to have a lasting effect on the demography and quality of life in the region Many exiles and prisoners were unable to return to their farms at all others attempted to do so but were forced to abandon the farms as unworkable given the damage caused by farm burning in the course of the scorched earth policy Destitute Boers and black Africans swelled the ranks of the unskilled urban poor competing with the uitlanders in the mines 106 The postwar reconstruction administration was presided over by Lord Milner and his largely Oxford trained Milner s Kindergarten This small group of civil servants had a profound effect on the region eventually leading to the Union of South Africa In the aftermath of the war an imperial administration freed from accountability to a domestic electorate set about reconstructing an economy that was by then predicated unambiguously on gold At the same time British civil servants municipal officials and their cultural adjuncts were hard at work in the heartland of the former Boer Republics helping to forge new identities first as British South Africans and then later still as white South Africans Some scholars for good reasons identify these new identities as partly underpinning the act of union that followed in 1910 Although challenged by a Boer rebellion only four years later they did much to shape South African politics between the two world wars and right up to the present day 107 Alfred Lord Milner was the British High Commissioner of Southern Africa He was involved from the start of the war and had a role in the peace process and the creation of the Union of South Africa The counterinsurgency techniques and lessons the restriction of movement the containment of space the ruthless targeting of anything everything and anyone that could give sustenance to guerrillas the relentless harassment through sweeper groups coupled with rapid reaction forces the sourcing and co ordination of intelligence and the nurturing of native allies learned during the Boer War were used by the British and other forces in future guerrilla campaigns including to counter Malayan communist rebels during the Malayan Emergency In World War II the British also adopted some of the concepts of raiding from the Boer commandos when after the fall of France they set up their special raiding forces and in acknowledgement of their erstwhile enemies chose the name British Commandos Many of the Boers referred to the war as the second of the Freedom Wars The most resistant of Boers wanted to continue the fight and were known as Bittereinders or irreconcilables and at the end of the war a number of Boer fighters such as Deneys Reitz chose exile rather than sign an oath such as the following to pledge allegiance to Britain 108 The bearer lt prisoner name gt has been released from prison of war camp lt Camp name gt on signing that he acknowledge terms of surrender and becomes a British subject Over the following decade many returned to South Africa and never signed the pledge Some like Reitz eventually reconciled themselves to the new status quo but others did not Union of South Africa Edit Main article Union of South Africa One of the most important events in the decade after the end of the war was the creation of the Union of South Africa later the Republic of South Africa It proved a key ally to Britain as a Dominion of the British Empire during the World Wars At the start of the First World War a crisis ensued when the South African government led by Louis Botha and other former Boer fighters such as Jan Smuts declared support for Britain and agreed to send troops to take over the German colony of German South West Africa Namibia Many Boers were opposed to fighting for Britain especially against Germany which had been sympathetic to their struggle A number of bittereinders and their allies took part in a revolt known as the Maritz Rebellion This was quickly suppressed and in 1916 the leading Boer rebels in the Maritz Rebellion escaped lightly especially compared with the fate of leading Irish rebels of the Easter Rising with terms of imprisonment of six and seven years and heavy fines Two years later they were released from prison as Louis Botha recognised the value of reconciliation Thereafter the bittereinders concentrated on political organisation within the constitutional system and built up what later became the National Party which took power in 1948 and dominated the politics of South Africa from the late 1940s until the early 1990s under the apartheid system Effect of the war on domestic British politics Edit Further information Opposition to the Second Boer War Memorial window from St Patrick s Cathedral Dublin by An Tur Gloine Much of the Irish public sympathised with the Boer side citation needed rather than the British side on which fought the Royal Irish Regiment Many Irish nationalists sympathised with the Boers viewing them to be a people oppressed by British imperialism much like they viewed themselves Irish miners already in the Transvaal at the start of the war formed the nucleus of two Irish commandos The Second Irish Brigade was headed up by an Australian of Irish parents Colonel Arthur Lynch In addition small groups of Irish volunteers went to South Africa to fight with the Boers this despite the fact that there were many Irish troops fighting in the British army including the Royal Dublin Fusiliers e In Britain the Pro Boer campaign expanded f with writers often idealising the Boer society The war also highlighted the dangers of Britain s policy of non alignment and deepened her isolation The 1900 UK general election also known as the Khaki election was called by the Prime Minister Lord Salisbury on the back of recent British victories There was much enthusiasm for the war at this point resulting in a victory for the Conservative government However public support quickly waned as it became apparent that the war would not be easy and it dragged on partially contributing to the Conservatives spectacular defeat in 1906 There was public outrage at the use of scorched earth tactics and at the conditions in the concentration camps It also became apparent that there were serious problems with public health in Britain since up to 40 of recruits in Britain were unfit for military service and suffered from medical problems such as rickets and other poverty related illnesses That came at a time of increasing concern for the state of the poor in Britain Having taken the country into a prolonged war the Conservative government was rejected by the electorate at the first general election after the war was over Balfour succeeded his uncle Lord Salisbury in 1903 immediately after the war took over a Conservative Party that had won two successive landslide majorities but led it to a landslide defeat in 1906 The 2nd Anglo Boer War was a victory that costed British taxpayers more than 200m 22 000 Empire troops and more than 400 000 army horses donkeys and mules were killed Britain had expected a swift victory against a mostly unmilitarised and predominantly agricultural based opponent However the conflict dragged on into the 20th century and the reign of a new monarch 109 At the time Britain was world s most technologically advanced military The results caused many both domestically and internationally to question the dominance of the British Empire especially as nations like the United States Germany and Japan had started to become major powers Horses Edit A horse destined to serve in the war being offloaded in Port Elizabeth The number of horses killed in the war was at the time unprecedented in modern warfare For example in the Relief of Kimberley French s cavalry rode 500 horses to their deaths in a single day The wastage was particularly heavy among British forces for several reasons overloading of horses with unnecessary equipment and saddlery failure to rest and acclimatise horses after long sea voyages and later in the war poor management by inexperienced mounted troops and distant control by unsympathetic staffs 110 111 The average life expectancy of a British horse from the time of its arrival in Port Elizabeth was around six weeks 112 Horses were slaughtered for their meat when needed During the Siege of Kimberley and Siege of Ladysmith horses were consumed as food once the regular sources of meat were depleted 113 The besieged British forces in Ladysmith also produced chevril a Bovril like paste by boiling down the horse meat to a jelly paste and serving it like beef tea 114 115 The Horse Memorial in Port Elizabeth is a tribute to the 300 000 horses that died during the conflict 116 Imperial involvement EditSee also British Army during the Victorian Era Second Boer War The vast majority of troops fighting for the British army came from Great Britain Yet a significant number came from other parts of the British Empire These countries had their own internal disputes over whether they should remain tied to London or have full independence which carried over into the debate around the sending of forces to assist the war Though not fully independent on foreign affairs these countries did have local say over how much support to provide and the manner it was provided Ultimately Australia Canada New Zealand and British South African Company administered Rhodesia all sent volunteers to aid the United Kingdom Troops were also raised to fight with the British from the Cape Colony and the Colony of Natal Some Boer fighters such as Jan Smuts and Louis Botha were technically British subjects as they came from the Cape Colony and Colony of Natal respectively citation needed There were also many volunteers from the Empire who were not selected for the official contingents from their countries and travelled privately to South Africa to form private units such as the Canadian Scouts and Doyle s Australian Scouts There were also some European volunteer units from British India and British Ceylon though the British Government refused offers of non white troops from the Empire Some Cape Coloureds also volunteered early in the war but later some of them were effectively conscripted and kept in segregated units As a community they received comparatively little reward for their services In many ways the war set the pattern for the Empire s later involvement in the two World Wars Specially raised units consisting mainly of volunteers were dispatched overseas to serve with forces from elsewhere in the British Empire The United States stayed neutral in the conflict but some American citizens were eager to participate Early in the war Lord Roberts cabled the American Frederick Russell Burnham a veteran of both Matabele wars but at that very moment prospecting in the Klondike to serve on his personal staff as Chief of Scouts Burnham went on to receive the highest awards of any American who served in the war but American mercenaries participated on both sides 117 Australia Edit See also History of the Australian Army Boer War 1899 1902 Main article Military history of Australia during the Second Boer War British and Australian officers in South Africa c 1900 From 1899 to 1901 the six separate self governing colonies in Australia sent their own contingents to serve in the Boer War That much of the population of the colonies had originated from Great Britain explains a general desire to support Britain during the conflict After the colonies formed the Commonwealth of Australia in 1901 the new Government of Australia sent Commonwealth contingents to the war 118 The Boer War was thus the first war in which the Commonwealth of Australia fought A few Australians fought on the Boer side 119 The most famous and colourful character was Colonel Arthur Alfred Lynch formerly of Ballarat Victoria who raised the Second Irish Brigade A memorial in Queanbeyan New South Wales unveiled in 1903 dedicated to Australians who served in the conflict over 20 000 The Australian climate and geography were far closer to that of South Africa than most other parts of the empire so Australians adapted quickly to the environment with troops serving mostly among the army s mounted rifles Enlistment in all official Australian contingents totalled 16 463 120 Another five to seven thousand Australians served in irregular regiments raised in South Africa Perhaps five hundred Australian irregulars were killed In total 20 000 or more Australians served and about 1 000 were killed A total of 267 died from disease 251 were killed in action or died from wounds sustained in battle A further 43 men were reported missing 121 When the war began some Australians like some Britons opposed it As the war dragged on some Australians became disenchanted in part because of the sufferings of Boer civilians reported in the press In an interesting twist for Australians when the British missed capturing President Paul Kruger as he escaped Pretoria during its fall in June 1900 a Melbourne Punch 21 June 1900 cartoon depicted how the War could be won using the Kelly Gang 122 The convictions and executions of two Australian lieutenants Harry Harbord Morant colloquially known as The Breaker for his skill with horses and Peter Handcock in 1902 and the imprisonment of a third George Witton had minimal impact on the Australian public at the time despite later legend citation needed The controversial court martial saw the three convicted of executing Boer prisoners under their authority After the war though Australians joined an empire wide campaign that saw Witton released from jail Much later citation needed some Australians came to see the execution of Morant and Handcock as instances of wrongfully executed Australians as illustrated in the 1980 Australian film Breaker Morant It is believed that up to 50 Aboriginal Australians served in the Boer War as trackers According to Dale Kerwin an Indigenous research fellow at Griffith University such is the lack of information that is available about the trackers it is even uncertain as to whether they returned to Australia at the end of the war He has claimed that at the end of the war in 1902 when the Australian contingents returned the trackers may not have been allowed back to Australia due to the White Australia Policy 123 Canada Edit Wikisource has original text related to this article Canadian Appeal for the Widows and Orphans of the South African War See also Military history of Canada Boer War The unveiling of the South African War Memorial in Toronto Ontario Canada in 1908 A total of around 8000 Canadians arrived in South Africa to fight for Britain These arrived in two contingents the first on 30 October 1899 the second on 21 January 1900 A third contongent of cavalry Strathcona s Horse embarked for South Africa on 16 17 March 1900 124 They remained until May 1902 125 With approximately 7 368 126 soldiers in a combat situation the conflict became the largest military engagement involving Canadian soldiers from the time of Confederation until the Great War 125 Eventually 270 of these soldiers died in the course of the Boer War 125 The Canadian public was initially divided on the decision to go to war as some citizens did not want Canada to become Britain s tool for engaging in armed conflicts Many Anglophone citizens were pro Empire and wanted the prime minister Sir Wilfrid Laurier to support the British in their conflict On the other hand many Francophone citizens felt threatened by the continuation of British imperialism to their national sovereignty 127 In the end to appease the citizens who wanted war and to avoid angering those who oppose it Laurier sent 1 000 volunteers under the command of Lieutenant Colonel William Otter to aid the confederation in its war to liberate the peoples of the Boer controlled states in South Africa The volunteers were provided to the British if the latter paid costs of the battalion after it arrived in South Africa 128 The supporters of the war claimed that it pitted British Freedom justice and civilization against Boer backwardness citation needed 129 The French Canadians opposition to the Canadian involvement in a British colonial venture eventually led to a three day riot in various areas of Quebec 126 Harold Lothrop Borden son of the National Minister of Defence and the most famous Canadian casualty of the war Commonwealth involvement in the Boer War can be summarised into three parts The first part October 1899 December 1899 was characterised by questionable decisions and blunders from the Commonwealth leadership which affected its soldiers greatly The soldiers of the Commonwealth were shocked at the number of Afrikaner soldiers who were willing to oppose the British The Afrikaner troops were very willing to fight for their country and were armed with modern weaponry and were highly mobile soldiers 127 This was one of the best examples of Guerrilla style warfare which would be employed throughout the twentieth century after set piece fighting was seen as a hindrance by certain groups 125 The Boer soldiers would evade capture and secure provisions from their enemies therefore they were able to exist as a fighting entity for an indeterminate period of time 130 The end of the First part was the period in mid December referred to as the Black Week During the week of 10 17 December 1899 the British suffered three major defeats at the hands of the Boers at the battlefields of Stormberg Magersfontein and Colenso Afterwards the British called upon more volunteers to take part in the war from the Commonwealth 131 The second part of the war February April 1900 was the opposite of the first After the British reorganised and reinforced under new leadership they began to experience success against the Boer soldiers Commonwealth soldiers resorted to using blockhouses farm burning and concentration camps to persuade the resisting Boers into submission 132 The final phase of the war was the guerrilla phase in which many Boer soldiers turned to guerrilla tactics such as raiding infrastructure or communications lines Many Canadian soldiers did not actually see combat after they had been shipped over to South Africa since many arrived around the time of the signing of the Treaty of Vereeniging on 31 May 1902 133 Notable Canadian Engagements Battle DescriptionPaardeberg A British led attack trapped a Boer Army in Central South Africa on the banks of the Modder River from 18 27 February 1900 Over 800 Canadian soldiers from Otter s 2nd Special Service Battalion were attached to the British attack force This was the first major attack involving the Canadians in the Boer War as well as the first major victory for Commonwealth soldiers The Canadian soldiers perched on a hill above the Boer camp and were credited with being the main reason that the Boers under General Cronje surrendered 128 Zand River On 6 May 1900 the Commonwealth s northwards advance to the capital of Pretoria was well on its way However the British soldiers encountered a position of Boer soldiers on the Zand River The British commander felt that the best course of action was to use cavalry to envelop the Boers on their left flank and infantry would therefore march on the Boer right flank to secure a crossing The Canadian 2nd Battalion was the lead unit advancing on the right flank However due to disease and casualties from earlier encounters the 2nd battalion was reduced to approximately half of its initial strength The Canadian battalion came under fire from the Boers who were occupying protected positions The battle continued for several hours until the British cavalry was able to flank the Boers and force a retreat Canadian casualties were two killed and two wounded The skirmishes around the Zand River would continue and more soldiers from various Commonwealth countries would become involved 134 Doornkop On the days of 28 29 May 1900 both the Canadian 2nd battalion and the 1st Mounted Infantry Brigade fought together on the same battlefield for the first and only time The Mounted Brigade which encompassed units such as the Canadian Mounted Rifles and the Royal Canadian Dragoons were given the task to establish a beachhead across a river which the Boers had fortified in an attempt to halt the advancing Commonwealth before they could reach the city of Johannesburg 135 Since the Boers were mounting a heavy resistance to the advancing mounted units the Commonwealth infantry units were tasked with holding the Boer units while the mounted units found another route across the river with less resistance 135 Even after the cavalry made it across to the other side of the river further down the line the infantry had to advance onto the town of Doornkop as they were the ones who were tasked with its capture The Canadians suffered very minimal casualties and achieved their objective after the Boer soldiers retreated from their positions 135 Although the Canadians suffered minimal casualties the lead British unit in the infantry advance the Gordon Highlanders did sustain heavy casualties in their march from the riflemen of the Boer force 136 Leliefontein On 7 November 1900 a British Canadian force was searching for a unit of Boer commandos which were known to be operating around the town of Belfast South Africa After the British Commander reached the farm of Leliefontein he began to fear that his line had expanded too far and ordered a withdrawal of the front line troops The rear guard consisting of the Royal Canadian Dragoons and two 12 pound guns from D section of the Canadian artillery were tasked with covering the retreat 137 The Boers mounted a heavy assault against the Canadians with the intention of capturing the two 12 pound artillery pieces During this battle the Afrikaners outnumbered the Canadians almost three to one 138 A small group of the Dragoons interposed themselves between the Boers and the artillery in order to allow the guns and their crews time to escape The Dragoons won three Victoria Crosses 137 for their actions during the battle of Leliefontein the most in any battle with the exception of the Battle of Vimy Ridge in World War I 138 India Edit Natal Indian Ambulance Corps with future leader Mohandas K Gandhi Middle row 5th from left Indian Monument at Observatory Ridge British garrisons in India contributed 18 534 British officers and men as well as an estimated 10 000 Indian auxiliaries deployed to assist them India also sent 7 000 horses ponies and mules 139 Indian auxiliaries were only employed in non combatant roles 140 The Natal Indian Ambulance Corps created by Mohandas K Gandhi and financed by the local Indian community served at Colenso and Spion Kop 139 New Zealand Edit See also Military history of New Zealand Second Boer War 1899 1902 New Zealand troops marching down Wellesley Street Auckland to embark for South Africa The top of the Dunedin Boer War Memorial The memorial reaffirms New Zealand s dedication to the Empire As McLean and Phillips said the New Zealand Boer War Memorials are tributes to the Empire and outpourings of pride about New Zealand s place in the Empire When the Second Boer War seemed imminent New Zealand offered its support On 28 September 1899 Prime Minister Richard Seddon asked Parliament to approve the offer to the imperial government of a contingent of mounted rifles thus becoming the first British Colony to send troops to the Boer War The British position in the dispute with the Transvaal was moderate and righteous he maintained He stressed the crimson tie of Empire that bound New Zealand to the mother country and the importance of a strong British Empire for the colony s security 141 By the time peace was concluded two and a half years later 10 contingents of volunteers totalling nearly 6 500 men from New Zealand with 8 000 horses had fought in the conflict along with doctors nurses veterinary surgeons and a small number of school teachers 142 Some 70 New Zealanders died from enemy action with another 158 killed accidentally or by disease 143 The first New Zealander to be killed was Farrier G R Bradford at Jasfontein Farm on 18 December 1899 144 The Boer War was greeted with extraordinary enthusiasm when the war was over and peace was greeted with patriotism and national pride 145 This is best shown by the fact that the Third Fourth and Fifth contingents from New Zealand were funded by public conscription 144 Rhodesia Edit Rhodesian military units such as the British South Africa Police Rhodesia Regiment and Southern Rhodesian Volunteers served in the Second Boer War South Africa Edit During the war the British army also included substantial contingents from South Africa itself There were large communities of English speaking immigrants and settlers in Natal and Cape Colony especially around Cape Town and Grahamstown which formed volunteer units that took the field or local town guards At one stage of the war a Colonial Division consisting of five light horse and infantry units under Brigadier General Edward Brabant took part in the invasion of the Orange Free State Part of it withstood a siege by Christiaan de Wet at Wepener on the borders of Basutoland Another large source of volunteers was the uitlander community many of whom hastily left Johannesburg in the days immediately preceding the war Rhodesian volunteers leaving Salisbury for service in the Second Boer War 1899 Later during the war Lord Kitchener attempted to form a Boer Police Force as part of his efforts to pacify the occupied areas and effect a reconciliation with the Boer community The members of this force were despised as traitors by the Boers still in the field Those Boers who attempted to remain neutral after giving their parole to British forces were derided as hensoppers hands uppers and were often coerced into giving support to the Boer guerrillas which formed one of the reasons for the British decision to launch scorched earth campaigns throughout the countryside and detain Boers in concentration camps in order to deny anything of use to the Boer guerillas citation needed Like the Canadian and particularly the Australian and New Zealand contingents many of the volunteer units formed by South Africans were light horse or mounted infantry well suited to the countryside and manner of warfare Some regular British officers scorned their comparative lack of formal discipline but the light horse units were hardier and more suited to the demands of campaigning than the overloaded British cavalry who were still obsessed with the charge by lance or sabre g At their peak 24 000 South Africans including volunteers from the Empire served in the field in various colonial units Notable units in addition to the Imperial Light Horse were the South African Light Horse Rimington s Guides Kitchener s Horse and the Imperial Light Infantry citation needed Notable participants EditBoer leaders Edit Louis Botha Koos de la Rey Paul Kruger Christiaan de WetUnited Kingdom and empire Edit Military leaders Edit Redvers Buller Robert Baden Powell 1st Baron Baden Powell Douglas Haig 1st Earl Haig John French 1st Earl of Ypres Herbert Kitchener 1st Earl Kitchener Frederick Roberts 1st Earl RobertsCivilains and other combatants Edit Harold Lothrop Borden Only son of Canada s Canadian Minister of Defence and Militia Frederick William Borden Serving in the Royal Canadian Dragoons he became the most famous Canadian casualty of the Second Boer War 146 Queen Victoria asked F W Borden for a photograph of his son Prime Minister Wilfrid Laurier praised his services tributes arrived from across Canada and in his home town Canning Nova Scotia there is a monument by Hamilton MacCarthy erected to his memory 146 Memorial at Plymouth by Emil Fuchs Sam Hughes Senior Militia officer and later a Federally elected cabinet minister As a very patriotic individual Hughes became involved in the Boer war as a member of Brigadier General Herbert Settle s expedition after Hughes unsuccessfully tried to raise his own brigade of soldiers 132 Hughes was noted by his colleagues for having a dislike of professional soldiers and he was noted for being an exceptional leader of irregular soldiers whom he preferred to lead in combat 147 However Hughes was dismissed and was sent home in the summer of 1900 for sending letters back home which were published outlining British command incompetence his impatience and boastfulness and his providing surrendering enemies favourable conditions When he arrived back in Canada Hughes became very active politically and he would eventually start his political career with the Conservatives When he became a Member of Parliament Canada MP Hughes would be in the position to become the Canadian Minister of Defence and Militia in 1911 just prior the outbreak of World War I This was a position that Hughes would be dismissed from in 1916 due once again to his impatience among other reasons 147 John McCrae Best known as the author of the World War I poem In Flanders Fields McCrae started his active military service in the Boer War as an artillery officer After completing several major campaigns McCrae s artillery unit was sent home to Canada in 1901 with what would be referred to today as an honourable discharge McCrae ended up becoming a special professor in the University of Vermont for pathology and he would later serve in World War I as a Medical officer until his death from pneumonia while on active duty in 1918 148 Harry Breaker Morant Australian soldier bush poet and horse breaker hence his nickname who as a commanding officer is accused of participation in summary executions of Boer prisoners under orders from Kitchener it was argued by Morant and co accused during his court martial although this is still debated due to the lack of British military papers being released for examination by Australian military historians and the killing of a German missionary who had been a witness to the shootings Morant was found guilty along with Peter Handcock and George Witton at their court martial with the two former being executed and the latter s sentence commuted and later released from British prison to return to Australia after sustained public pressure to do so 149 This entire affair is still extremely controversial in Australian military history predominantly regarding Australian officers under the command of British officers being tried by the British instead of by fellow Australians as Federation occurred during the Boer War A group of British prisoners with Winston Churchill on the right Winston Churchill Best known as the prime minister of Britain during the main part of the Second World War Churchill worked as a war correspondent for The Morning Post At the age of twenty six 150 he was captured and held prisoner in a camp in Pretoria from which he escaped and rejoined the British army He received a commission in the South African Light Horse still working as a correspondent and witnessed the capture of Ladysmith and Pretoria 151 Mahatma Gandhi Best known as the leader of the independence movement in India he lived in South Africa 1893 1915 where he worked on behalf of Indians He volunteered in 1900 to help the British by forming teams of ambulance drivers and raising 1100 Indian volunteer medics At Spioenkop Gandhi and his bearers had to carry wounded soldiers for miles to a field hospital because the terrain was too rough for the ambulances General Redvers Buller mentioned the courage of the Indians in his dispatch Gandhi and thirty seven other Indians received the War Medal 152 Sir Arthur Conan Doyle Author and creator of Sherlock Holmes Served as a volunteer doctor in the Langman Field Hospital at Bloemfontein between March and June 1900 In his widely distributed and translated pamphlet The War in South Africa Its Cause and Conduct he justified both the reasonings behind the war and handling of the conflict itself In response to complaints about concentration camps he pointed out that over 14 000 British soldiers had died of disease during the conflict as opposed to 8 000 killed in combat and at the height of epidemics he was seeing 50 60 British soldiers dying each day in a single ill equipped and overwhelmed military hospital 153 James Craig 1st Viscount Craigavon Future Prime Minister of Northern Ireland Served as a Captain in the 3rd Battalion of the Royal Irish Rifles and as part of the 13th battalion of the Imperial Yeomanry He was captured in 1900 but released due to a perforated colon and served as a deputy assistant director of the Imperial Military Railways until being evacuated to the UK due to ill health 154 155 156 157 158 Canadian Victoria Cross recipients Edit The Victoria Cross is the highest military medal available to soldiers of the Brirush Empire including those fighting for in Commonwealth armies and those of former British Territories It is awarded based on exemplary bravery and valour in the presence of danger 159 Four Canadian soldiers who fought in the Second Boer War were awarded the Victoria Cross Sergeant Arthur Herbert Lindsay Richardson of Lord Strathcona s Horse Richardson rode a wounded horse while wounded himself back into enemy fire to retrieve a wounded comrade whose horse had been killed at Wolve Spruit on 5 July 1900 159 Lieutenant Hampden Zane Churchill Cockburn of the Royal Canadian Dragoons Cockburn received his Victoria Cross on 7 November 1900 when his unit was the rear guard at Leliefontein Cockburn along with fellow Victoria Cross recipient Lieutenant R E W Turner held off an advancing group of Boer soldiers in order to allow two Canadian Field guns to escape along with their crews Cockburn was wounded and captured by the Boer soldiers 138 Lieutenant Richard Ernest William Turner of the Royal Canadian Dragoons Turner received his Victoria Cross in the same engagement as Cockburn 138 Though wounded Turner was still able to escape capture unlike Cockburn Turner would later become a high ranking officer in the Canadian army in World War I Sergeant Edward James Gibson Holland of the Royal Canadian Dragoons Holland received the Victoria Cross for valor during a rear guard action at the same battle as Cockburn and Turner Holland held off the advancing Boers with a carriage mounted Colt machine gun despite the position s becoming increasingly dangerous due to the proximity of the enemy Holland remained at his position until his gun jammed In order to prevent it from falling into enemy hands Holland removed the Colt from the carriage and retreated on horseback gun in hand 138 Final overview Edit Wounded British soldiers The Second Boer War was the harbinger of a new type of combat which would persevere throughout the twentieth century guerrilla warfare 125 After the war was over the entire British army underwent a period of reform which was focused on lessening the emphasis placed on mounted units in combat 160 It was determined that the traditional role of cavalry was antiquated and improperly used on the battlefield in the modern warfare of the Boer War and that the First World War was the final proof that mounted attacks had no place in twentieth century combat 160 Cavalry was put to better use after the reforms in the theatres of the Middle East and World War I and the idea of mounted infantry was useful in the times when the war was more mobile 160 An example was during the First World War during the Battle of Mons in which the British cavalry held the Belgian town against an initial German assault Another was the use of mounted infantry at the Battle of Megiddo 1918 in which Allenby s force routed the enemy owing to speed and dexterity of arms 161 The Canadian units of the Royal Canadian Dragoons and the Royal Canadian Mounted Rifles fought in the First World War in the same role as the Boer War However during and after the Second World War the regiments swapped their horses for mechanised vehicles 162 It was also the beginning of types of conflict involving machine guns shrapnel and observation balloons which were all used extensively in the First World War 125 To the Canadians however attrition was the leading cause of death in the second Boer war with disease being the cause of approximately half of the Canadian deaths 163 Canadian soldiers en route to South Africa in 1899 Canadians ended the war with four Victoria Crosses to its soldiers and two more Victoria Crosses were given to Canadian doctors attached to British Medical Corps units Lieutenant H E M Douglas 1899 Magersfontein and Lieutenant W H S Nickerson 1900 Wakkerstroom 132 Not all soldiers saw action since many landed in South Africa after the hostilities ended while others including the 3rd Special Service Battalion The Royal Canadian Regiment performed garrison duty in Halifax Nova Scotia so that their British counterparts could join at the front lines Later on contingents of Canadians served with the paramilitary South Africa Constabulary Both sides used a scorched Earth policy to deprive the marching enemy of food And both had to corral civilians into makeshift huts by concentrating them into camps 127 For example at Buffelspoort British soldiers were held in captivity in Boer encampments after surrendering their arms and civilians were often mixed in with service personnel because the Boers did not have the resources to do otherwise A total of 116 000 women children and Boer soldiers were confined to the Commonwealth concentration camps of which at least 28 000 mainly women and children would die 138 The lack of food water and sanitary provisions was a feature of 20th century warfare for both civilians and armed services personnel yet one consequence of the Boer War and investigative commissions was the implementation of The Hague Convention 1899 and Geneva Convention 1904 of which there were many further agreements thereafter Views on British tactics Edit The British saw their tactics of scorched earth and concentration camps as a legitimate way of depriving the Boer guerrillas of supplies and safe havens 164 The Boers saw them as a British attempt to coerce the Boers into surrender 165 with the camp inmates mainly families of Boer fighters seen as deliberately kept in poor conditions to encourage high death rates 166 Even in 2019 the controversy around the British tactics continued to make headlines 167 Commemorations EditThe Australian National Boer War Memorial Committee organises events to mark the war on 31 May each year In Canberra a commemorative service is usually held at the Saint John the Baptist Anglican Church in Reid Floral tributes are laid for the dead 168 See also EditBombardment in the Second Boer War British logistics in the Boer War First Italo Ethiopian War List of Second Boer War Victoria Cross recipients London to Ladysmith via Pretoria Military history of South Africa VolkstaatNotes Edit Larger numbers of volunteers came from the Netherlands Germany and Sweden Norway Smaller forces came from Ireland Australia Italy Congress Poland France Belgium Russia the United States Denmark and Austria Hungary 5 774 killed in battle 2 107 died of wounds 18 211 died of disease 7 309 3 990 killed in battle 157 died in accidents 924 of wounds and disease 1 118 while prisoners of war 8 79 Salisbury felt that the Transvaal the Orange Free State and Cape Boers aspired to a Dutch South Africa The achievement of such a state would damage British imperial prestige Although some 30 000 Irishmen served in the British Army under Irish General Lord Frederick Roberts who had been Commander of Chief of British Forces in Ireland prior to his transfer to South Africa some historians argue that the sympathies of many of their compatriots lay with the Boers Nationalist controlled local authorities passed pro Boer resolutions and there were proposals to confer civic honours on Boer leader Paul Kruger Irish Ambassador Daniel Mulhall written for History Ireland 2004 Lloyd George and Keir Hardie were members of the Stop the War Committee See the founder s biography William T Stead s Many British authors gave their Pro Boer opinions in British press such as G K Chesterton s writing to 1905 see Rice University Chesterton s poetry analysis British cavalry travelled light compared with earlier campaigns but were still expected to carry all kit with them on campaign owing to distances covered on the Veldt References EditCitations Edit Jones Huw M October 1999 Neutrality 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Australian War Memorial 2008 Australia and the Boer War 1899 1902 Australian War Memorial Archived from the original on 22 July 2012 Retrieved 10 May 2008 Wilcox 2002 p 103 The Full Story Claims 50 Aboriginal trackers left behind during the Boer War ABC News 31 May 2010 Retrieved 19 September 2014 Chronicle of the 20th Century by John S Bowman a b c d e f Webb 2010 pp 75 90 a b Marshall Robert Boer War Remembered Maclean s a b c Miller Carman South African War Canadian Encyclopedia a b Granatstein 2010 p page needed Canada amp The South African War 1899 1902 Canadian War Museum Retrieved 26 October 2022 The Guerrilla War Anglo Boer War Museum Rickard J The Black Week History of War a b c Canada amp The South African War 1899 1902 Canadian War Museum Cavendish Richard The Peace of Vereeniging History Today O Leary 1999 a b c Wessels Elria 2009 Boers positions in the Klipriviersberg Veldslae Anglo Boereoorlog 1899 1902 Archived from the original on 14 February 2013 Stirling 2009 a b Chase 2012 a b c d e f Pulsifer 2017 a b Reddy E S 29 July 1999 India And The Anglo Boer War Retrieved 5 June 2022 Itzkin Eric May 2009 The Indian War Memorial National Memory and Selective Forgetting PDF Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Retrieved 5 June 2022 New Zealand History Online 2008 Brief history New Zealand in the South African Boer War New Zealand History Retrieved 10 May 2008 New Zealand History Online 2008 New Zealand in the South African Boer War New Zealand History Retrieved 10 May 2008 D O W Hall War History Branch Wellington 1949 a b Pugsley Christopher 2016 The ANZAC Experience New Zealand Australia and Empire in the First World War Auckland New Zealand Oratia pp 42 43 Phillips Jock 1990 The Sorrow and the Pride New Zealand War Memorials Wellington New Zealand GP Books p 48 a b Borden Harold Lothrop Dictionary of Canadian Biography Volume XII 1891 1900 a b Duffy 2009 Peddie 2009 Witton 2003 p page needed Pakenham 1991a p 568 Powell 2015 p page needed Desai amp Vahed 2015 p page needed Miller Russell The Adventures of Arthur Conan Doyle New York Thomas Dunne Books 2008 pp 211 217 ISBN 0 312 37897 1 Patrick Buckland 1980 James Craig Lord Craigavon Gill and Macmillan p 3 No 27168 The London Gazette 23 February 1900 p 1256 No 27171 The London Gazette 6 March 1900 p 1528 The War Embarcation of Troops The Times 36078 London 1 March 1900 p 7 No 27475 The London Gazette 19 September 1902 p 6024 a b Victoria Cross PDF Government of Canada Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 6 December 2018 a b c Jones Spencer 2011 Scouting for Soldiers Reconnaissance and the British Cavalry 1899 1914 War in History 18 4 495 513 doi 10 1177 0968344511417348 S2CID 110398601 Baker Chris Battle of Mons History of Royal Canadian Dragoons Archived from the original on 22 November 2012 Canadian casualties in the Boer War Goldi Productions Ltd Sibbald 1993 p 214 Grundlingh Albert The Bitter Legacy of the Boer War History Today Barnard Hennie The Concentration Camps 1899 1902 Archived from the original on 3 November 2012 Retrieved 12 November 2012 Gous Nico Boer War women children put in concentration camps for own good British MP sparks outrage The Australian National Boer War Memorial bwm org au 31 May 2017 Retrieved 28 August 2019 Sources Edit Ash Chris 2020 The Boer War Atlas Durban 30 Degrees South ISBN 978 1 928359 83 8 Ash Chris 2017 Kruger s War The Truth behind the Myths of the Boer War Durban 30 Degrees South ISBN 978 1928211990 Berger Carl 1971 The Sense of Power Studies in the Ideas of Canadian Imperialism 1867 1914 University of Toronto Press pp 233 34 ISBN 978 0 8020 6113 3 OCLC 1036947483 Archived from the original on 27 January 2014 Bester R 1994 Boer Rifles and Carbines of the Anglo Boer War Bloemfontein War Museum of the Boer Republics Blake Albert 2010 Boereverraaier Farmer Traitor in Afrikaans Tafelberg p 46 Case Name Anglo Boer Britain s Vietnam 1899 1902 American University of Washington D C Trade Environment projects Archived from the original on 27 October 2016 Retrieved 21 July 2016 Davidson Apollon Filatova Irina 1998 The Russians and the Anglo Boer War 1899 1902 Cape Town Human amp Rousseau ISBN 0 7981 3804 1 Desai Ashwin Vahed Goolem 2015 The South African Gandhi Stretcher bearer of Empire Stanford University Press Miscellaneous information Cost of the war AngloBoerWar com 2015 Retrieved 12 September 2015 unreliable source Chase Sean 4 November 2012 Dragoons remember the heroes of Leliefontein Daily Observer Archived from the original on 28 June 2018 Retrieved 12 November 2012 Duffy Michael 22 August 2009 Sam Hughes Biography firstworldwar com unreliable source Cameron Trewhella ed 1986 An Illustrated History of South Africa Johannesburg Jonathan Ball p 207 Cartwright A P 1964 The Dynamite Company Cape Town Purnell amp Sons Davis Richard Harding 1900 With Both Armies In South Africa Charles Scribner Sons p 34 fn 59 Farwell Byron March 1976 Taking Sides in the Boer War American Heritage Magazine 20 3 ISSN 0002 8738 Archived from the original on 7 January 2009 Ferguson Niall 2002 Empire The Rise and Demise of the British World Order and the Lessons for Global Power Basic Books p 235 Grundlingh Albert 1980 Collaborators in Boer Society In Warwick P ed The South African War London pp 258 78 Granatstein J L 2010 The Oxford Companion to Canadian Military History Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 543088 2 Grattan Robert 2009 The Entente in World War I a case study in strategy formulation in an alliance Journal of Management History 15 2 147 58 doi 10 1108 17511340910943796 Gronum M A 1977 Die ontplooiing van die Engelse Oorlog 1899 1900 The Deployment of the English War 1899 1900 in Afrikaans Tafelberg ISBN 978 0 624 01009 8 Haydon A P 1964 South Australia s first war Australian Historical Studies 11 42 Hayes Matthew Horace 1902 Horses on board ship a guide to their management London Hurst and Blackett pp 213 14 Inglis Brian 1974 Roger Casement London Coronet Books pp 53 55 Jeffery Keith 2000 The Irish Soldier in the Boer War In Gooch John ed The Boer War London Cass p 145 cites Jacson M 1908 II The Record of a Regiment of the Line Hutchinson amp Company p 88 ISBN 1 4264 9111 5 Jones Maurig 1996 Blockhouses of the Boer War Colonial Conquest magweb Archived from the original on 13 May 2008 Retrieved 10 May 2008 Jones Huw M October 1999 Neutrality compromised Swaziland and the Anglo Boer War 1899 1902 Military History Journal 11 3 4 Archived from the original on 22 December 2015 Retrieved 19 August 2010 Judd Denis Surridge Keith 2013 The Boer War A History 2nd ed London I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 78076 591 4 excerpt and text search a standard scholarly history Keppel Jones Arthur 1983 Rhodes and Rhodesia The White Conquest of Zimbabwe 1884 1902 Montreal Quebec and Kingston Ontario McGill Queen s University Press pp 590 99 ISBN 978 0 7735 0534 6 McElwee William 1974 The Art of War Waterloo to Mons London Purnell pp 223 29 ISBN 0 253 31075 X Relative Value of UK using Economic Power in 2014 using the share of GDP Five Ways to Compute the Relative Value of a UK Pound Amount 1270 to Present Measuringworth com 2015 Retrieved 12 September 2015 Marsh Peter T 1994 Joseph Chamberlain Entrepreneur in Politics Yale University Press pp 482 522 Meintjes Johannes 1974 President Paul Kruger A Biography First ed London Cassell ISBN 978 0 304 29423 7 Morris Michael Linnegar John 2004 Chapter 3 Being in Touch Every Step of the Way The Journey to Freedom in South Africa Ministry of Education pp 58 95 ISBN 0 7969 2061 3 Nasson Bill 2011 The War for South Africa The Anglo Boer War 1899 1902 ISBN 978 0349104669 Nathan M 1941 Paul Kruger His Life And Times Durban Knox O Brien P 1988 The Costs and Benefits of British Imperialism 1846 1914 Past amp Present O Leary Michael 29 December 1999 Regimental Rouge Battles of the Boer War Regimental Rouge Pakenham Thomas 1979 The Boer War New York Random House ISBN 0 394 42742 4 Peddie John 22 August 2009 John McCrae Biography firstworldwar com Pocock Roger S 1917 Horses London J Murray p viii fn 11 ISBN 0 665 99382 X Powell Sean Andre 2015 How Did Winston S Churchill s Experience As A Prisoner Of War During The Boer War Affect His Leadership Style And Career Pickle Partners Publishing Onselen Charles van 1982 Chapter 1 New Babylon Studies in the Social and Economic History of the Witwatersrand 1886 1914 London Longman ISBN 978 0 582 64384 0 Onselen Charles van October 2003 The Modernization of the Zuid Afrikaansche Republiek F E T Krause J C Smuts and the Struggle for the Johannesburg Public Prosecutor s Office 1898 1899 Law and History Review American Society for Legal History 21 3 483 526 doi 10 2307 3595118 JSTOR 3595118 S2CID 145286422 Pakenham Thomas 1991 1979 The Boer War London Cardinal p 571 ISBN 0 7474 0976 5 Pakenham Thomas 1991a The Scramble for Africa Avon Books p 573 ISBN 0 380 71999 1 Ploeger Jan 1985 Burgers in Britse Diens 1902 Citizens in British Service Scientia Militaria in Afrikaans 15 1 15 22 Pretorius Fransjohan 2000 The Experience of the Bitter Ender Boer In Gooch John ed The Boer War Direction Experience and Image London Cass p 179 Pretorius Fransjohan 2011 Anglo Boer war In Jacobs S Johnson K eds Encyclopedia of South Africa Pulsifer Cameron 2017 For Queen and Country Canadians and the South African War Canadian War Museum Retrieved 2 February 2017 Scott John L 2007 British Concentration Camps of the Second South African War The Transvaal 1900 1902 The South African War 1899 1902 South African History Online 10 November 2011 Retrieved 29 January 2017 Searle G R 2004 A new England peace and war 1886 1918 Oxford University Press pp 269 307 Spies S B 1977 Methods of Barbarism Roberts and Kitchener and Civilians in the Boer Republics January 1900 May 1902 Cape Town Human amp Rousseau p 265 Sibbald Raymond 1993 The War Correspondents The Boer War Bramley Books ISBN 1 85833 733 X Stirling John 17 February 2009 Gordon Highlanders extract Our Regiments in South Africa Naval and Military Press Surridge Keith 2000 Lansdowne at the War Office In Gooch John ed The Boer War Direction Experience and Image London Cass p 24 Swardt Eric 1998 The JJ Potgieter Manuscript PDF p 97 Archived from the original PDF on 16 August 2010 Retrieved 23 August 2009 Villiers J C de June 1984 The Medical Aspect of the Anglo Boer War 1899 1902 Part ll Military History Journal 6 3 page needed Warwick Peter 1983 Black People and the South African War 1899 1902 Cambridge University Press Watt S December 1982 Intombi Military Hospital and Cemetery Military History Journal Die Suid Afrikaanse Krygshistoriese Vereniging The South African Military History Association 5 6 Webb Peter 2010 The Silent Flag in the New Fallen Snow Sara Jeannette Duncan and the Legacy of the South African War Journal of Canadian Studies University of Toronto Press 44 1 75 90 Archived from the original on 5 February 2017 Retrieved 4 February 2017 Wessels Andre 2000 Afrikaners at War In Gooch John ed The Boer War Direction Experience and Image London Cass Wessels Andre 2010 A Century of Postgraduate Anglo Boer War 1899 1902 Studies Masters and Doctoral Studies Completed at Universities in South Africa in English speaking Countries and on the European Continent 1908 2008 African Sun Media p 32 ISBN 978 1 920383 09 1 Wessels Andre 2011 The Anglo Boer War 1889 1902 White Man s War Black Man s War Traumatic War African Sun Media p 79 ISBN 978 1 920383 27 5 Wessels Elria 2009 Boers positions in the Klipriviersberg Veldslae Anglo Boereoorlog 1899 1902 Archived from the original on 14 February 2013 Wilcox Craig 2002 Australia s Boer War The War in South Africa 1899 1902 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 551637 1 Witton George 2003 Scapegoats of the Empire The True Story of Breaker Morant s Bushveldt Carbineers excerpt Yap Melanie Leong Man Dainne 1996 Colour Confusion and Concessions The History of the Chinese in South Africa Hong Kong Hong Kong University Press p 510 ISBN 9 6220 9423 6 Historiography EditKrebs Paula M Gender Race and the Writing of Empire Public Discourse and the Boer War Cambridge UP 1999 online Seibold Birgit Emily Hobhouse and the Reports on the Concentration Camps during the Boer War 1899 1902 Two Different Perspectives Columbia UP 2011 Van Hartesveldt Fred R The Boer War Historiography and Annotated Bibliography Greenwood 2000 onlineFurther reading EditGooch John ed The Boer War Direction Experience and Image London Cass p 179 an anthology frequently cited in this article Murray Nicholas 2013 The Rocky Road to the Great War the Evolution of Trench Warfare to 1914 Dulles Virginia Potomac Books Ockerbloom John Mark ed 2017 South African War 1899 1902 The Online Books Page a Boer War bibliography of on line books British War Office Maurice Sir John Frederick Grant Maurice Harold 1906 1910 History of the war in South Africa 1899 1902 1st in four volumes ed detailed official British history volume 1 maps volume 1 1906 volume 2 maps volume 2 1907 volume 3 maps volume 3 1908 volume 4 maps volume 4 1910 Reitz Deneys 1929 Commando A Boer Journal of the Boer War OCLC 801364049 SOUTH AFRICAN WAR CONCENTRATION CAMPS HC Deb 04 March 1902 vol 104 cc402 67 Hansard Parliament of the United KingdomExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Second Boer War Wikimedia Commons has media related to Memorials of the Boer wars Wikiquote has quotations related to Second Boer War Americanhistoryprojects com links to books amp articles on Second Boer War Scrapbook of Boer War MSS P 456 at L Tom Perry Special Collections Harold B Lee Library Brigham Young University Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Second Boer War amp oldid 1131796789, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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