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Chapter 2 The Cause Of Quarrel
There might almost seem to be some subtle connection between the
barrenness and worthlessness of a surface and the value of the minerals
which lie beneath it. The craggy mountains of Western America, the arid
plains of West Australia, the ice-bound gorges of the Klondyke, and the bare
slopes of the Witwatersrand veld--these are the lids which cover the great
treasure chests of the world.
Gold had been known to exist in the Transvaal before, but it was only in
1886 that it was realised that the deposits which lie some thirty miles
south of the capital are of a very extraordinary and valuable nature. The
proportion of gold in the quartz is not particularly high, nor are the veins
of a remarkable thickness, but the peculiarity of the Rand mines lies in the
fact that throughout this 'banket' formation the metal is so uniformly
distributed that the enterprise can claim a certainty which is not usually
associated with the industry. It is quarrying rather than mining. Add to
this that the reefs which were originally worked as outcrops have now been
traced to enormous depths, and present the same features as those at the
surface. A conservative estimate of the value of the gold has placed it at
seven hundred millions of pounds.
Such a discovery produced the inevitable effect. A great number of
adventurers flocked into the country, some desirable and some very much the
reverse. There were circumstances, however, which kept away the rowdy and
desperado element who usually make for a newly opened goldfield. It was not
a class of mining which encouraged the individual adventurer. There were
none of those nuggets which gleamed through the mud of the dollies at
Ballarat, or recompensed the forty-niners in California for all their
travels and their toils. It was a field for elaborate machinery, which could
only be provided by capital. Managers, engineers, miners, technical experts,
and the tradesmen and middlemen who live upon them, these were the
Uitlanders, drawn from all the races under the sun, but with the
Anglo-Celtic vastly predominant. The best engineers were American, the best
miners were Cornish, the best managers were English, the money to run the
mines was largely subscribed in England. As time went on, however, the
German and French interests became more extensive, until their joint
holdings are now probably as heavy as those of the British. Soon the
population of the mining centres became greater than that of the whole Boer
community, and consisted mainly of men in the prime of life--men, too, of
exceptional intelligence and energy.
The situation was an extraordinary one. I have already attempted to bring
the problem home to an American by suggesting that the Dutch of New York had
trekked west and founded an anti-American and highly unprogressive State. To
carry out the analogy we will now suppose that that State was California,
that the gold of that State attracted a large inrush of American citizens,
who came to outnumber the original inhabitants, that these citizens were
heavily taxed and badly used, and that they deafened Washington with their
outcry about their injuries. That would be a fair parallel to the relations
between the Transvaal, the Uitlanders, and the British Government.
That these Uitlanders had very real and pressing grievances no one could
possibly deny. To recount them all would be a formidable task, for their
whole lives were darkened by injustice. There was not a wrong which had
driven the Boer from Cape Colony which he did not now practise himself upon
others--and a wrong may be excusable in 1885 which is monstrous in 1895. The
primitive virtue which had characterised the farmers broke down in the face
of temptation. The country Boers were little affected, some of them not at
all, but the Pretoria Government became a most corrupt oligarchy, venal and
incompetent to the last degree. Officials and imported Hollanders handled
the stream of gold which came in from the mines, while the unfortunate
Uitlander who paid nine-tenths of the taxation was fleeced at every turn,
and met with laughter and taunts when he endeavoured to win the franchise by
which he might peaceably set right the wrongs from which he suffered. He was
not an unreasonable person. On the contrary, he was patient to the verge of
meekness, as capital is likely to be when it is surrounded by rifles. But
his situation was intolerable, and after successive attempts at peaceful
agitation, and numerous humble petitions to the Volksraad, he began at last
to realise that he would never obtain redress unless he could find some way
of winning it for himself.
Without attempting to enumerate all the wrongs which embittered the
Uitlanders, the more serious of them may be summed up in this way.
1. That they were heavily taxed and provided about seven-eighths of
the revenue of the country. The revenue of the South African
Republic--which had been 154,000 pounds in 1886, when the gold fields
were opened--had grown in 1899 to four million pounds, and the country
through the industry of the newcomers had changed from one of the
poorest to the richest in the whole world (per head of population).
2. That in spite of this prosperity which they had brought, they, the
majority of the inhabitants of the country, were left without a vote,
and could by no means influence the disposal of the great sums which
they were providing. Such a case of taxation without representation has
never been known.
3. That they had no voice in the choice or payment of officials. Men of
the worst private character might be placed with complete authority over
valuable interests. Upon one occasion the Minister of Mines attempted
himself to jump a mine, having officially learned some flaw in its
title. The total official salaries had risen in 1899 to a sum sufficient
to pay 40 pounds per head to the entire male Boer population.
4. That they had no control over education. Mr. John Robinson, the
Director General of the Johannesburg Educational Council, has reckoned
the sum spent on Uitlander schools as 650 pounds out of 63,000 pounds
allotted for education, making one shilling and tenpence per head per
annum on Uitlander children, and eight pounds six shillings per head on
Boer children--the Uitlander, as always, paying seven-eighths of the
original sum.
5. No power of municipal government. Watercarts instead of pipes, filthy
buckets instead of drains, a corrupt and violent police, a high
death-rate in what should be a health resort--all this in a city which
they had built themselves.
6. Despotic government in the matter of the press and of the right of
public meeting.
7. Disability from service upon a jury.
8. Continual harassing of the mining interest by vexatious legislation.
Under this head came many grievances, some special to the mines and some
affecting all Uitlanders. The dynamite monopoly, by which the miners had
to pay 600,000 pounds extra per annum in order to get a worse quality of
dynamite; the liquor laws, by which one-third of the Kaffirs were
allowed to be habitually drunk; the incompetence and extortions of the
State-owned railway; the granting of concessions for numerous articles
of ordinary consumption to individuals, by which high prices were
maintained; the surrounding of Johannesburg by tolls from which the town
had no profit--these were among the economical grievances, some large,
some petty, which ramified through every transaction of life.
And outside and beyond all these definite wrongs imagine to a free born
progressive man, an American or a Briton, the constant irritation of being
absolutely ruled by a body of twenty-five men, twenty-one of whom had in the
case of the Selati Railway Company been publicly and circumstantially
accused of bribery, with full details of the bribes received, while to their
corruption they added such crass ignorance that they argue in the published
reports of the Volksraad debates that using dynamite bombs to bring down
rain was firing at God, that it is impious to destroy locusts, that the word
'participate' should not be used because it is not in the Bible, and that
postal pillar boxes are extravagant and effeminate. Such obiter dicta may be
amusing at a distance, but they are less entertaining when they come from an
autocrat who has complete power over the conditions of your life.
From the fact that they were a community extremely preoccupied by their own
business, it followed that the Uitlanders were not ardent politicians, and
that they desired to have a share in the government of the State for the
purpose of making the conditions of their own industry and of their own
daily lives more endurable. How far there was need of such an interference
may be judged by any fair-minded man who reads the list of their complaints.
A superficial view may recognise the Boers as the champions of liberty, but
a deeper insight must see that they (as represented by their elected rulers)
have in truth stood for all that history has shown to be odious in the form
of exclusiveness and oppression. Their conception of liberty has been a
selfish one, and they have consistently inflicted upon others far heavier
wrongs than those against which they had themselves rebelled.
As the mines increased in importance and the miners in numbers, it was found
that these political disabilities affected some of that cosmopolitan crowd
far more than others, in proportion to the amount of freedom to which their
home institutions had made them accustomed. The continental Uitlanders were
more patient of that which was unendurable to the American and the Briton.
The Americans, however, were in so great a minority that it was upon the
British that the brunt of the struggle for freedom fell. Apart from the fact
that the British were more numerous than all the other Uitlanders combined,
there were special reasons why they should feel their humiliating position
more than the members of any other race. In the first place, many of the
British were British South Africans, who knew that in the neighbouring
countries which gave them birth the most liberal possible institutions had
been given to the kinsmen of these very Boers who were refusing them the
management of their own drains and water supply. And again, every Briton
knew that Great Britain claimed to be the paramount power in South Africa,
and so he felt as if his own land, to which he might have looked for
protection, was conniving at and acquiescing in his ill treatment. As
citizens of the paramount power, it was peculiarly galling that they should
be held in political subjection. The British, therefore, were the most
persistent and energetic of the agitators.
But it is a poor cause which cannot bear to fairly state and honestly
consider the case of its opponents. The Boers had made, as has been briefly
shown, great efforts to establish a country of their own. They had travelled
far, worked hard, and fought bravely. After all their efforts they were
fated to see an influx of strangers into their country, some of them men of
questionable character, who outnumbered the original inhabitants. If the
franchise were granted to these, there could be no doubt that though at
first the Boers might control a majority of the votes, it was only a
question of time before the newcomers would dominate the Raad and elect
their own President, who might adopt a policy abhorrent to the original
owners of the land. Were the Boers to lose by the ballot-box the victory
which they had won by their rifles? Was it fair to expect it? These
newcomers came for gold. They got their gold. Their companies paid a hundred
per cent. Was not that enough to satisfy them? If they did not like the
country why did they not leave it? No one compelled them to stay there. But
if they stayed, let them be thankful that they were tolerated at all, and
not presume to interfere with the laws of those by whose courtesy they were
allowed to enter the country.
That is a fair statement of the Boer position, and at first sight an
impartial man might say that there was a good deal to say for it; but a
closer examination would show that, though it might be tenable in theory, it
is unjust and impossible in practice.
In the present crowded state of the world a policy of Thibet may be carried
out in some obscure corner, but it cannot be done in a great tract of
country which lies right across the main line of industrial progress. The
position is too absolutely artificial. A handful of people by the right of
conquest take possession of an enormous country over which they are dotted
at such intervals that it is their boast that one farmhouse cannot see the
smoke of another, and yet, though their numbers are so disproportionate to
the area which they cover, they refuse to admit any other people upon equal
terms, but claim to be a privileged class who shall dominate the newcomers
completely. They are outnumbered in their own land by immigrants who are far
more highly educated and progressive, and yet they hold them down in a way
which exists nowhere else upon earth. What is their right? The right of
conquest. Then the same right may be justly invoked to reverse so
intolerable a situation. This they would themselves acknowledge. 'Come on
and fight! Come on!' cried a member of the Volksraad when the franchise
petition of the Uitlanders was presented. 'Protest! Protest! What is the
good of protesting? ' said Kruger to Mr. W. Y. Campbell; 'you have not got
the guns, I have. ' There was always the final court of appeal. Judge
Creusot and Judge Mauser were always behind the President.
Again, the argument of the Boers would be more valid had they received no
benefit from these immigrants. If they had ignored them they might fairly
have stated that they did not desire their presence. But even while they
protested they grew rich at the Uitlander's expense. They could not have it
both ways. It would be consistent to discourage him and not profit by him,
or to make him comfortable and build the State upon his money; but to
ill-treat him and at the same time to grow strong by his taxation must
surely be an injustice.
And again, the whole argument is based upon the narrow racial supposition
that every naturalised citizen not of Boer extraction must necessarily be
unpatriotic. This is not borne out by the examples of history. The newcomer
soon becomes as proud of his country and as jealous of her liberty as the
old. Had President Kruger given the franchise generously to the Uitlander,
his pyramid would have been firm upon its base and not balanced upon its
apex. It is true that the corrupt oligarchy would have vanished, and the
spirit of a broader more tolerant freedom influenced the counsels of the
State. But the republic would have become stronger and more permanent, with
a population who, if they differed in details, were united in essentials.
Whether such a solution would have been to the advantage of British
interests in South Africa is quite another question. In more ways than one
President Kruger has been a good friend to the empire.
So much upon the general question of the reason why the Uitlander should
agitate and why the Boer was obdurate. The details of the long struggle
between the seekers for the franchise and the refusers of it may be quickly
sketched, but they cannot be entirely ignored by any one who desires to
understand the inception of that great contest which was the outcome of the
dispute.
At the time of the Convention of Pretoria (1881) the rights of burghership
might be obtained by one year's residence. In 1882 it was raised to five
years, the reasonable limit which obtains both in Great Britain and in the
United States. Had it remained so, it is safe to say that there would never
have been either an Uitlander question or a great Boer war. Grievances would
have been righted from the inside without external interference.
In 1890 the inrush of outsiders alarmed the Boers, and the franchise was
raised so as to be only attainable by those who had lived fourteen years in
the country. The Uitlanders, who were increasing rapidly in numbers and were
suffering from the formidable list of grievances already enumerated,
perceived that their wrongs were so numerous that it was hopeless to have
them set right seriatim, and that only by obtaining the leverage of the
franchise could they hope to move the heavy burden which weighed them down.
In 1893 a petition of 13,000 Uitlanders, couched in most respectful terms,
was submitted to the Raad, but met with contemptuous neglect. Undeterred,
however, by this failure, the National Reform Union, an association which
organised the agitation, came back to the attack in 1894. They drew up a
petition which was signed by 35,000 adult male Uitlanders, a greater number
than the total Boer male population of the country. A small liberal body in
the Raad supported this memorial and endeavoured in vain to obtain some
justice for the newcomers. Mr. Jeppe was the mouthpiece of this select band.
'They own half the soil, they pay at least three quarters of the taxes,'
said he. 'They are men who in capital, energy, and education are at least
our equals.
What will become of us or our children on that day when we may find
ourselves in a minority of one in twenty without a single friend among the
other nineteen, among those who will then tell us that they wished to be
brothers, but that we by our own act have made them strangers to the
republic? ' Such reasonable and liberal sentiments were combated by members
who asserted that the signatures could not belong to law-abiding citizens,
since they were actually agitating against the law of the franchise, and
others whose intolerance was expressed by the defiance of the member already
quoted, who challenged the Uitlanders to come out and fight. The champions
of exclusiveness and racial hatred won the day. The memorial was rejected by
sixteen votes to eight, and the franchise law was, on the initiative of the
President, actually made more stringent than ever, being framed in such a
way that during the fourteen years of probation the applicant should give up
his previous nationality, so that for that period he would really belong to
no country at all. No hopes were held out that any possible attitude upon
the part of the Uitlanders would soften the determination of the President
and his burghers. One who remonstrated was led outside the State buildings
by the President, who pointed up at the national flag. 'You see that flag? '
said he. 'If I grant the franchise, I may as well pull it down. ' His
animosity against the immigrants was bitter. 'Burghers, friends, thieves,
murderers, newcomers, and others,' is the conciliatory opening of one of his
public addresses. Though Johannesburg is only thirty-two miles from
Pretoria, and though the State of which he was the head depended for its
revenue upon the gold fields, he paid it only three visits in nine years.
This settled animosity was deplorable, but not unnatural. A man imbued with
the idea of a chosen people, and unread in any book save the one which
cultivates this very idea, could not be expected to have learned the
historical lessons of the advantages which a State reaps from a liberal
policy. To him it was as if the Ammonites and Moabites had demanded
admission into the twelve tribes. He mistook an agitation against the
exclusive policy of the State for one against the existence of the State
itself. A wide franchise would have made his republic firm-based and
permanent. It was a small minority of the Uitlanders who had any desire to
come into the British system. They were a cosmopolitan crowd, only united by
the bond of a common injustice. But when every other method had failed, and
their petition for the rights of freemen had been flung back at them, it was
natural that their eyes should turn to that flag which waved to the north,
the west, and the south of them--the flag which means purity of government
with equal rights and equal duties for all men. Constitutional agitation was
laid aside, arms were smuggled in, and everything prepared for an organised
rising.
The events which followed at the beginning of 1896 have been so thrashed out
that there is, perhaps, nothing left to tell--except the truth. So far as
the Uitlanders themselves are concerned, their action was most natural and
justifiable, and they have no reason to exculpate themselves for rising
against such oppression as no men of our race have ever been submitted to.
Had they trusted only to themselves and the justice of their cause, their
moral and even their material position would have been infinitely stronger.
But unfortunately there were forces behind them which were more
questionable, the nature and extent of which have never yet, in spite of two
commissions of investigation, been properly revealed. That there should have
been any attempt at misleading inquiry, or suppressing documents in order to
shelter individuals, is deplorable, for the impression left--I believe an
entirely false one--must be that the British Government connived at an
expedition which was as immoral as it was disastrous.
It had been arranged that the town was to rise upon a certain night, that
Pretoria should be attacked, the fort seized, and the rifles and ammunition
used to arm the Uitlanders. It was a feasible device, though it must seem to
us, who have had such an experience of the military virtues of the burghers,
a very desperate one. But it is conceivable that the rebels might have held
Johannesburg until the universal sympathy which their cause excited
throughout South Africa would have caused Great Britain to intervene.
Unfortunately they had complicated matters by asking for outside help. Mr.
Cecil Rhodes was Premier of the Cape, a man of immense energy, and one who
had rendered great services to the empire. The motives of his action are
obscure--certainly, we may say that they were not sordid, for he has always
been a man whose thoughts were large and whose habits were simple. But
whatever they may have been--whether an ill-regulated desire to consolidate
South Africa under British rule, or a burning sympathy with the Uitlanders
in their fight against injustice--it is certain that he allowed his
lieutenant, Dr. Jameson, to assemble the mounted police of the Chartered
Company, of which Rhodes was founder and director, for the purpose of
co-operating with the rebels at Johannesburg. Moreover, when the revolt at
Johannesburg was postponed, on account of a disagreement as to which flag
they were to rise under, it appears that Jameson (with or without the orders
of Rhodes) forced the hand of the conspirators by invading the country with
a force absurdly inadequate to the work which he had taken in hand. Five
hundred policemen and three field guns made up the forlorn hope who started
from near Mafeking and crossed the Transvaal border upon December 29th,
1895. On January 2nd they were surrounded by the Boers amid the broken
country near Dornkop, and after losing many of their number killed and
wounded, without food and with spent horses, they were compelled to lay down
their arms. Six burghers lost their lives in the skirmish.
The Uitlanders have been severely criticised for not having sent out a force
to help Jameson in his difficulties, but it is impossible to see how they
could have acted in any other manner. They had done all they could to
prevent Jameson coming to their relief, and now it was rather unreasonable
to suppose that they should relieve their reliever. Indeed, they had an
entirely exaggerated idea of the strength of the force which he was
bringing, and received the news of his capture with incredulity. When it
became confirmed they rose, but in a halfhearted fashion which was not due
to want of courage, but to the difficulties of their position. On the one
hand, the British Government disowned Jameson entirely, and did all it could
to discourage the rising; on the other, the President had the raiders in his
keeping at Pretoria, and let it be understood that their fate depended upon
the behaviour of the Uitlanders. They were led to believe that Jameson would
be shot unless they laid down their arms, though, as a matter of fact,
Jameson and his people had surrendered upon a promise of quarter. So
skillfully did Kruger use his hostages that he succeeded, with the help of
the British Commissioner, in getting the thousands of excited
Johannesburgers to lay down their arms without bloodshed. Completely
out-manoeuvred by the astute old President, the leaders of the reform
movement used all their influence in the direction of peace, thinking that a
general amnesty would follow; but the moment that they and their people were
helpless the detectives and armed burghers occupied the town, and sixty of
their number were hurried to Pretoria Gaol.
To the raiders themselves the President behaved with great generosity.
Perhaps he could not find it in his heart to be harsh to the men who had
managed to put him in the right and won for him the sympathy of the world.
His own illiberal and oppressive treatment of the newcomers was forgotten in
the face of this illegal inroad of filibusters. The true issues were so
obscured by this intrusion that it has taken years to clear them, and
perhaps they will never be wholly cleared. It was forgotten that it was the
bad government of the country which was the real cause of the unfortunate
raid. From then onwards the government might grow worse and worse, but it
was always possible to point to the raid as justifying everything. Were the
Uitlanders to have the franchise? How could they expect it after the raid?
Would Britain object to the enormous importation of arms and obvious
preparations for war? They were only precautions against a second raid. For
years the raid stood in the way, not only of all progress, but of all
remonstrance. Through an action over which they had no control, and which
they had done their best to prevent, the British Government was left with a
bad case and a weakened moral authority.
The raiders were sent home, where the rank and file were very properly
released, and the chief officers were condemned to terms of imprisonment
which certainly did not err upon the side of severity. Cecil Rhodes was left
unpunished, he retained his place in the Privy Council, and his Chartered
Company continued to have a corporate existence. This was illogical and
inconclusive. As Kruger said, 'It is not the dog which should be beaten, but
the man who set him on to me. ' Public opinion--in spite of, or on account
of, a crowd of witnesses--was ill informed upon the exact bearings of the
question, and it was obvious that as Dutch sentiment at the Cape appeared
already to be thoroughly hostile to us, it would be dangerous to alienate
the British Africanders also by making a martyr of their favourite leader.
But whatever arguments may be founded upon expediency, it is clear that the
Boers bitterly resented, and with justice, the immunity of Rhodes.
In the meantime, both President Kruger and his burghers had shown a greater
severity to the political prisoners from Johannesburg than to the armed
followers of Jameson. The nationality of these prisoners is interesting and
suggestive. There were twenty-three Englishmen, sixteen South Africans, nine
Scotchmen, six Americans, two Welshmen, one Irishman, one Australian, one
Hollander, one Bavarian, one Canadian, one Swiss, and one Turk. The
prisoners were arrested in January, but the trial did not take place until
the end of April. All were found guilty of high treason. Mr. Lionel
Phillips, Colonel Rhodes (brother of Mr. Cecil Rhodes), George Farrar, and
Mr. Hammond, the American engineer, were condemned to death, a sentence
which was afterwards commuted to the payment of an enormous fine. The other
prisoners were condemned to two years' imprisonment, with a fine of 2000
pounds each. The imprisonment was of the most arduous and trying sort, and
was embittered by the harshness of the gaoler, Du Plessis. One of the
unfortunate men cut his throat, and several fell seriously ill, the diet and
the sanitary conditions being equally unhealthy. At last at the end of May
all the prisoners but six were released. Four of the six soon followed, two
stalwarts, Sampson and Davies, refusing to sign any petition and remaining
in prison until they were set free in 1897. Altogether the Transvaal
Government received in fines from the reform prisoners the enormous sum of
212,000 pounds. A certain comic relief was immediately afterwards given to
so grave an episode by the presentation of a bill to Great Britain for
1,677, 938 pounds 3 shillings and 3 pence--the greater part of which was
under the heading of moral and intellectual damage.
The raid was past and the reform movement was past, but the causes which
produced them both remained. It is hardly conceivable that a statesman who
loved his country would have refrained from making some effort to remove a
state of things which had already caused such grave dangers, and which must
obviously become more serious with every year that passed. But Paul Kruger
had hardened his heart, and was not to be moved. The grievances of the
Uitlanders became heavier than ever. The one power in the land to which they
had been able to appeal for some sort of redress amid their grievances was
the law courts. Now it was decreed that the courts should be dependent on
the Volksraad. The Chief Justice protested against such a degradation of his
high office, and he was dismissed in consequence without a pension. The
judge who had condemned the reformers was chosen to fill the vacancy, and
the protection of a fixed law was withdrawn from the Uitlanders.
A commission appointed by the State was sent to examine into the condition
of the mining industry and the grievances from which the newcomers suffered.
The chairman was Mr. Schalk Burger, one of the most liberal of the Boers,
and the proceedings were thorough and impartial. The result was a report
which amply vindicated the reformers, and suggested remedies which would
have gone a long way towards satisfying the Uitlanders. With such
enlightened legislation their motives for seeking the franchise would have
been less pressing. But the President and his Raad would have none of the
recommendations of the commission. The rugged old autocrat declared that
Schalk Burger was a traitor to his country for having signed such a
document, and a new reactionary committee was chosen to report upon the
report. Words and papers were the only outcome of the affair. No
amelioration came to the newcomers. But at least they had again put their
case publicly upon record, and it had been endorsed by the most respected of
the burghers. Gradually in the press of the English-speaking countries the
raid was ceasing to obscure the issue. More and more clearly it was coming
out that no permanent settlement was possible where the majority of the
population was oppressed by the minority. They had tried peaceful means and
failed. They had tried warlike means and failed. What was there left for
them to do? Their own country, the paramount power of South Africa, had
never helped them. Perhaps if it were directly appealed to it might do so.
It could not, if only for the sake of its own imperial prestige, leave its
children for ever in a state of subjection. The Uitlanders determined upon a
petition to the Queen, and in doing so they brought their grievances out of
the limits of a local controversy into the broader field of international
politics. Great Britain must either protect them or acknowledge that their
protection was beyond her power. A direct petition to the Queen praying for
protection was signed in April 1899 by twenty-one thousand Uitlanders. From
that time events moved inevitably towards the one end. Sometimes the surface
was troubled and sometimes smooth, but the stream always ran swiftly and the
roar of the fall sounded ever louder in the ears.
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