About half of the members of the Reform Committee were arrested and taken
through to Pretoria on the night of the 9th. Others were arrested at various
times during the evening and night, were detained in the lock-up at
Johannesburg as ordinary felons, and escorted to the Pretoria gaol on the
following morning. The scene on their arrival at Pretoria railway station
and during their march to the gaol was not creditable to the Boers. A
howling mob surrounded the prisoners, hustling them, striking them, and
hurling abuse at them incessantly. The mounted burghers acting as an escort
forced their horses at the unfortunate men on foot, jostling them and
threatening to ride them down. One of the prisoners, a man close on sixty
years of age, was thrown by an excited patriot and kicked and trampled on
before he was rescued by some of his comrades.
Once within the gaol, the men were searched and locked up in the cells,
and treated exactly as black or white felons of the lowest description. In
many cases four or five men were incarcerated in single cells 9 feet long by
5 feet 6 inches wide, with one small grating for ventilation. At night they
were obliged to lie on the mud floor, or in some cases on filthy straw
mattresses left in the cells by former occupants. No provision was made by
which they could obtain blankets or other covering—indeed at first it was
not necessary, as the overcrowding and lack of ventilation very nearly
resulted in asphyxiation. With an inhumanity almost incredible, in one
instance one of the prisoners, suffering from fever and dysentery, was
locked up for twelve hours with four others in such a
cell without any sanitary provisions whatever. Friends in Pretoria induced
the authorities, by means not unpopular in that place, to admit a better
class of food than that allowed to the ordinary prisoners; and it is stated
that the first meal enjoyed by the Reformers cost close upon £100 for
introduction. Day by day fresh concessions were obtained in a similar
manner, with the result that before long the prisoners were allowed to have
their own clothing and beds and such food as they chose to order. Nothing
however could alter the indescribable sanitary conditions, nor compensate
for the fact that the cells occupied by these men were in many cases
swarming with vermin.
The climate in Pretoria in January is almost tropical, and the sufferings
of many of the older and less robust men under such circumstances were very
considerable. On the eleventh day of incarceration the majority of the
prisoners were let out on bail of £2,000 each; in the cases of two or three
bail of £4,000 each was required; but bail was refused to Colonel Rhodes,
Messrs. Phillips, Farrar, Hammond (the signatories to the letter), and J.P.
FitzPatrick, the secretary of the Reform Committee. These five continued to
occupy the undesirable premises for four weeks more, at the end of which
time, owing to the serious effect upon their health which imprisonment under
these conditions had produced, and owing to the repeated representations
within the Transvaal and from the British Government as well, an alteration
was made under somewhat novel conditions.
It was notified to the public that the Government had graciously
consented to admit the prisoners to bail. The terms, however, were not at
the time publicly announced. First and foremost it was required of them that
they should deposit £10,000 in sovereigns each as security that they would
not break the conditions of their altered imprisonment. They were to reside
in a cottage in Pretoria under strong guard, and they were to pay the whole
of the costs of their detention, including the salary and living expenses of
the officer and guard placed over them. The cost, including interest upon
the money deposited, was upwards of £1,000 a month.
The preliminary examination into the charges against the
Reformers began on February 3, and lasted about a month. It resulted in
the committal for trial, on the charge of high treason, of all those
arrested. The Imperial Government having decided to send a representative to
watch the trial on behalf of the British, American and Belgian subjects, Mr.
J. Rose Innes, Q.C., the leader of the Bar in Cape Colony, attended on their
behalf. It was intimated to the Transvaal Government that Mr. Innes would
represent the Imperial Government; but objection was made to this on the
grounds that he had been admitted to the Pretoria Bar during the British
administration, and had failed to comply with a subsequent rule of Court
which required some sort of registration; and permission was refused to him
to address the Court. The objection was maintained, and Mr. Innes was
obliged to limit his participation in the affair to sitting at the counsels'
table and consulting and advising with the Pretoria barristers employed to
defend the prisoners.
The examination was, as Dr. Coster the State Attorney announced, of the
nature of a fishing examination, and he claimed to be permitted to conduct
it in a manner which, he alleged, is popular in Holland, but which is
entirely unknown in the Transvaal, and certainly does not obtain in any
British possession. The chief feature of this system appears to be a total
disregard of the rules applying to evidence. A few instances will suffice.
One of the first witnesses called was Judge Ameshof, who with Chief-Justice
Kotzé and Mr. Kock formed the Government Commission appointed to meet the
deputation from the Reform Committee on January 1. Judge Ameshof was duly
sworn, and was asked to identify a list of the members of the Reform
Committee. He did so. He stated that it was the list supplied to the
Government Commission at the meeting of January 1 by the deputation of the
Reform Committee, and he regarded it therefore as authentic. The deputation
had stated to the Commission that it was so.
This was the first revelation of the tactics about to be pursued by the
Government, in using information which had been given under privilege and in
good faith by the prisoners themselves, when negotiating with the Government
prior to any question of arrest being raised. Mr. Wessels, counsel for
the accused, rose to obtain from Judge Ameshof the
official account of the meeting, desiring to prove this very important
negotiation by means of witnesses on the Government side. He got no further
however than saying to the witness, 'You said you were a member of the
Government Commission?' when Judge Ameshof replied, 'Yes, but if you are
going to ask me about anything that took place at that meeting, I cannot
answer, because the meeting was a privileged one.' Mr. Wessels did not lose
his opportunity, 'You have stated,' he said, 'that you are a Judge of the
High Court?' The witness signified assent. 'And you mean to tell me,' Mr.
Wessels continued, 'that you feel yourself free to divulge so much as it
suits the Government to reveal, but that as soon as I wish to prove
something to my clients' advantage the interview becomes privileged?' The
witness did not answer, and Mr. Wessels appealed to the Court. Judicial
Commissioner Zeiler, however, upheld the witness's contention. Mr. Wessels
urged in reply that if it was a privileged interview he objected to any
evidence whatever being given in connection with it, and protested
vehemently against the admission of the list of members just sworn to. The
objection was overruled, and it was thus laid down that the interview was
privileged as far as the Government was concerned, but not in so far as it
could benefit the Reformers.
Another case was that of Mr. Schumacher, a witness who testified,
inter alia, that he did not know what the objects of a certain
Development Syndicate were. His evidence showed that he had not been
informed upon this point. He was very hard pressed by the State Attorney,
but he adhered to his first answer. Dr. Coster then altered his tactics and
asked, 'Had you no opinions on the subject? Did you not guess at all?' The
witness replied that he might have thought and conjectured at various times,
but that he had nothing in the nature of information or knowledge on the
point. This did not satisfy Dr. Coster, who then pressed the question,
'Well, what did you think? What were your thoughts?' The witness objected to
state what his thoughts were, as they could have no bearing on the fact, and
might be absolutely wide of the mark. He could only repeat that he had no
knowledge. The witness appealed to the Bench for
protection. Mr. Wessels urged that it was an unheard-of proceeding to compel
a witness to state what he thought and to use it as evidence. The objections
were again overruled, and the witness was ordered by the Court to answer.
His reply afforded no satisfaction to the Government, being to the effect
that he could not then remember what his thoughts were at various times. On
the application of the State Attorney the Judicial Commissioner sent him to
gaol for twelve hours for contempt of court.
Mr. Wessels strenuously objected to the decision and applied to the Court
to stay imprisonment to enable him to appeal to a judge in chambers, but
even this was refused. Mr. Wessels in the course of his address received a
reprimand from the Bench for stating that he now recognized the force of the
State Attorney's contention that the law of evidence as obtaining in South
Africa was not sufficiently wide; for, he added, he thought it would suit
the purpose of the Government better if they reverted to an older system
under which racks and thumbscrews were popular.
The witness was sent to gaol. Some hours later an appeal was heard by
Judge de Korté in chambers, and the decision of the Judicial Commissioner
was reversed, but the prisoner had already completed seven hours'
imprisonment in a dirty cell. Judge de Korté stated that he had reversed the
decision after consultation with Chief Justice Kotzé, and it was felt that
something at least had been achieved by Mr. Schumacher, and the rights of a
witness would be recognized. But the end is not always in sight in dealing
with the Transvaal Government. The State Attorney in turn appealed from the
single judge's decision to the full Bench. Judge Morice, a Scotchman, many
years a judge of the High Court, supported the decision of Judge de Korté.
The Chief Justice, who had advised Judge de Korté in his decision however in
a most extraordinary judgment now reversed it, and in this view he was
supported by Judge Ameshof—himself a witness in the case against the
Reformers.
Thus the majority judgment of the High Court against the Reformers on
this principle of evidence happened to be formulated by the two judges who
had been appointed to negotiate with the Reformers' deputation on behalf of
the Government.
The impossibility of obtaining justice in the Courts
of the Transvaal under the then conditions was thus brought home to the
prisoners. An appeal from the decision of the Lower Court on Judge Ameshof's
interpretation of privilege, which had been seriously discussed, was then
abandoned as being worse than useless, and calculated only to provoke more
extreme measures against the prisoners by placing the Bench in a ridiculous
position. It could not be expected that the Chief Justice, who was himself a
member of the Government Commission which Judge Ameshof had claimed to be
privileged, would take any other view than that favouring the policy and
convenience of the Government which he showed himself so ready to befriend.
In the Schumacher appeal case before the full Court, Dr. Coster had made
no secret that he intended to disregard the rules and precedents governing
the treatment of witnesses, and even claimed that he should receive no
opposition from the prisoners' counsel, since he was only 'fishing'
for evidence and not actually accumulating it against the prisoners, and had
no intention of using the evidence given at this examination. Mr. Wessels
asked him whether he would pledge himself to this effect, and what, for
instance, would be done in case a witness who had been heard at the
preliminary examination should die before the main trial came off. The reply
was, that in such a case of course the Government would be bound to use some
of the evidence, but would use it with discretion and not unfairly. This
undertaking provoked smiles even in court. The wisdom and fairness of Mr.
Wessels' contention were fully justified when the trial actually did take
place, for the whole of the evidence of the preliminary examination was
handed in for the guidance of the judge in determining his sentences against
the accused. It may be added that each witness was called upon to sign the
notes of his evidence as taken down in Dutch. When required, the official
reporter read a free translation of the notes to the witness before they
were signed.
At the conclusion of the examination all the prisoners were committed on
the same charge—that of high treason—no distinction whatever being made in
the references to them from the Bench. By this time Mr. Hammond, who had
been ill, was released on bail of £20,000 in order to go
to the seaside.
Application was made on behalf of Colonel Rhodes, Messrs. Phillips,
Farrar, and FitzPatrick for release on bail, upon the grounds that no
distinction whatever had been made between them and the other prisoners who
had already been released, but this was refused after the point had been
reserved for consideration by the State Attorney in consultation with the
Chief Justice, and the four men returned to their former conditions of
imprisonment. Mr. Chamberlain continued to make representations on behalf of
these men, and at one time it appeared as though the restrictions would be
removed, Dr. Coster having pledged himself to accept bail, and having
actually drawn out the bail-bonds and submitted them to the solicitors of
the accused for approval, and every arrangement having been completed—even
to the finding of the additional security. They were however at the last
moment curtly informed that bail would not be allowed. On this being
reported to Mr. Chamberlain, he at once replied to the effect that he could
not believe that a Government would revoke a promise made on their behalf by
the State Attorney. Dr. Leyds, on behalf of his Government, stated that the
matter was in the hands of the State Attorney alone and did not concern the
Executive, and that on inquiry he found that no such promise had been made
and no undertaking given. The incident is more or less trivial, but again
shows the readiness with which the Boer Government repudiate a promise when
it is to their convenience to do so. Dr. Coster on his side admitted with
expressions of regret that there had been a breach of undertaking, and
stated that it had been done by order of the Executive Council.
Communications between Mr. Chamberlain and the Pretoria Government were
of great frequency during this period. The phantom of Mr. Kruger's visit to
England was chased with great assiduity. The wily old President seized on
Mr. Chamberlain's suggestions as an excellent pretext for delay to enable
him to spread his nets, and he used the time to great advantage. But this
was not the worst! Mr. Chamberlain's new diplomacy and his stupid or
treacherous advisers led him into blunders; as when, for instance, he tried
to bounce without the intention of making good his
implied threats; and when he sent his 4th of February despatch (publishing
it in London before it reached Pretoria), strongly and ably reviewing the
position, but spoiling all by a proposal which, whilst it had not been
suggested to or discussed by the Rand people, and would not have been
acceptable to them in lieu of what they had demanded, was also an
interference in the internal affairs of the Transvaal. It gave the Pretoria
Government an opportunity, which they did not miss, of severely snubbing Mr.
Chamberlain. When the latter in turn peremptorily refused their demands, he
was informed that the cancellation of the London Convention would not be
pressed 'at present,' but might remain in abeyance.
Throughout the period prior to the main trial, President Kruger continued
to use with great effect 'the wishes and intentions of his burghers.' When
bail was first refused to the leaders this course was justified on the
grounds that the burghers were strongly against it, and that the President
could not act against their wishes. When at a later stage a petition was
presented by a number of burghers more or less in touch with the Uitlander
community, who felt that the treatment of the leaders was having a bad
effect, counter petitions came in within a day or two urging the Government
on no account to extend the privilege of bail to these men. Oddly enough,
these petitions were got up and signed by relatives and near connexions of
the President himself.
During this period another petition was presented which is surely without
parallel in a civilized state; but it illustrates admirably the Boer idea of
right and liberty. Fifty burghers in the district of Standerton addressed
the Government, pointing out the undesirability of allowing a 'certain
Advocate Wessels to defend the Jameson rebels,' and praying that the
Government would put him over the border, 'which is the slightest punishment
that can be inflicted upon him.' The receipt of this petition was announced
in the Government organ, the Press, on March 25.
At about this time another incident occurred which excited considerable
feeling. Commandant Henning Pretorius, one of the most prominent Boer
officials, having paid a visit to his native district in the Cape Colony
shortly after the Jameson raid, purchased from the owner
of a farm at Cookhouse Drift the beam from which the five Boers had been
hanged at Slagter's Nek for rebellion in the year 1816. Reference has
already been made in the first chapter to this deplorable affair. The beam
(which had been built into the house) was brought up by the purchaser to
Pretoria. He states, and no doubt truly, that he obtained the historical
relic for the purpose of adding it to the National Museum; but it must be
added that the time was not well chosen unless the intention was to rouse
feeling. The Volksstem, the Hollander-Boer organ, in an extremely
violent article, described in detail the Slagter's Nek executions, and
called upon the burghers to avenge on the persons of the Reformers their
murdered countrymen; and it is a fact vouched for by persons by no means
friendly to the Uitlander that certain Boers approached President Kruger,
intimating to him that the beam had arrived, that it would not be necessary
to bother about a trial, but that the four men should be hanged out of hand
from the same scaffold which had served for their compatriots. It is but
right to say that President Kruger's reply was a severe reprimand, and a
reminder that they were not a barbarous people, but should comply with the
law. The matter having been brought to the notice of Mr. Chamberlain, strong
representations were made upon the subject, to which the Transvaal
Government replied (forgetful apparently of the fact that the President had
frequently urged his inability to control his burghers) that the Transvaal
was a civilized State, that the burghers were law-abiding and peaceful
people, and that their Government was at all times able to control them. It
was interesting to see the argument of the burghers getting out of hand,
which was used with such effect in the case of Dr. Jameson and quoted by Sir
Hercules Robinson, recoil upon the head of its originator.
A final effort was made by the people of Johannesburg to obtain the
release on bail of the four prisoners. A petition bearing the signatures of
20,000 persons was presented; the gentlemen bearing the petition were
informed that it could not be received; that they must call again. Having
called again and again, the petition was at last accepted and placed before
the Government; but no reply was ever vouchsafed. The
treatment of this memorial is in sharp contrast with that accorded to the
one presented by a score or so of the President's relatives and
supporters—objecting to the release.
From the time of the arrests until just before the trial speculation was
rife as to which judge would preside. The Chief Justice and Judge Ameshof
could hardly sit (even allowing for the precedents already established by
them), since they had both acted on the Government Commission in negotiating
with the prisoners, and one of them had already given evidence against the
accused. There remained Justices Jorissen, De Korté and Morice. Mr. De Korté
was then threatened with suspension owing to pecuniary embarrassments, and
would evidently not be allowed to preside. The fifth judge, Mr. Jorissen,
had expressed himself so violently against the Reformers that he had himself
recognized the impossibility of attaining an impartial attitude, and had
refused to sit. The only judge available was therefore Mr. Justice Morice,
against whom there was no valid objection whatever. Moreover, in the
ordinary routine it so happened that it was his turn to preside at the
forthcoming trial; but he was known to hold Liberal views and to be strongly
in sympathy with internal reform.
At this time Chief-Justice Kotzé undertook several journeys to the Free
State and Cape Colony, ostensibly to rid himself of insomnia, but in
reality, as results proved, in order to employ a judge for this trial. His
choice eventually fell upon Mr. Gregorowski, formerly a judge in the Free
State, and at that time State-Attorney to that country.
Mr. Gregorowski was noted on the Bench for the peculiar severity of his
sentences on all except Boers. He had moreover expressed openly in
Bloemfontein his wish that he might have the trying of 'those Reformers; he
would give them what for.' These things were not known at the time of the
trial; nor had the fact yet come out that before taking the oath of office
he had endeavoured to borrow from at least one of his colleagues a black cap
for the forthcoming trial. His attitude at the time is sufficiently
indicated by what he wrote shortly after the trial, in defence of his
action, 'I came up to put down rebellion. I have done so with a
strong hand, and I believe that my judgment will bear good
fruit in the future.' The prisoners could not but contrast the action of
the Government in employing and appointing, on approval, a judge who had no
status whatever in the country, with their action in declining to allow Mr.
Rose Innes to appear at the Bar on the pretext of his previous qualification
not being in order; and it was felt to be ominous that an independent and
upright judge, against whom there could be no objection, should be passed
over, and another specially imported for the occasion.
The trial was at last fixed to take place on April 27, and the
indictments were served upon the accused six days before that date. The
following is the list of those who were committed for trial:
- Lionel Phillips
- Colonel F.W. Rhodes
- George Farrar
- J.H. Hammond
- J.P. FitzPatrick
- S.W. Jameson
- G. Richards
- J.L. Williams
- G. Sandilands
- F. Spencer
- R.A. Bettington
- J.G. Auret
- E.P. Solomon
- J.W. Leonard
- W.H.S. Bell
- W.E. Hudson
- D.F. Gilfillan
- C.H. Mullins
- E.O. Hutchinson
- W. van Hulsteyn
- A. Woolls-Sampson
- H.C. Hull
- Alf. Brown
- C.L. Andersson
- M. Langermann
- W. Hosken
- W. St. John Carr
- H.F. Strange
- C. Garland
- Fred Gray{33}
- A. Mackie Niven
- Dr. W.T.F. Davies
- Dr. R.P. Mitchell
- Dr. Hans Sauer
- Dr. A.P. Hillier
- Dr. D.P. Duirs
- Dr. W. Brodie
- H.J. King
- A. Bailey
- Sir Drummond Dunbar
- H.E. Becher
- F. Mosenthal
- H.A. Rogers
- C. Butters
- Walter D. Davies
- H. Bettelheim
- F.R. Lingham
- A.L. Lawley
- W.B. Head
- V.M. Clement
- W. Goddard
- J.J. Lace
- C.A. Tremeer
- R.G. Fricker
- J.M. Buckland
- J. Donaldson
- F.H. Hamilton
- P. du Bois
- H.B. Marshall
- S.B. Joel
- A.R. Goldring
- J.A. Roger
- Thomas Mein
- J.S. Curtis{34}
The indictment served on all alike was as follows:
H.J. Coster, State Attorney of the South African
Republic, who, on behalf of the State, prosecutes, brings to the notice
of the Court:That they (citing the accused),
all and each or one or more of them, are guilty of the crime of High
Treason:
Firstly: In that in or about the months of November
and December in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and
ninety-five, the exact dates being unknown to the State Attorney, they,
the said accused, at Johannesburg, Witwatersrand Goldfields, South
African Republic, being citizens of, or residing in, this Republic, all
and each or one or more of them wrongfully, unlawfully, and with a
hostile intention to disturb, injure, or bring into danger the
independence or safety of this Republic, treated, conspired, agreed with
and urged Leander Starr Jameson, an alien, residing without the
boundaries of this Republic, to come into the territory of this Republic
at the head of and with an armed and hostile troop, and to make a
hostile invasion and to march through to Johannesburg aforesaid.
Secondly: In that they (the said accused), being
citizens of, or residing in, this Republic, all and each or one or more
of them, there and then in conjunction with Charles Leonard and Dr. H.
Wolff, now fugitives, and other persons unknown to the State Attorney,
appearing and acting as a committee, by them named the 'Reform
Committee,' after the above-mentioned Leander Starr Jameson, on or about
December 29, in the year aforesaid, had come from without the Republic,
at the head of and with an armed and hostile troop, in the neighbourhood
of Ottoshoop, district Marico, into the territory of this Republic, and
had made a hostile invasion, and had violently attempted to penetrate
through to Johannesburg aforesaid, wrongfully, unlawfully, and with a
hostile intention to disturb, injure, or bring into danger the
independence or safety of this Republic, gave, or attempted to give, the
aforementioned Leander Starr Jameson during his hostile invasion
aforesaid information about the state of the defences at Johannesburg,
and had armed troops ready to assist, and sent assistance to him, and
subsequently by seditious speeches made, or caused to be made, in
public, with the object to persuade and induce the people there to stand
by the aforementioned Jameson in his hostile invasion, and further have
assisted him, the aforementioned Jameson, during his hostile invasion
above mentioned, by providing him with provisions, forage, and horses.
Thirdly: That in or about the month of December, in
the year aforesaid, and in the month of January in the year one thousand
eight hundred and ninety-six, exact dates not known to the State
Attorney, at Johannesburg aforesaid, they (the said accused), being
inhabitants of, and residing in, this Republic, all and each or one or
more of them, then and there, in conjunction with Charles Leonard and
Dr. H. Wolff, now fugitives, and other persons unknown to the State
Attorney, appearing and acting as a committee named by them the 'Reform
Committee,' wrongfully and unlawfully, and with a hostile intention to
disturb, injure, or bring into danger the independence or safety of this
Republic, have distributed, or caused to be distributed, amongst the
population there, and in the neighbourhood thereof, Maxim guns, other
weapons, arms, and ammunition; further, have enrolled men, or have
caused them to be enrolled, and have formed them, or have caused them to
be formed, into military corps; have erected there, or caused to be
erected, earthworks and other fortifications.
Fourthly: In that in or about the
month of December and the month of January, the exact dates being
unknown to the State Attorney, and at Johannesburg aforesaid they (the
said accused), being citizens of, and residing in, this Republic, all
and each or one or more of them, then and there, in conjunction with
Charles Leonard and Dr. H. Wolff, now fugitives, and other persons
unknown to the State Attorney, appearing and acting as a committee
called by them the 'Reform Committee,' wrongfully and unlawfully, with
hostile intention to disturb, injure, or bring into danger the
independence or safety of this Republic, have arrogated to themselves,
and have exercised and caused to be exercised, the functions, and powers
belonging to the authorities of this Republic; by violence, or by
threats of violence, have compelled, or caused to be compelled, the
police of this Republic stationed at Johannesburg aforesaid to leave the
public squares and streets; have formed, or caused to be formed, their
own police corps, and have provided that corps, or caused it to be
provided, with guns and other arms; and further have appointed, or
caused to be appointed, as head of that corps, Andrew Trimble, and have
entrusted him with jurisdiction in police cases, in virtue whereof the
aforementioned Andrew Trimble has passed sentence and caused it to be
carried out.
In consequence of all which acts abovementioned the
independence of this country was brought into danger, and its safety
disturbed and impaired.
Wherefore the State Attorney, after due proof and
conviction thereof, requests the judgment of this Court against said
accused, according to law.
The general opinion based upon the character of the evidence adduced at
the preliminary examination was that it would be impossible to sustain the
charge of high treason; but the disclosure of the documents in the
possession of the State Attorney put a different complexion upon the case.
Then for the first time the members of the Reform Committee became aware of
that factor in their case which has since become famous as 'de trommel van
Bobby White'—Major Robert White's despatch-box—a veritable conjurer's hat,
from which Mr. Kruger produced to an admiring and astonished world the
political equivalents of eggs and goldfish, pigeons and white mice. In this
box (which was taken with the invading force at Doornkop) it appears Major
White had brought as much of his previous correspondence as he could
conveniently carry, together with diaries, notebooks, code-books,
cipher-keys, etc. Nor was this all. He had brought a copy of the letter of
invitation, certified by himself as magistrate in the Bechuanaland
Protectorate. Revelations at and subsequent to the trial show that the State
Attorney, on discovering this copy and finding that as a copy it would not
be admitted and that he might experience some difficulty
in proving it, prevailed upon Major White while in the Pretoria gaol to
confirm his previous certificate, and to make an affidavit to the effect
that he had compared the letter with the original, that it was a true copy,
and that he had examined the signatures, and believed them to be the
signatures of the persons indicated. The State Attorney alleges that he
bargained with Major White for this affidavit, and in return surrendered to
him certain private documents which had also been taken in the despatch-box.
Major White on the other hand stated to the writer and to another member of
the Reform Committee—Mr. H.C. Hull—that there is no truth in the allegation
that he received a quid pro quo; but has no excuse to offer for
making the affidavit, except that he—'does not remember having done it.'
The Reform prisoners, who, animated by a desire not to give any of their
comrades away, had for a period of close upon four months borne all the
abuse which could be heaped upon them, and had abstained from making any
defence in public, or any of those revelations such as have since been made
through the exertion of the Transvaal authorities, the Select Committee of
the Cape House of Assembly, and the Bow Street officers, found to their
inexpressible disgust that the efforts which they had made were rendered
futile by the capture of these documents; and they were highly incensed at
the action of one of the very men whose lives they believed they had saved
by surrendering on January 7. The affidavit was looked upon as unpardonable,
and the unnecessary statement regarding the genuineness of the signatures
was interpreted in a very unpleasant sense.
Consultations now took place between Mr. Advocate Wessels and Mr. Richard
Solomon, Q.C., of Kimberley, who had also been retained on behalf of the
accused; and endeavours were made to obtain from the State Attorney details
of the evidence which it was proposed to bring, but with only partial
success. From the facts already known to them it was clear that the
Government were determined to stretch every point in law to their own
advantage and to indulge in few scruples as to the means to be employed to
secure a conviction. The Judge, it was known, had been
specially imported for this trial, and provisionally appointed to a seat on
the Bench. As the confirmation of his appointment was to take place when the
Volksraad should meet, or at any rate at some period subsequent to the
trial, it was not unnatural to regard his as a case in which a judge was
appointed on approval, the appointment to be either confirmed or cancelled
according to the satisfaction which he should give.
Appeal to the full bench of the High Court had already been proved to be
entirely useless; since the only judges to whom appeal could be made were
those who had in the earlier stages associated themselves with the
Government against the Reform Committee, and later on in their judicial
capacities confirmed the attitude taken up by them as patriots.
The options before the prisoners were therefore three in number. One
course would be to enter upon a protracted trial before a Boer jury and a
specially-appointed judge, with the certainty for the majority of an adverse
verdict in any case. In such a trial numberless occasions would arise for
the exercise of discretion in the admission or rejection of evidence, and
any defence of the prisoners must necessarily partake of the character of an
indictment against the Government and the faction which both judge and jury
avowedly represented, and tend only to aggravate the penalty. They would
moreover have to face that trial as a body of over sixty men, many of whom
could have reasonably set up special defences, many of whom were not even
mentioned in any evidence which the Government had yet secured (with the
exception of course of Judge Ameshof's privileged list), and could
therefore reasonably expect to be discharged on making individual defences.
The second alternative was to decline to plead at all, on the ground that
they had negotiated with the Government in good faith, and that a
treacherous arrest and breach of understandings arrived at would not be
recognised in any way by them—in fact, to refuse to condone treachery or
take a hand in a farce. The third course was to plead guilty, and take a
short cut on the best terms possible to what was realized to be a
pre-arranged conclusion.
The second alternative was rejected, because it was
found to be impossible to secure unanimity of action. In the course of the
discussions upon the other alternatives, certain negotiations took place
between the State Attorney Dr. Coster and Mr. Wessels, the result of which
was that Dr. Coster made the following offer: If the leaders (the
signatories to the letter of invitation) would consent to plead guilty to
count 1 of the indictment, he would agree to withdraw as against them counts
2, 3, and 4; and in such case he would agree that the rank and file should
plead guilty to counts 3 and 4 only, he withdrawing as against them counts 1
and 2. The matter was discussed by the prisoners, and objection was taken to
that part of the indictment in which it was stated that the Reform Committee
had acted 'with a hostile intention to disturb, injure or bring into danger
the independence or safety of this Republic.'
Another meeting took place between the State Attorney and Mr. Wessels, at
which Dr. Coster agreed to eliminate from the indictment against the rank
and file the words objected to, provided that the leaders would plead guilty
to count 1. Having arrived at this—to him—satisfactory conclusion, Dr.
Coster remarked that they (i.e., all except the four) were now
charged with a merely nominal offence. Mr. Wessels endeavoured to obtain the
same alteration in the indictment of the leaders, but this was refused on
the ground that it would make the indictment ridiculous; and, apropos
of the concession to the rank and file, Dr. Coster even expressed doubts as
to whether, if the hostile intention were eliminated, any crime could be
said to remain under the indictment. He however agreed to allow the four
leaders to qualify their plea by a statement in writing which they were to
put in at the same time. He stated that he would have pro forma to
put in some evidence of the offence, but undertook not to press for
exemplary punishment, and moreover promised that he would not dispute or
question the statement to be put in, provided that it contained no material
error in fact.
A discussion then followed as to the law under which the trial would take
place. Mr. Wessels urged that, as there was specific provision in the
statute law for cases of this nature, the statute law would of course apply
in preference to Roman-Dutch law. Dr. Coster said he
presumed that this would be the case, but that he was not quite sure whether
Roman-Dutch law would not apply. He added however that anything he could say
would not be binding upon the judge, who could alone decide as to the
question of law.
Mr. Wessels's report to his clients induced the rank and file to agree
under the altered circumstances to the third alternative, namely, pleading
guilty, and they agreed to this under the impression, which without doubt
had been suggested and deliberately fostered by the Government, that they
were pleading guilty to a nominal offence, and would incur a monetary
penalty in proportion.
In consultation with the leaders, Mr. Wessels reported the discussions
with Dr. Coster as above given. Both he and Mr. Solomon represented to them
the gravity of the plea, and said that there was the possibility that the
judge would invoke Roman-Dutch law and ignore the laws of the country, in
which case it would be in his power to pass sentence of death. In their
opinion, they added, and in the opinion of Mr. Rose Innes and others, this
would be a monstrous straining of the law, yet they felt bound to indicate
the possibility.
The course before the prisoners was not indeed an attractive one, but it
was not without its recommendations. It would have been infinitely
preferable to fight it out had there been a chance of a good fight, if even
a losing one; but, apart from a verdict of guilty being an absolute
certainty, the circumstances were against any possibility of effecting
anything like a strong impeachment of the Government. Moreover, the course
now proposed would prevent any 'giving away' of Dr. Jameson, who had yet to
be tried, and of others; and it also removed the necessity for individual
defences by those among the prisoners who had been involved in a less degree
than others. The matter at that time appeared in one way to concern the
leaders only. If they were willing to take upon themselves the burden of the
charge and secure the acquittal of others by accepting the full
responsibility, it could only be regarded as a chivalrous act. But there
were some among the other the
prisoners—'Irreconcilables,' as they were called—who considered themselves
equally responsible with the leaders, who strongly objected to shifting any
portion of their responsibility upon others, and who desired to stand with
those who were prepared to bear the brunt of the charge. To them the
suggestion to plead guilty was as gall and wormwood, and was regarded as
another humiliation which they were required to endure, another
climbing-down similar to the disarmament, and attended, like it, with
exasperating and baffling complications and involvements that made refusal
an impossibility. The one call to which these men would respond was the call
to stand together and have no divisions—a cause for which they were still to
make many sacrifices. The irony of it was that in order to 'stand together'
they had to agree to segregation.
Dr. Coster would accept no further modification or variation of his
terms—there was no option to individuals to plead not guilty and fight it
out, except at the cost of involving all the others, nor was there any
option to them to plead with the leaders. One other factor in the
determination of this policy remains to be noted. The communications already
recorded as having passed between some of the members of the Reform
Committee and Dr. Jameson, after the latter had actually invaded the
country, and some evidence as to the arrangements made for the reception and
camping of his force, were in the hands of the Government, and these were
sufficient to convict every member of the Reform Committee under count 2 of
the indictment in a trial before a Boer jury and by a special judge.
Conviction under count 1 was assured by the letter of invitation and the
admissions in the 'privileged' meeting with the Government Commission.
Conviction under count 2 would be a distinct aggravation of the position of
the four—or so it seemed then—whilst it would be a most serious thing for
the rank and file; and it was finally decided to plead in accordance with
the suggestion of the State Attorney. The decision was conveyed to this
gentleman and by him to the President, who expressed his 'satisfaction' at a
course which would enable him to 'deal magnanimously with the prisoners,' no
doubt in pursuance of the policy of 'Forget and Forgive.' When, as a
convincing proof of the wisdom of the decision to plead
guilty, the 'satisfaction' of the President was made known to the
Irreconcilables, they remarked that this was the worst sign that they had
yet detected, but others were more hopeful.
As to the soundness of the advice on which the prisoners pleaded, it may
be observed that Messrs. Gregorowski and Coster have both since then
expressed the opinion that there was sufficient evidence to convict one and
all of high treason, and they should know what would have been considered
'sufficient.' The latter added that the prime movers were of course guilty;
but they at any rate had tried to stop Jameson, whilst those who joined the
Reform Committee in the later stages were morally worse, since they had only
joined when and because they knew that he had invaded the country. Mr.
Gregorowski, at a later stage, defended his sentence on the leaders, but
feared he had been 'far too lenient with the others.' It would be unfair
therefore to suggest that the advice on which the prisoners had decided to
act was other than sound wise and proper in the circumstances. That it
should afterwards appear that the other parties to the arrangement had acted
with deliberate duplicity and bad faith cannot be laid as a charge against
the gentlemen who gave this advice, and whose only fault, if fault it be,
was that their instincts, their principles, and their training precluded the
suspicion of treachery.
The trial commenced on April 24, when the prisoners were arraigned, after
which an adjournment was made until the 27th, in order to allow three of the
prisoners who were then travelling up to take their trial to arrive. On the
latter date, all being present, and pleas of guilty having been recorded,
the State Attorney put in the cipher telegrams, the minutes of the
'privileged' meeting between the Government Commission and the deputation of
the Reform Committee, none of which had been produced in evidence, and the
record of evidence taken at the preliminary examination. Mr. Wessels then
read and put in the following statement of the four leaders:
For a number of years endeavours have been made to obtain
by constitutional means the redress of the grievances under which the
Uitlander population labours. The new-comer asked for no more than is
conceded to emigrants by all
the other Governments in South Africa, under which every man may, on
reasonable conditions, become a citizen of the State; whilst here alone
a policy is pursued by which the first settlers retain the exclusive
right of government.Petitions supported by the
signatures of some 40,000 men were ignored; and when it was found that
we could not get a fair and reasonable hearing, that provisions already
deemed obnoxious and unfair were being made more stringent, and that we
were being debarred for ever from obtaining the rights which in other
countries are freely granted, it was realized that we would never get
redress until we should make a demonstration of force to support our
claims.
Certain provision was made regarding arms and
ammunition, and a letter was written to Dr. Jameson, in which he was
asked to come to our aid under certain circumstances.
On December 26 the Uitlanders' Manifesto was
published, and it was then our intention to make a final appeal for
redress at the public meeting which was to have been held on January 6.
In consequence of matters that came to our knowledge we sent on December
26 Major Heany (by train via Kimberley), and Captain Holden across
country, to forbid any movement on Dr. Jameson's part.
On the afternoon of Monday, December 30, we learnt
from Government sources that Dr. Jameson had crossed the frontier. We
assumed that he had come in good faith to help us, probably misled by
some of the exaggerated rumours which were then in circulation. We were
convinced, however, that the Government and the burghers would not in
the excitement of the moment believe that we had not invited Dr. Jameson
in, and there was no course open to us but to prepare to defend
ourselves if we were attacked, and at the same time to spare no effort
to effect a peaceful settlement.
It became necessary to form some organization for the
protection of the town and the maintenance of order; since, in the
excitement caused by the news of Dr. Jameson's coming, serious
disturbances would be likely to occur, and it was evident that the
Government organization could not deal with the people without serious
risks of conflict.
The Reform Committee was formed on Monday night,
December 30, and it was intended to include such men of influence as
cared to associate themselves with the movement. The object with which
it was formed is best shown by its first notice, viz.:
'Notice is hereby given that this Committee
adheres to the National Union Manifesto, and reiterates its desire
to maintain the independence of the Republic. The fact that rumours
are in course of circulation to the effect that a force has crossed
the Bechuanaland border renders it necessary to take active steps
for the defence of Johannesburg and preservation of order. The
Committee earnestly desire that the inhabitants should refrain from
taking any action which can be construed as an overt act of
hostility against the Government. By order of the Committee,
'J. PERCY FITZPATRICK,
'Secretary.'
The evidence taken at the preliminary examination will
show that order was maintained by this Committee during a time of
intense excitement, and through the action of the Committee no
aggressive steps whatever were taken against the Government, but on the
contrary, the property of the Government was protected, and its
officials were not interfered with.
It is our firm belief that had no
such Committee been formed, the intense excitement caused by Dr.
Jameson's entry would have brought about utter chaos in Johannesburg.
It has been alleged that we armed natives. This is
absolutely untrue, and is disposed of by the fact that during the crisis
upwards of 20,000 white men applied to us for arms and were unable to
get them.
On Tuesday morning, December 31, we hoisted the flag
of the Z.A.R., and every man bound himself to maintain the independence
of the Republic. On the same day the Government withdrew its police
voluntarily from the town and we preserved perfect order.
During the evening of that day, Messrs. Marais and
Malan presented themselves as delegates from the Executive Council. They
came (to use their own words) to 'offer us the olive branch,' and they
told us that if we would send a deputation to Pretoria to meet a
Commission appointed by the Government, we should probably obtain
'practically all that we asked for in the Manifesto.'
Our deputation met the Government Commission,
consisting of Chief Justice Kotzé, Judge Ameshof, and Mr. Kock, member
of the Executive.
On our behalf our deputation frankly avowed knowledge
of Jameson's presence on the border, and of his intention, by written
arrangement with us, to assist us in case of extremity.
With the full knowledge of this arrangement, with the
knowledge that we were in arms and agitating for our rights, the
Government Commission handed to us a resolution by the Executive
Council, of which the following is the purport:
'The High Commissioner has offered his services with a
view to a peaceful settlement. The Government of the South African
Republic has accepted his offer. Pending his arrival, no hostile step
will be taken against Johannesburg, provided Johannesburg takes no
hostile action against the Government. In terms of a certain
proclamation recently issued by the President, the grievances will be
earnestly considered.'
We acted in perfect good faith with the Government,
believing it to be their desire, as it was ours, to avert bloodshed, and
believing it to be their intention to give us the redress which was
implied in the 'earnest consideration of grievances.'
There can be no better evidence of our earnest
endeavour to repair what we regarded as a mistake on the part of Dr.
Jameson than the following offer which our deputation, authorized by
resolution of the Committee, laid before the Government Commission:
'If the Government will permit Dr. Jameson to come
into Johannesburg unmolested, the Committee will guarantee, with their
persons if necessary, that he will leave again peacefully as soon as
possible.'
We faithfully carried out the agreement that we should
commit no act of hostility against the Government; we ceased all active
operations for the defence of the town against any attack, and we did
everything in our power to prevent any collision with the burghers—an
attempt in which our efforts were happily successful.
On the telegraphic advice of the result of the
interview of the deputation with the Government Commission, we
despatched Mr. Lace, a member of our Committee, as an escort to the
courier carrying the High Commissioner's despatch to Dr. Jameson, in
order to assure ourselves that the despatch would reach its destination.
On the following Saturday, January 4, the High
Commissioner arrived in Pretoria. On Monday, the sixth, the following
telegram was sent to us:
'Pretoria,
January 6, 1896.
'From H.M.'s AGENT to
REFORM COMMITTEE, Johannesburg.
'January 6.—I am directed to inform you
that the High Commissioner met the President, the Executive, and the
Judges to-day. The President announced the decision of the
Government to be that Johannesburg must lay down its arms
unconditionally as a [condition] precedent to a discussion and
consideration of grievances. The High Commissioner endeavoured to
obtain some indication of the steps which would be taken in the
event of disarmament, but without success, it being intimated that
the Government had nothing more to say on this subject than had
already been embodied in the President's proclamation. The High
Commissioner inquired whether any decision had been come to as
regards the disposal of the prisoners, and received a reply in the
negative. The President said that as his burghers, to the number of
8,000, had been collected and could not be asked to remain
indefinitely, he must request a reply "Yes" or "No" to this
ultimatum within twenty-four hours.'
On the following day Sir Jacobus de Wet, H.M.'s Agent,
met us in committee, and handed to us the following wire from his
Excellency the High Commissioner:
'HIGH COMMISSIONER, Pretoria,
to SIR J. DE WET, Johannesburg.
'Received
Johannesburg 7.36 a.m., January 7, 1896.
'Urgent—You should inform the Johannesburg
people that I consider that if they lay down their arms they will be
acting loyally and honourably, and that if they do not comply with
my request they forfeit all claim to sympathy from Her Majesty's
Government, and from British subjects throughout the world, as the
lives of Jameson and prisoners are practically in their hands.'
On this, and the assurance given in the Executive
Council resolution, we laid down our arms on January 6, 7, and 8; on the
9th we were arrested, and have since been under arrest at Pretoria, a
period of three and a half months.
We admit responsibility for the action taken by us. We
frankly avowed it at the time of the negotiations with the Government,
when we were informed that the services of the High Commissioner had
been accepted with a view to a peaceful settlement.
We submit that we kept faith in every detail in the
arrangement with the Government; that we did all that was humanly
possible to protect both the State and Dr. Jameson from the consequence
of his action; that we have committed no breach of the law which was not
known to the Government at the time that the earnest consideration of
our grievances was promised.
We can only now lay the bare facts before the Court,
and submit to the judgment that may be passed upon us.
(Signed) LIONEL PHILLIPS. FRANCIS RHODES. GEORGE
FARRAR.
Pretoria, April 24, 1896.
I entirely concur with the above statement.
(Signed) JOHN HAYS HAMMOND.
Pretoria, April 27, 1896.
An incident which occurred during the reading of this
statement enabled the prisoners to realize how poor would have been their
chance of a fair trial before a Boer jury. On the right hand of the judge
seats had been reserved for higher officials. Several members of the
Executive were present in this quarter, and amongst them in a very prominent
position and facing the quarter reserved for the burghers sat Mr. Wolmarans,
a member of the Executive Council. When Mr. Wessels came to that portion of
the statement referring to the negotiations with the Executive Council, Mr.
Wolmarans at first smiled superciliously, then turned and addressed a remark
to one of his colleagues, shrugging his shoulder at the same time, and at
the conclusion of the reference looked across the room to where the jurymen
sat, still smiling and shaking his head slowly and continuously for half a
minute. To men accustomed to the decencies of British Courts of Justice this
incident was rather revolting. When it is remembered that the Government
refused to produce the minute referred to, and that through their
representatives they claimed 'privilege' for the interview at which it was
given, in order to absolve themselves from appearing in Court, and that Mr.
Wolmarans himself sent the message to the Rand that the Government by the
withdrawal of its police gave practical evidence of holding out the
olive-branch, his conduct appears the more unprincipled.
The State Attorney in a purely formal address, in consonance with his
promise to Mr. Wessels not to seek exemplary punishment, asked for
punishment according to law. Mr. Wessels in reply made an eloquent appeal on
behalf of the accused and recited the circumstances which led to their
seeking redress in the manner in which they did. He referred to the
negotiations with the Government, to the part played by the Reform Committee
in the maintenance of order, to the fidelity with which they had fulfilled
their undertakings with the Government, and to their attitude towards Dr.
Jameson. His references to the Government and to the existing abuses were
made as judiciously as possible. He referred candidly to the relationship
with Dr. Jameson, especially alluding to the efforts made to protect him
from the results of his own action and to stand by him
even at the cost of personal sacrifice, and claimed that such action towards
their former colleague within the limits set by them did not necessarily
imply treason against the independence of the State, but should fairly
entitle the prisoners to sympathy for their efforts to save a quondam
colleague, however wrong he might have been. On the point of law, Mr.
Wessels claimed that the Thirty-three Articles formed the basis of the
State's law, that there was specific provision for such cases as this in
those Articles, and that the punishment to be meted out to the prisoners
should be in accordance with these statutes, modified as the Court in its
judgment might deem fit. No sooner had Mr. Wessels resumed his seat than Dr.
Coster, as was then thought, repenting the fulfilment of his promise and
casting off all disguise, or, as is more probable, carried away by an
over-mastering excitement and strong personal and racial feeling and
stimulated by concentration upon one aspect only of the case, claimed the
right to address the Court again after the advocate for the defence had
spoken. Dr. Coster has the reputation among those who know him of being a
thoroughly honourable and straight-forward gentleman. As a Hollander no
doubt he felt deeply in a matter in which Hollanderism was the casus
belli; as public prosecutor it was his duty to prosecute, not to judge;
and one prefers to think that in peculiar and trying circumstances he forgot
the pledge he had given and remembered only the cause of his party. In a
short but very violent speech he depicted in the blackest terms the actions
of the men against whom he had agreed not to seek exemplary punishment, and
pointing out the provisions of the Roman-Dutch law, claimed that the Court
should apply it in this case in preference to the statutes of the country,
and demanded from the Court the severest possible penalty which could be
imposed under that law and under the Thirty-three Articles and the Gold Law
as well. With reference to the last-named, Dr. Coster having mentioned the
provision regarding the confiscation of property, said that upon this point
he would not speak but would leave the matter to the judgment of the Court.
The Court was then adjourned until the morning of the 28th, ostensibly in
order to enable the judge to consider the evidence and make up his mind.
The majority of the prisoners, utterly unsuspicious of
what lay before them, made all necessary arrangements to return to their
homes and avocations upon the conclusion of the trial, believing that a
nominal fine would be the penalty imposed. Many of them had taken return
tickets from Johannesburg available for two days. The public throughout the
Transvaal and South Africa anticipated nothing more than a nominal
punishment upon the majority and a fine of a few thousand pounds upon the
signatories to the letter of invitation.
Some of the prisoners however were better informed. News had been
obtained some days before the trial commenced that extra accommodation was
being prepared in the gaol, avowedly to provide for the Reformers. Two of
the accused visited the gaol and verified this. Others of the accused, few
in number, were informed by personal friends who had special means of
getting information in Pretoria that imprisonment would be the lot of all
and that the punishment on the leaders would be extremely severe; and they
provided for this contingency accordingly. The manager of the Government
newspaper in Pretoria informed two or three of those interested that the
sentence of death would be passed upon the four leaders, as this had been
arranged; and men closely associated with the leaders themselves had been
confidentially informed beforehand that it was the intention of the
Government to pass sentence of death, and that the matter was a
cut-and-dried one. The information was given with a view to preparing the
prisoners for what awaited them.
On approaching the temporary Court-house (the Pretoria Market Buildings
having been altered for this purpose) on the morning of the sentence, it was
perfectly evident that some serious development was afoot. The town was
thronged with mounted burghers, State artillery, and mounted and foot
police. Every approach to the Court was guarded and the streets were
patrolled. Most of the population of Pretoria were gathered in the Market
Square, endeavouring to gain admittance to the Court. The prisoners were
arranged in their former places in a special quarter of the building railed
off for the purpose, with the exception of Messrs. Phillips,
Farrar, Rhodes and Hammond, who were separated from the rest and placed
in a special movable dock, which had been carried in over the heads of the
people after the hour appointed for the sitting of the Court. The appearance
of this dock was recognized by all to be ominous, but some relief from the
feeling of foreboding was experienced when Judge Gregorowski after taking
his seat was observed to smile several times and to make some jocular remark
to one of the officials of the Court. The faces of the officials however
damped any hopes that were built upon the judge's genial appearance.
Many of these gentlemen were personal and intimate friends of the
prisoners: some were connected by closer ties; and one of the most trying
experiences for the prisoners was to witness the complete breakdown of the
minor officials employed in the carrying out of this tragic farce. The
judge's first order was for the removal of all ladies. The wives and
relatives of many of the prisoners had been warned by them beforehand of
what was likely to happen and had accordingly absented themselves, but there
were nevertheless a good number of ladies present. Judge Gregorowski then
took the case in hand, passed in review the circumstances, and dealt with
much of the evidence, including that taken at the preliminary examination
and the documents put in by Government which had not yet been seen by the
prisoners' advisers. He made no reference to the statement of the principal
accused, subject to which their plea of guilty had been made and accepted.
He reviewed the law, and by a method of reasoning which has not commended
itself to others he justified himself for setting aside special statutes and
applying the Roman-Dutch law instead. In conclusion, he stated that he held
the signatories of the letter to be directly responsible for the shedding of
the burghers' blood at Doornkop, that he would therefore pass upon them the
only punishment possible under Roman-Dutch law—namely death, and that
whatever hope there might be in the merciful hearts of the Executive Council
and in the President's great magnanimity, they should remember that in no
other country would they have the slightest grounds for hope. The usual
question as to whether there were any reasons why sentence of death should
not be passed upon them having been put and the usual
reply in the negative having been received, in the midst of silence that was
only disturbed by the breaking down of persons in various parts of the
hall—officials, burghers, and in the general public—sentence of death was
passed, first on Mr. Lionel Phillips, next on Colonel Rhodes, then on Mr.
George Farrar, and lastly on Mr. Hammond. The bearing of the four men won
for them universal sympathy and approval, especially under the conditions
immediately following the death sentence, when a most painful scene took
place in Court. Evidences of feeling came from all parts of the room and
from all classes of people: from those who conducted the defence and from
the Boers who were to have constituted the jury. The interpreter translating
the sentence broke down. Many of the minor officials lost control of
themselves, and feelings were further strained by the incident of one man
falling insensible.
Sentence was next passed upon the other prisoners. They were condemned to
suffer two years' imprisonment, to pay a fine of £2,000 each, or as an
alternative suffer another year's imprisonment, and thereafter to be
banished from the State for a period of three years. It was added that the
question of confiscation of their property would be one for the Executive to
deal with.
The action of Mr. Gregorowski has been variously described, but at no
time more graphically than at the time of the sentence, when a sergeant of
police who was guarding the prisoners exclaimed in the peculiar Dutch idiom:
'My God! he is like a dog: he has bitten and chewed and guzzled!'
After passing the minor sentences the judge gave a short address to the
burghers, in which he thanked them for their attendance and made allusion
with evident signs of satisfaction to the manner in which the trial had been
brought to a conclusion. A long delay followed during which the judge
proceeded to note his judgments. Once his attention was drawn by a remark of
an official to which he replied promptly, at the same time breaking into a
broad smile, but suddenly recollecting the circumstances and the presence of
the men sentenced to death, placed his hand over his mouth and wiped the
smile away. The incident was of course noticed by many people in Court and
helped to strengthen the impression which a limited but
sufficient experience of Mr. Gregorowski had already created.
If the belief which now obtains, that the Reformers were enticed to plead
guilty and misled as to the probable consequences of that plea, should
outlive personal feelings and leave a permanent mark in South African
history, it will be because it survives a searching test. In South Africa—as
in many other countries—it is the invariable practice of the Courts to
decline to accept the plea of guilty to a capital charge. The prisoner is
informed that as the plea involves capital punishment it will not be
accepted; and a formal trial and sufficient evidence of the crime are
required by the Court. That is done even in cases where the prisoner knows
what the punishment will be! In the case of the Reformers the State Attorney
had, it is true, informed Mr. Wessels that he would be obliged pro forma
to put in certain evidence, but the reason was not given, and Mr. Wessels
regarded it merely as the quid pro quo for accepting unquestioned the
written statement of the four accused! Mr. Gregorowski in defending his
sentence has stated that under Roman-Dutch law he had no option but to pass
sentence of death. Yet contrary to the custom with which seventeen years'
practice had made him familiar he accepted the plea of guilty—and accepted
it without a word of explanation or of warning! Is it surprising that people
should want to know why?
The men were removed from Court under very heavy escort, the condemned
men being conveyed in a closed carriage and the rest of the prisoners being
marched through the streets to the gaol, the whole party moving at a foot
pace. A little incident at the start did not fail to attract attention. The
officer commanding a section of the guard having issued his orders in Dutch
and some confusion having ensued, the orders were repeated in German,
with a satisfactory result.
One more incident—trifling perhaps in itself but leaving an ineffaceable
impression—occurred during the march to the gaol. As the prisoners slowly
approached the Government buildings, Dr. Leyds accompanied by one friend
walked out until within a few yards of the procession of sentenced men (a
great proportion of whom were personally well known to him) and stood there
with his hands in his pockets smiling at them as they
went past. The action was so remarkable, the expression on the State
Secretary's face so unmistakable, that the Dutch guards accompanying the
prisoners expressed their disgust. His triumph no doubt was considerable;
but the enjoyment must have been short-lived if the accounts given by other
members of the Executive of his behaviour a month later are to be credited.
The man who stood in safety and smiled in the faces of his victims was the
same Dr. Leyds who within a month became seriously ill because some fiery
and impetuous friend of the prisoners sent him an anonymous letter with a
death's head and cross-bones; who as a result obtained from Government a
guard over his private house; and who thereafter proceeded about his duties
in Pretoria under armed escort.
It is stated that the death sentence was commuted the same afternoon, but
no intimation of this was given to the prisoners and no public announcement
was made until twenty-four hours later. In spite of the vindictive urgings
of the Hollander newspaper, the Volksstem, few could believe that the
death sentence would be carried out and most people recognized that the
ebullitions of that organ expressed the feelings of only a few rabid and
witless individuals among the Hollanders themselves and were viewed with
disgust by the great majority of them. At the same time the scene in court
had been such as to show that the Government party—the officials and Boers
then present—had not regarded the death sentence as a mere formality, but
had, on the contrary, viewed it as a deliberate and final judgment. In such
circumstances therefore it can be believed that the prisoners themselves
were not without misgivings.
Footnotes for Chapter VIII
{33} Died in prison.
{34} Unable, owing to illness, to stand trial
with the others. On recovery, Mr. Curtis returned to the Transvaal, and
decided to plead 'not guilty,' whereupon proceedings were dropped.