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Explore the history of South Africa from 1890-1960, focusing on significant events such as the rise of diamond and gold mining, the South African War, and the development of segregation. Learn about nationalist movements and the introduction of apartheid.
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South Africa, 1890-1960 HI177 | A History of Africa since 1800 Term 2 | Week 5 | Dr Sacha Hepburn
Diamonds and Gold • Kimberley diamond mining from 1867 • By 1890, £3M per annum - 50% of Cape revenue • 18,000 black workers • Cecil Rhodes & De Beers • Cape legislation entrenched white dominance to secure black labour for mines and farms • Witwatersrand gold mines, 1880s- • Prospectors, profiteers, technicians flooded in • Needed large capital (Randlords), and migrant labour • 1899: 27% world gold, 100,000 workers 1913: 40% (£30M), 200,000 workers
The South African War • Jameson Raid (1895) – Rhodes’ “capitalist politics” • Transvaal Republic under Kruger • Imperial strategy – did Britain want to annex the Transvaal? • War: 28,000 Boer civilians killed. 7000 Boers soldiers, 20,000 British • 1910: Boer Republics and British colonies were joined in the Union of South Africa
The Development of Segregation Example laws: • 1913 Native Lands Act • Pass Laws • 1930-32: Native Economic Commission • 1936 Native Trust and Land Act • 1936: Native Representation Act Segregation in action
Nationalisms • Afrikaner nationalism • Afrikaner nationhood and identity: white Africans • Understood themselves as a pioneer people who had tamed the landscape and cultivated in ‘empty lands’ • Christian Nationalism • National Party, founded in 1914 • African nationalism • African National Congress, founded in 1912 • Alternative politics • South African Indian Congress, founded in 1923 • South African Communist Party, founded in 1921
1948: The Election • National Party under Malan on the offensive, United Party under Smuts on the defensive – National Party narrowly wins • Apartheid: • ‘apartness’, ‘separateness’ • built on years of racial populism • relatively undefined in 1948 • ‘Allowed Afrikaner nationalism to cohere as an election-winning force’ - Dubow Daniel François Malan
The Early Years of Apartheid • Apartheid vs earlier policies of racial segregation • ‘Positives’ of separate development for all races (but particular appealing to Afrikaners) • Social engineering rigidified • E.g. Mixed Marriages Act, 1949; Immorality Act, 1950; Population Registration Act, 1950 • Social and economic progress secured by race • Political separation • E.g. Suppression of Communism Act, 1950; Separate Representation of Voters Act, 1951 • Structural inequality • E. g. Group Areas Act, 1950; Black Laws Amendment Act, 1952
Resistance to apartheid • ANC, SAIC, SACD = Congress Alliance under ANC leadership • Defiance campaign, 1952 • Freedom Charter, 1955 • The Treason Trial, 1956-61 • Pan African Congress formed and joins Congress Alliance • But, a splintered opposition • Urban-rural divisions in ANC • ANC members leave over non-racial policy of Freedom Charter • PAC breaks from Congress over white and left influence
Sharpeville and beyond… • PAC wanted deliberate, determined action against the government and apartheid • March 1960: sponsors anti-pass campaign in Sharpeville • Police repression: 69 killed, many more injured • Protests across South Africa lead to police repression • ANC and PAC banned; activists driven underground or into exile; move towards armed struggle • ANC shifts from nationalist protest movement to a national liberation movement