Selected Official Documents of the South African Republic and Great Britain

Frederick Charles Hicks
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Selected Official Documents of
the South African Republic and
Great Britain

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Title: Selected Official Documents of the South African Republic and
Great Britain A Documentary Perspective Of The Causes Of The War
In South Africa
Author: Various
Editor: Hugh Williams and Frederick Charles Hicks
Release Date: November 23, 2005 [EBook #17136]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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OFFICIAL DOCUMENTS ***

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Selected
Official Documents
OF THE
South African Republic
AND
Great Britain.
* * * * *
A documentary perspective of the causes of the war in South Africa.
* * * * *
EDITED BY
HUGH WILLIAMS, M.A., B.L.S.,
Library of Congress,
AND
FREDERICK CHARLES HICKS, Ph.B.,
Library of Congress.

PREFACE.
The universal interest in the affairs of the South African Republic is
responsible for the idea that a selection of documents illustrative of the
South African controversy will be appreciated by American readers.
The documents which are here reprinted are by no means unobtainable;
but, to the general reader, they have been hitherto quite inaccessible.
Only the largest public libraries have the proper sources of information,
and even with these books at hand the student has been forced to delve
in a mass of irrelevant material for the hidden object of his desire.
The present compilation has been made in the hope of meeting the
immediate demands of the public. To avoid cumbersomeness, many
important documents have necessarily been omitted; yet as far as
possible, the editors have given a complete series of documents. The
arrangement is partly chronological, and we hope altogether logical.
Commencing with the London Convention of 1884, which defines the
status of the South African Republic in its relations with Great Britain,
we follow with the revised Constitution of 1889, and its
complementary law of June 23, 1890, which granted representation in a
second Volksraad to burghers of two years' standing. The latest
legislation concerning the right of franchise is given in the enactment
of July, 1899. This law, together with negotiations looking toward
further concessions to the Uitlander population forms the subject of our
third chapter. No agreement having been reached, and numerous
complications having arisen, conspicuously the movements of British
troops, the Ultimatum of President Kruger on October 9, precipitated a
state of war.
In presenting this Ultimatum President Kruger knew that the Republic
would not have to fight alone, but that there would be practically a war
of the South African Dutch against the English. The declaration of the
Orange Free State to Great Britain will therefore be of interest, as
expressing the grounds of sympathy between the South African
Republic and the Orange Free State, and the latter's view of the causa
belli. Lastly we add the constitution of the Orange Free State that the
political status of the two republics may be appreciated by comparison

of their constitutions.
The documents have been compiled from the _Codex van de Locale
Wetten der Zuid-Afrikaansche Republiek. Gröningen, 1894_; _The
Political Laws of the South African Republic. London and Cape Town,
1896_; and the _State Papers of Great Britain, London, 1884-99_.
WASHINGTON, _February 10, 1900_.

CONTENTS.
PAGE
CHAPTER I.
1. Convention of London, February 27, 1884 7
2. Ratification by Volksraad, August 8, 1884 14
CHAPTER II.
3. Constitution of the South African Republic, revised and published
December 25, 1889 16
4. Establishment of the Second Volksraad, June 23, 1890 40
CHAPTER III.
_The Franchise._
5. The Franchise Law. July 26, 1899 47
6. Proposed modification
(a) Proposal of Great Britain for a joint inquiry, August 2, 1899 53
(b) Alternative proposal of the South African Republic--The five year

franchise, August 19, 1899 53
CHAPTER IV.
7. Ultimatum of South African Republic, October 9, 1899 57
8. Reply of Great Britain, October 10, 1899 61
CHAPTER V.
_Dual alliance of the South African Republic and the Orange Free
State._
9. Resolution of Orange Free State Volksraad, September 27, 1899 62
10. Correspondence between Great Britain and Orange Free State,
October 11, 1899 63
CHAPTER VI.
11. Constitution of Orange Free State, revised and published, 1868 65
CHAPTER I.
CONVENTION OF LONDON, _February 27, 1884_.
_A Convention Between Her Majesty the Queen of the United
Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and the South African
Republic._
Whereas, The
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