The
Reminiscences of Sir Walter Stanford
Volume I:
1850-1885
Volume II:
1885-1929
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Geredigeer deur
J.W. Macquarrie Die Departement van Naturellesake |
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Sir Walter Stanford het
vir baie jare in die Departement van Naturelleske van die Kaapkolonie
gedien voordat hy in 1907 afgetree het en begin het om sy memoires
te skryf. Die eerste volume beskryf sy jeug, sy
opleiding aan Stanford as ‘n jong man |
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warnings of
intended treachery reached the magistrates but the meeting passed over without
any overt act. The conduct of Makwaai’s men however
was such that Mr. Brownlee was satisfied of their intention to rebel.
Following
on the meeting traders were warned to leave the district. In doing so they were
not personally molested but their stores were looted. On the evening of the 3rd
October Ramhlagwana warned Mr. Brownlee that an
attack on Mooiterie’s Kop had been arranged for that
night. Ramhlagwana’s son Stampi
and his brother Umsi were in the plot. On this
information Mr. Brownlee and the officers with him put up defences
and this becoming known the attack was deferred. On the morning of the 4th
it was decided that Mr.
Brownlee and party should return to Kokstad and Liefeldt [with] his clerk Austin fall back on the Fingo locations southward where later he successfully organised a defensive force. Ramhlagwana
and his brother Sili with fifty armed men met the
chief magistrate as he approached the border of his location.
The
hostile Basuto, some four hundred strong, who were
threatening a flank attack from the right, fell back on observing this
movement. For about five miles Ramhlagwana kept with
Mr. Brownlee and then turned homeward. The Umizimvubu
drift was not far off when some mounted Basuto
galloped forward to intercept the chief magistrate. These were checked and at
the river a force of thirty Europeans and one hundred natives thoughtfully sent
forward from Kokstad by Mr. J. T. Wylde, then Magistrate of the
A
laager had been formed by farmers from the neighbourhood
near this drift and, leaving Commandant Strachan in control, Mr. Brownlee proceeded to Kokstad
and energetically entered upon the task of organising
such forces as were available to meet the emergency.
For an
hour after Mr. Brownlee’s departure from Mooiterie s
Kop Liefeldt and Austin waited there with sixty loyal Fingos
of the Hlubi tribe. The treacherous petty chief Umsi with about forty Basuto were
also there. After the interval mentioned Liefeldt
dashed out on horseback with Austin and got through to the location of the
chief Ludidi and other Fingo
headmen on the Kenigha River.3 The people
there were is a state of panic, but the presence of their magistrate restored
confidence and [they] faced the Basuto, who were
already devastating the country around. The sixty Fingos
who were at Mooiterie’s Kop belonged to thee
locations. They were suffered to depart with their arms by the Basuto headman, Sekaki, but were
afterwards attacked and lost eleven men in cutting their way through the Basuto.
Umhlonhlo now came forward as the
friend of the Government. He sent a congratulatory message to Mr. Brownlee and
expressed readiness to take the field with his men under [the} command of the
magistrate. Umhlonhlo’s loyalty in this critical time
would have been very valuable to the country and it was even suggested that his well-known influence with
the Bathlokoa chief, Lindingwana,
might be used to detach that chief from the rebel Basuto
with whom he was rightly suspected of being in sympathy.
It was
not without grave misgivings that the experienced Chief Magistrate accepted the
offer of Umhlonhlo made through his magistrate. But
Hope4 was confident and the issues at stake were very important. So,
accompanied by Umhlonhlo, Hope attended a preliminary
meeting at Hlankomo (
Hope
and Welsh returned to their respective magistracies. Meanwhile the Chief
Magistrate had rapidly got forces together and, with these, Commandant Strachan attacked Makwaai, Sekaki and other Basuto leaders
driving them and their adherents