Great Boer War

Home > Other > Great Boer War > Page 74
Great Boer War Page 74

by Farwell, Byron,,


  Patterson, A. B. “Banjo,”

  Peace negotiations

  Pearse, H. H. S.

  Pecci, Count

  Pen Hoek

  Penn Symons, Maj. Gen. Sir William

  Pennsylvania Dutch

  Pepworth Hill

  Perrin. H.

  Pettersen-Janek, Hjalmar

  Philippines

  Phillips, Capt. Henry

  Phillips, Capt. L. March

  Phipps-Hornby, Maj. Edmund

  Pickwood, Lt. Col. Edwin

  Pienaar, Christina and Johannes

  Pienaar, Jack

  Pienaar, Philip

  Pietermaritzburg

  Pietersburg

  Piet Retief commando

  Plaatje, Solomon Tshekisho; novel, Mhudi

  Plowden, Pamela

  Plumbe, Maj. John

  Plumer, Brigadier, H. C. O.

  Plumer, Lt. Col. Herbert

  Pohl, Frederick

  Pohl, Stephen and Willie

  Pole-Carew, Gen. R.

  Pom pom

  Poore, Lady Florence

  Poplar Grove, battle of

  Port Elizabeth

  Porter, Col. T. C.

  Portuguese

  Porchefstroom; camp

  Potgieter, F. J.

  Pretoria; Boers surrender; Boer women in; burgher “camps”; British campaign; British prisoners in; Diamond Hill battle; peace talks; Roberts occupation of

  Pretoria Convention

  Pretoria Commando

  Pretoria Mounted Police

  Pretorius, Andries

  Pretorious, M. W.

  Pretyman, Gen. Sir George

  Price, Col. H. S.

  Prince of Wales

  Princess of Wales

  Prinsloo, Hendrik

  Prinsloo, Jacobus

  Prinsloo, Marthinus

  Prinsloo, Commandant Gen.

  Prior, Melton

  Prisoners and prisoner of war camps; camp conditions and life; held by Boers; released by Boers; taken by British; escapes; newspapers in camps; relief organizations; at war’s end

  Protectorate Regiment

  Prothero, Capt.

  Queen’s chocolate

  Queen’s Infantry

  Queensland Mounted Infantry

  Raal, Sarah

  Railway Pioneer Regiment

  Railways and supply lines; blockhouse system; convoy abandoned

  Ralph, Julian

  Rand (Witwatersrand)

  Rawlinson, Lord Henry

  Red crosses

  Reddersburg

  Reed, Capt. Hamilton

  Reform Committee

  Reichmann, Capt. Carl

  Reitz, Denys; career; as guerrilla; at Spion Kop

  Reitz, Francis W.

  Reitz, Hjalmar

  Reitz, Joubert

  Reitz (town)

  Repatriation department

  Retief, Pieter

  Republics, see Voortrekker republics

  Rhenoster River, battle at

  Rhodes, Cecil; and Jameson Raid; and Kimberley siege

  Rhodes, Col. Frank

  Rhodesia

  Rice, Cecil Spring

  Rice, Capt. Gerard

  Richardson, Col. Wodehouse D.

  Richiardi, Cumillo

  Riebeck, Johan (Jan) van

  Riet River

  Rifle Brigade

  Rimington’s Guides

  Roberts, Gen. Sir Abraham

  Roberts, Aileen

  Roberts, Lt. the Honourable Frederick S.

  Roberts, Field Marshal Frederick Sleigh t Baron of Kandahar; annexation of Orange Free State and Transvaal; head of army; at Bloemfontein; and Buller; career and personality; thinks war ended; leniency towards Boers; Paardeberg and Cronje; Pretoria; pursuit of Boer leaders; and Rhodes; into Transvaal

  Roberts, Lady

  Roberts, Horse

  Robertse, Frans

  Robertson, Capt. E. R.

  Robertson, Field Marshal William

  Robinson, Sir Hercules

  Rocke, Lt. Cyril

  Romer, Sir Robert

  Roodewal

  Rooilaagte, battle of

  Roos, Tielman Johannes de Villiers

  Roosevelt, Theodore

  Roslyn, Lord

  Rothschild, Lord

  Roux, Gen. Paul Hendrik

  Rouxville commando

  Royal Army Medical Corps

  Royal Engineers

  Royal Horse Artilley Batteries; “G,” ; “U,” ; “Q”

  Royal Irish Fusiliers

  Royal Lancaster Regiment

  Royal Marines; see also Naval Brigade

  Royal Navy

  Royal Scots

  Riuter

  Russia and Russians

  Rutherford, Col. N. J. C.

  Rutherford, Dr. Nathan

  St. Helena pow camp

  Salisbury, Lord Robert

  Salt, Lt. George

  Sampson, Victor

  Sanna’s Post, battle of

  Sansom, Dr. C. L.

  Santos-Dumont, Alberto

  Sargant, E. B.

  Saunders, W. A.

  Scandinavians

  Scarlett, Dr. the Honourable Ella Campbell

  Scheepers, Gideon

  Scheepers, Jacobus and Sophia

  Shikkerling, Roland

  Schiller, Friedrich von

  Schleswig-Holstein, Prince Victor of

  Schlosberg, Freda

  Schoeman, J. H.

  Schofield, Capt. Harry

  Schreiner, Olive

  Schreiner, W. P.

  Schumann, J. H. L.

  Schutte, Pieter

  Schweizer Reneke

  Schwikkard, Lt.

  Scotland

  Scots Fusiliers

  Scots Greys

  Scots Guards

  Scott-Chisholme, Col. John

  Scott-Moncrieff, Maj. William

  Scottish Horse

  Seaforth Highlanders

  Seeley, Capt. James

  Selborne, Lord William

  Senekal, Cecilia

  Seymour, Louis Irving

  Shaul, Cpl. John

  Shaw, George Bernard

  Shaw, Capt. Frederick

  Shepstone, Theophilus

  Sheridan, Lt. Richard Brinsley

  Shrapnel Henry

  Shropshire Light Infantry

  Simonstown pow camp

  Slabbert, M. J.

  Slachter’s Nek

  Slocum, Capt. Joshua

  Slocum, Capt. S. L’H.

  Smit, Nicolaas

  Smith, Sir Harry

  Smith, James Francis

  Smith, Johannes

  Smith-Dorrien, Maj. Gen. Horace

  Smithfield commando

  Smuts, Isie

  Smuts, Jan; career and personality; and collapse of Boer army; as guerrilla commando; and peace; and reorganization period

  Smuts, Gen. Tobias

  Snyman, Gen. J. P.

  Somerset Light Infantry

  South Africa; history to beginning of war; land and people; Republic of; Union of See also Afrikaners; Boers

  South African Conciliation Committee

  South African Indian Ambulance Corps

  South African Light Horse

  South African Women and Children’s Distress Fund

  South Lancashire Regiment

  Spain

  Spender, Harold

  Spens, Col. James

  Spies

  Spion Kop; battle of; aftermath

  Spragge, Col. B.

  Springfontein camp

  Staatsartillerie, see Boer army

  Standerton; camp

  Stanley, Lord

  Stanley, Pvt.

  Stanley, Henry M.

  Stead, W. T. 314; books and newspapers

  Steenekamp, Commandant, Lucas

  Steevens, G. W.

  Stent, Vere

  Stephanson’s brigade

  Sternberg, Count von

&
nbsp; Sterndale, Robert A.

  Stewart, Capt. Charles

  Steyn, Colin

  Steyn, Advocate Gladys

  Steyn, Marthinus Theunis; attempts to avert war; evades capture; and peace; portable government of; perseverance of; sickness and death; at Vereeniging

  Steyn, Pieter Gysburt

  Steyn, Tibbie

  Steyn, Willie

  Steytler, George and Lourens

  Stopford, Lt. Col. Horace

  Stormberg Junction; battle of

  Streatfield, Col. Henry

  Stuart, Mrs. K. H. R.

  Sullivan, Sir Arthur

  Surrender; document

  SutherlandLt.

  Swanepoel, Hans

  Swart, C. R.

  Swazis

  Swinburne, Algernon Charles

  Tabanyama ridge

  Talana; battle of

  Tasmanians

  Taylor, Maj. Philip

  Tohrengula Hill, battle of

  Teachers and schools

  Teller, Senator Henry Moor (U.S.)

  Temple, Lt. William

  Terrorism and torture

  Thackery, Lt. Col. Thomas

  Theron, Danie

  Third Cavalry Brigade

  Thirteenth Brigade

  Thorneycroft, Lt. Col. Alexander W.

  Three Tree Hill

  The Times History of the War in South Africa, 1899-1902,; quoted; on Bantu; on British regulars; on Buller; on Spion Kop

  Tocqueville, Alexis de

  Transvaal; army of; and blockhouse system; early British rule; camps in; defeat; gold and uitlanders; guerrilla war; Kruger and Joubert; peace talks; Roberts’ invasion of; self-government and Union; towards war; war govt.

  Transvaal Political Association

  Tree, Mrs. Beerbohm

  Trekker republics, see Voortrekker republics

  Treves, Dr. Frederick

  Trevor, Maj. Tudor C.

  Trichardt, Cdt. Piet

  Tucker, Lt. Gen. Charles

  Tucker, J. E.

  Tucker, W. K.

  Tugela River; Boers on; British on; and battle of Colenso

  Turkey

  Twain, Mark

  Tweebosch

  Twin Peaks

  Twyford, Maj. Ernest

  Uitlanders; franchise for; Milner and; refugees

  Uniform problem, see Guerrilla Commandos

  Uniondale

  Unionist Party (Brit.)

  United States; see also Americans

  Utrect commando

  Vaale Krantz hill, battle of

  Vaal River

  Vandeleur, Seymour

  Van de Merwe, Jan

  Van der Veldt, Johannes

  Van Deventer, Jacobus ff.

  Vane, Capt. Francis Fletcher

  Van Gogh, Cor and Vincent

  Van Heardon, Alan and Petronella

  Van Miekerk, Cdt. C. A.

  Van Oostrun, O.

  Van Rensburg, Niklaas

  Van Rensburg, Stompie

  Van Riet, G. J.

  Van Warmelo, Johanna

  Van Wouw, Anton

  Van Zyl, Louis Jacobus

  Veld; British soldier in; guerrillas; at war’s end; women and

  Venter’s Spruit

  Vercuel, A. J.

  Vereeniging; camp; peace talks

  Vermaak, Field Cornet Ignatias Utrecht

  Verner, Col. Willoughby

  Vertur, Capt. Naunton

  Victoria, Queen of England; and Colenso defeat; Empire and; gifts to soldiers; and illusory end of war; and women in S. Africa

  Victoria Cross

  Victorian Mounted Rifles

  Viljoen, Gen. Ben

  Viljoen, Jan

  Viljoen, Pieter and Henning

  Viljoen, Petrus

  Vilonel, Frans

  Vincent, Lt. Col. A. C. F.

  Vizetelly, Frank

  Volunteer forces, colonial and foreign: with Boers; with British; compared to regulars

  Von Donop, Col. Pelham

  Voortrekker republics

  Vrede commando

  Vryburg

  Vryheid commando

  Wade, Sgt. W. J.

  Wagon Hill, battle of

  Wakkerstroom commando

  Walker, Benjamin

  Wallace, Edgar

  War correspondents, see News coverage and newspapers

  War Office (Brit.); military preparation; and volunteers

  Ward, Col. Edward

  Warnock, Quartermaster Sgt.

  Warren, Lt. Gen. Sir Charles; career; incompetence; at Tabanyama and Spion Kop; relieved of command

  Warren, Lt. George

  Waters, Col. Wallscourt

  Waterson, Dr. Jane

  Waterval Drift

  Waterval North camp

  Watson, Lt. W. W. R.

  Watson, Capt.

  Wauchope, Maj. Gen. Andrew

  Wauchope, Lt. Arthur

  Webb, Beatrice

  Webster, A. T.

  Weil, Benjamin

  Welch regiment

  Welsh hospital

  Wepener

  Wessels, Gen. C. J.

  Wessles, Gen. J. B.

  Wessels, J. H. J.

  Wessels, Marthinus

  Westminster, Duke of

  Weston, Maj.

  West Yorkshire Regiment

  White, C. K.

  White, Lt. Gen Sir George; battle of Ladysmith; career; to Natal; in Ladysmith; siege of Ladysmith

  White, Capt. Wyndham

  White flag

  Whittington, Dr. Richard

  Widows and Orphans Fund

  Wilkinson, Spencer

  Willcock, Capt. Stephen

  Williams, Basil

  Willis, George W.

  Wilson, Capt. Gordon

  Wilson, Lady Sarah née Churchill

  Wilson, H. W.

  Wilson, Henry

  Wilson, Lt. Robert

  Wilson, Sir William

  Witwatersrand, see Rand

  Wolfaardt, Piet

  Wolmarans, A. D. W.

  Wolmarans, Maj. J. F.

  Wolseley, Gen. Sir Garnet; compared to Buller; and Roberts

  Women and children (see also Concentration camps), Boer: with forces; and farms destroyed; in Pretoria; on veld; British: nurses; teachers; visitors

  Wood, Gen. Evelyn

  Woodgate, Maj. Gen. E. R. P.

  Woodroffe, Dr. G. G.

  Wools-Sampson, Aubrey

  World Wars

  Worsfold, W. Basil

  Wright, Sir Almroth

  Wright, Maj. Robert

  Xenophon (Anabasis)

  Yorkshire Regiment

  Yorkshire Light Infantry

  Younghusband, Sir George

  Yule, Brig. Gen. James

  Yule, Dr. Pratt

  Zand River Convention

  Zarps, see Johannesburg police

  Zeppelin, Count Ferdinand von

  Zoutpansberg district

  Zulus; war with British

  a Daniel Lindley (1801-1888) was an American, son of the president of Philadelphia College, who came to South Africa in 1833, learned Dutch, and in 1843 was ordained in the Dutch Reformed Church.

  b The Griquas are a people of mixed origins: Hottentot, European, and Bantu. They proudly called themselves Bastards until missionaries told them the word was pejorative.

  c Not even missionaries and liberals in England suggested equal political rights. A schoolbook explained it: “To the natives . . . the British flag means protection and security. It does not mean complete equality before the law, still less does it mean political equality. In a land where the natives are so many more in number than the whites, and where the natives are not by nature either intelligent or law-abiding, they must be restrained in matters where white men are left free.”1

  d British regulars began the war with old Lee-Metfords. Although a few years earlier the army had decided to adopt the improved Lee-Enfield, which differed from the older rif
le in the number, depth, and width of the grooves, it had been determined, with typical military economy, to allow the regulars to wear out the old rifles and, except for 25,000 issued to reservists, the Lee-Enfields (some 200,000) were put in the reserve of rifles. Three months after the war started, when the army began to issue the new Lee-Enfields to the Imperial Yeomanry, it was discovered by the yeomanry that all these new rifles were badly sighted, firing 18 inches to the right at 500 yards!

  e Instead of the hiding he deserved, young Dunn became a hero. Invalided home, he was given a tumultuous welcome. At Portsmouth the crowd carried him on their shoulders. There was some execrable poetry written about him, and he was taken to Osborne to meet the Queen, who presented him with a new silver bugle with a suitable inscription. Queen Victoria, writing of him in her journal, described him as “a nice-looking, modest boy.” Richard Harding Davis, the American newspaper correspondent and novelist, declared that the only people who emerged from the war with any distinction were Sir George White, Baden-Powell, John French, Winston Churchill, and Bugler Dunn.

  f Had he not been born into one of the classes of society from which British officers were drawn, Roberts could never have been a professional soldier, for the minimum height required by the regular army for other ranks was 5 feet 5½ inches, reduced during the war in South Africa to 5 feet 2 inches for the Royal Artillery and 5 feet 3 inches for other regiments of the line.

  g Actually the 18th.

  h These are the figures obtained by Captain S. L’H. Slocum, 8th United States Cavalry, who was the American military attaché with Roberts’s force, but a wide variety of other figures exist. Wild as the Boer numbers generally were, those of the British often showed wide discrepancies too. The Times History gave Roberts’s strength as “roughly 37,000 men,” of whom 30,000 were combatants; Rayne Kruger, a modern writer, and A. Conan Doyle gave about 33,000 (over 25,000 infantry and nearly 8,000 mounted troops); American historian A. T. Mahan gave the total as 35,000 (24,000 infantry and 11,000 cavalry and mounted infantry), which is also the figure used by Brian Gardner. The number of guns is also in dispute: Kruger said “over 100,” Mahan and Conan Doyle said 98, while Slocum gave 92.

  i A bheestie is an Indian water carrier; a mussack is the goatskin bag he carries. A pokhole (usually spelled puckauly) is a large waterskin made from an entire ox hide and holding about 20 gallons.

  j A remarkable young man who, as he spoke Afrikaans and English as well as several Bantu languages, served as an interpreter in Mafeking. He also knew how to type. After the war he became a Lutheran lay preacher, editor of an English-Setswana weekly newspaper, and in 1912 the first general corresponding secretary of the South African Native National Congress. His novel, Mhudi, written in English, was the first by a South African Bantu; he also made many translations from English into Setswana. His diary of the siege was not discovered until 1969.

 

‹ Prev