Contree (Jul 2024)

Some attitudes in Grahamstown towards the advent of the second Anglo-Boer War

  • H.C. Hummel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4102/nc.v20i0.733
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 0

Abstract

Read online

In October 1899 the Anglo-Boer War broke out. This article looks at how so quintessentially English speaking a community as late-Victorian Grahamstown (especially some of its local newspapers) reacted to the gathering crisis. Underlying the most obvious - but certainly not entirely representative - outburst of popular jingoistic feeling, was the sense that Grahamstown was in a state of limbo: it was no longer of commercial or military importance and it had not yet found its sense of identity as a university centre. In such circumstances, Grahamstonians looked essentially to their own interests. Theirs was a "tightfisted" response even to the plight of their own compatriots who fled the "Boer North".

Keywords