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Surrendered burghers and the first concentration camps

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After the capture of the republican capitals (Bloemfontein on 13 March 1900 and Pretoria on 5 June 1900), the British supreme command believed that the subsequent formal annexations of the republics would lead to the end of the war. They were not prepared for the guerrilla warfare, launched by Boer leaders such as generals Christiaan de Wet, Koos de la Rey and Louis Botha, that was to frustrate the British army for a further two years. However, it was a depleted Boer force that began a mobile war in the guerrilla phase.

Many burghers (republican citizens) surrendered voluntarily: nearly 26 per cent of those who had been eligible for military service at the outbreak of the war and about 40 per cent of those who had been mobilised initially. This was the result of the proclamation of Lord Roberts, the British commander-in-chief, which promised that those who took the oath of neutrality could return to their farms and not take part in the war. This attempt to create division in the Boer forces was one of the more immediate factors leading to the formation of concentration camps.

But events did not go smoothly, and those who laid down their arms came under considerable pressure from both the Boer and the British forces. The Boer forces did not recognise the oath of neutrality and forced these men, known as surrendered burghers or hendsoppers (handsuppers) in popular parlance, to rejoin the commandos. The British were unable to exercise complete military control in many districts and often failed to protect surrendered burghers. Yet they insisted that the Boers honour their oath of neutrality. Being in an invidious position, some burghers rejoined the Boer forces and others tried, under difficult circumstances, to avoid being drawn back into the conflict. The number of surrendered burghers grew as burghers became increasingly war-weary.

The British authorities needed to institute measures to protect and give recognition to those who had surrendered voluntarily. General E.Y. Brabant (commander of Brabant’s Horse, a Cape Colony regiment) realised this and on 13 May 1900 he proposed that Free State burghers be sent to Aliwal North, on the Cape side of the Orange River, because he believed this was an appropriate location in which to protect them.

A political divide almost as wide as the ocean: left, a defiant group of bittereinder prisoners at Broadwood prisoner-of-war camp on St Helena
The home soil of Irene camp for those hendsoppers who had accepted the Crown.

Sir Alfred Milner, the British high commissioner, supported Brabant’s proposal in principle but had doubts about its feasibility. Roberts had the same concerns and hypothesised that such a decision might actually strengthen the hand of the Boer leaders, who could then convince burghers that they would be sent to the Cape Colony as prisoners of war if they surrendered.

Nevertheless, Brabant’s proposal had great merit for the British supreme command and provided a practical solution for removing these burghers from the scene of the war. Failure to do so might have caused the war to drag on indefinitely, Milner maintained.

Lieutenant General Sir Redvers Buller shared Brabant’s view and suggested that burghers who had surrendered be sent with their livestock to Natal, where they could be accommodated on the unoccupied farms of Natal rebels. By 25 July 1900, one person had been relocated in this manner. But, before the policy could be implemented further, Buller had to obtain the approval of the Natal government, which raised well-founded objections and concerns about the military’s ability to carry it out correctly.

By August 1900, the British military authorities still had no effective way of protecting the Boers who had capitulated. On the contrary, British actions were characterised by futile reprisal measures against those suspected of violating their oath of neutrality. The lack of British protection caused some people to flee to towns and cities under British control. The district commissioners encouraged these people to move, as it was often the only way to protect them. In Pretoria burghers were accommodated in empty houses and received rations of two shillings and sixpence per day. The military authorities also devised a scheme to employ them as municipal workers to offset the rations they were given and enable them to earn money. But the scheme had limited appeal and, despite the distribution of 2 000 notices, only 12 people presented themselves for employment (six of them wanted to work as foremen).

The British authorities could not accommodate all the surrendered burghers in towns and cities indefinitely because of the lack of housing, and the burghers were not allowed to bring their livestock. Consequently, the notion of protection camps received increasing support. If carried out successfully, these would solve the problem of accommodating the burghers. On 23 August 1900, Milner informed Roberts: ‘I think, if once we can make up our minds to a camp or camps in South Africa, we shall find it an absolute advantage in this respect ... My idea is that many of the more pacific of them [the burghers] would be protected against being again commandeered and, at the same time, would not be sent out of the country. Both of these objects would be secured by keeping them in custody in South Africa.’[3]

Roberts supported his proposals and considered establishing similar camps in the Transvaal. On 22 September 1900 it was officially announced that camps for burghers who had surrendered would be established in Bloemfontein and Pretoria. The Bloemfontein camp was formed that same month. In Pretoria, burghers were housed in a so-called rest camp, which had previously served as a transit camp for Boer prisoners of war. The inmates of the rest camp were later transferred to the Irene concentration camp, near Pretoria.

These protection camps ensured the Boers’ safety, but provision also had to be made for their livestock. Roberts ruled that, in cases where their livestock was required by the military authorities, a valid permit had to be issued for the animals. Where the livestock was not needed, a few people would be allowed to remain on the farms to look after the animals and would be issued with protection passes. But many burghers were reluctant to stay on their farms because they feared being commandeered by the Boer forces or that their livestock would be confiscated without compensation by the British columns. Therefore a few of the Boers took some sheep and cattle to the camps and kept them nearby.

The camps were officially set up only for surrendered burghers and their families. However, women and children who had been rendered homeless as a result of the scorched-earth policy were also sent to the camps or forced to find refuge there. Roberts indicated on 30 September 1900 that commanders could use their discretion when housing individuals in the Bloemfontein camp and it was not necessarily intended for surrendered burghers only. In October, wives and children of loyal republican burghers were forced to go to Bloemfontein and by 15 November 1900 there were 519 people in this camp.

There was, therefore, no difference between the protection camps (for burghers who had surrendered) and concentration camps (for the wives and children of loyal burghers who were compelled to be there). The British also described the camps as refugee camps, but this term is misleading because it implies that the women went voluntarily as refugees, while in reality the British had forced them off their farms and into the camps.

It can be argued that the policy of extensive concentration camps that was developed later can be traced back to these efforts to protect the surrendered burghers. In this way, these burghers contributed to the genesis of the concentration-camp system, albeit indirectly and inadvertently.

There is another link between the camps and the burghers who laid down their arms. Burgher peace committees, consisting of surrendered burghers, were established in co-operation with the British authorities in an attempt to compel those who were still on commando to surrender because the cause was lost. Their efforts were largely fruitless. Several republican leaders and, later, historians, believed that the peace committees actually gave the idea of concentration camps to Horatio Lord Kitchener, Roberts’s successor. It was believed that Meyer de Kock, a burgher from Belfast who acted as peace envoy and later died for this cause, persuaded the British to use this method. However, there is no conclusive evidence to support this, and Kitchener had already given serious consideration to the expansion of the camps even before he met with the burgher peace committees. Nevertheless, it is clear that some surrendered burghers supported the establishment of camps.

The War at Home

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