THE first known finding of a diamond in South Africa was as recent as 1867, and this
diamond was found by accident and could not for a time obtain any credence. It is first
known to have been seen at the house of a Dutch farmer named Jacobs, in the northern
limits of the Cape Colony, and south of the Orange River. It had probably been brought
from the bed of the stream or from the other side of the river. The "other side"
vould be in Griqualand West, the land of diamonds. As far as I can learn, there is no idea
that diamonds have been deposited by nature in the soil of the Cape Colony proper. At
Jacobs's house it was seen in the hands of one of the children by another Boer named Van Niekerk, who observing that it was brighter and also heavier than other stones, and
thinking it to be too valuable for a plaything, offered to buy it. But the child's mother
would not sell such a trifle and gave it to Van Niekerk. From Van Niekerk it was passed on
to one O'Reilly, who seems to have been the first to imagine it to be a diamond. He took
it to Capetown, where he could get no faith for his stone, and thence back to Colesberg on
the northern extremity of the Colony, where it was again encountered with ridicule. But it
became a matter of discussion, and was at last sent to Dr. Atherstone, of Grahamstown, who
was known to be a geologist and a man of science. He surprised the world of South Africa
by declaring the stone to be an undoubted diamond. It weighed over 21 carats and was sold
to Sir P. Wodehouse, the then Governor of the Colony, for £ 500.
In 1868 and 1869 various diamonds were found, and the search for them was no doubt
instigated by Van Niekerk's and O'Reilly's success; but nothing great was done nor did the
belief prevail that South Africa was a country richer in precious stones than any other
region yet discovered. Those which were brought to light during these two years may I
believe yet be numbered, and no general belief had been created. But some searching by
individuals was continued. The same Van Niekerk who had received the first diamond from
the child not unnaturally had his imagination fired by his success. Either in 1868 or 1869
he heard of a large stone which was then in the hands of a Kafir witch-doctor from whom he succeeded in buying it, giving for it as the story goes all his sheep and
all his horses. But the purchase was a good one,---for a Dutchman's flocks are not often
very numerous or very valuable,---and he sold the diamond to merchants in the neighborhood
for £11,200. It weighed 83 carats, and is said to be perfect in all its appointments as
to water, shape, and whiteness. It became known among diamonds and was christened the
"Star of South Africa." After a lawsuit, during which an interdict was
pronounced forbidding its exportation or sale, it made its way to the establishment of
Messrs. Hunt and Rosskill from whom it was purchased for the delight of a lovely British
countess.
Even then the question whether this part of South Africa was diamondiferous had not
been settled to the satisfaction of persons who concern themselves in the produce and
distribution of diamonds. There seems to have been almost an Anti-South African party in
the diamond market, as though it was too much to expect that from a spot so insignificant
as this corner of the Orange and Vaal Rivers should be found a rival to the time-honored
glories of Brazil and India. It was too good to believe,---or to some perhaps too
bad,---that there should suddenly come a plethora of diamonds from among the Hottentots.
It was in 1870 that the question seems to have got itself so settled that some portion
of the speculative energy of the world was enabled to fix itself on the new Diamond
Fields. In that year various white men set themselves seriously to work in searching the
banks of the Vaal up and down between Hebron and Klipdrift,---or Barkly as it is now
called,---and many small parcels of stones were bought from natives who had been
instigated to search by what they had already heard. The operations of those times are now
called the "river diggings" in distinction to the "dry diggings,"
which are works of much greater magnitude, carried on in a much more scientific manner
away from the river,---and which certainly are in all respects "dry" enough. But
at first the searchers confined themselves chiefly to the river bed and to the small
confluents of the river, scraping up into their mining cradles the shingles and dirt they
had collected, and shaking and washing away the grit and mud, till they could see by
turning the remaining stones over with a bit of slate on a board whether Fortune had sent
on that morning a peculiar sparkle among the lot.
I was taken up to Barkly "on a picnic" as people say; and a very nice picnic
it was,---one of the pleasantest days I had in South Africa. The object was to show me the
Vaal River, and the little town which had been the capital of the diamond country before
the grand discovery at Colesberg Kopje had made the town of Kimberley. There is nothing
peculiar about Barkly as a South African town, except that it is already half deserted.
There may be perhaps a score of houses there, most of which are much better built than
those at Kimberley. They are made of rough stone, or of mud and whitewash; and, if I do
not mistake, one of them had two stories. There was a hotel,---quite full, although the
place is deserted,---and clustering round it were six or seven idle gentlemen, all of whom
were or had been connected with diamonds. I am often struck by the amount of idleness
which persons can allow themselves whose occupations have diverged from the common work of
the world.
When at Barkly we got ourselves and our provisions into a boat so that we might have
our picnic properly, under the trees at the other side of the river,---for opposite to
Barkly is to be found the luxury of trees. As we were rowed down the river we saw a white
man with two Kafirs poking about his stones and gravel on a miner's ricketty table under a
little tent on the beach. He was a digger who had still clung to the " river "
business; a Frenchman who had come to try his luck there a few days since. On the Monday
previous,---we were told,---he had found a 13 carat white stone without a flaw. This would
be enough, perhaps, to keep him going and almost to satisfy him for a month. Had he missed
that one stone he would probably have left the place after a week. Now he would go on
through days and days without finding another sparkle. I can conceive no occupation on
earth more dreary---hardly any more demoralizing---than this of perpetually turning over
dirt in quest of a peculiar little stone which may turn up once a week or may not. I could
not but think, as I watched the man, of the comparative nobility of the work of a
shoemaker who by every pull at his thread is helping to keep some person's foot dry.
After our dinner we walked along the bank and found another "river" digger,
though this man's claim might perhaps be removed a couple of hundred yards from the water.
He was an Englishman, and we stood awhile and talked to him. He had one Kafir with him to
whom he paid 7s. a week and his food, and he too had found one or more stones which he
showed us,---just enough to make the place tenable. He had got upon an old digging which
he was clearing out lower. He had, however, in one place reached the hard stone at the
bottom, in, or below which there could be no diamonds. There was, however, a certain
quantity of diamondiferous matter left, and as he had already found stones he thought that
it might pay him to work through the remainder. He was a most good-humored, well-mannered
man, with a pleasant fund of humor. When I asked him of his fortune generally at the
diggings, he told us among other things that he had broken his shoulder bone at the
diggings, which he displayed to us in order that we might see how badly the surgeon had
used him. He had no pain to complain of,---or weakness; but his shoulder had not been made
beautiful. "And who did it?" said the gentleman who was our Amphytrion at the
picnic and is himself one of the leading practitioners of the Fields. "I think it was
one Dr -----," said the digger, naming our friend whom no doubt he knew. I need not
say that the doctor loudly disclaimed ever having had previous acquaintance with the
shoulder.
The Kafir was washing the dirt in a rough cradle, separating the stones from the dust,
and the owner, as each sieveful was brought to him, threw out the stones on his table and
sorted them through with the eternal bit of slate or iron formed into the shape of a
trowel. For the chance of a sieveful one of our party offered him half a crown,---which he
took. I was glad to see it all inspected without a diamond, as had there been anything
good the poor fellow's disappointment must have been great. That halfcrown was probably
all that he would earn during the week,---all that he would earn perhaps for a month. Then
there might come three or four stones in one day. I should think that the tedious despair of the vacant days could hardly be compensated by the triumph of the lucky
minute. These "river" diggers have this in their favor,---that the stones found
near the river are more likely to be white and pure than those which are extracted from
the mines. The Vaal itself in the neighborhood of Barkly is pretty, ---with rocks in its
bed and islands and trees on its banks. But the country around, and from thence to
Kimberley, which is twenty-four miles distant, is as ugly as flatness, barrenness, and
sand together can make the face of the earth.
The commencement of diamond-digging as a settled industry was in 1872. It was then that
dry-digging was commenced, which consists of the regulated removal of ground found to be
diamondiferous and of the washing and examination of every fraction of the soil. The
district which we as yet know to be so specially gifted extends up and down the Vaal River
from the confluence of the Modder to Hebron, about seventy-five miles, and includes a small district on the
cast side of the river. Here, within twelve miles of the river, and within a circle, of
which the diameter is about two and a half miles, are contained all the mines,---or dry
diggings,---from which have come the real wealth of the country. I should have said that
the most precious diamond yet produced, one of 288 carats, was found close to the river
about twelve miles from Barkly. This prize was made in 1872.
It is of the dry diggings that the future student of the Diamond Fields of South Africa
will have to take chief account. The river diggings were only the prospecting work which
led up to the real mining operations,---as the washing of the gullies in Australia led to
the crushing of quartz and to the sinking of deep mines in search of alluvial gold. Of
these dry diggings there are now four, Du Toit's Pan, Bultfontein, Old De Beers,---and
Colesberg Kopje, or the great Kimberley mine, which though last in the Field has thrown
all the other diamond mines into the shade. The first working at the three first of these
was so nearly simultaneous, that they may almost be said to have been commenced at once. I
believe, however, that they were in fact opened in the order I have given.
Bultfontein and Du Toit's Pan were on two separate Boer Farms, of which the former was
bought first,---as early as 1869,---by a firm who had even then had dealings in diamonds
and who no doubt purchased the land with reference to diamonds. Here some few stones were
picked from the surface, but the affair was not thought to be hopeful. The diamond
searchers still believed that the river was the place. But the Dutch farmer at Du Toit's
Pan, one Van Wyk, finding that precious stones were found on his neighbor's land; let out
mining licenses on his own land, binding the miners to give him one fourth of the value of
what they found. This, however, did not answer, and the miners resolved to pay some small monthly sum for a license, or to "jump" the two farms
altogether. Now " jumping" in South African language means open stealing. A man
"jumps" a thing when he takes what does not belong to him with a tacit
declaration that might makes right. Appeal was then made to the authorities of the Orange
Free State for protection;---and something was done. But the diggers were too strong, and
the proprietors of the farms were obliged to throw open their lands to the miners on the
terms which the men dictated.
The English came,---at the end of 1871,---just as the system of dry-digging had formed
itself at these two mines, and from that time to this Du Toit's Pan and Bultfontein have
been worked as regular diamond mines. I did not find them especially interesting to a
visitor. Each of them is about two miles distant from Kimberley town, and the center of
the one can hardly be more than a mile distant from the center of the other. They are
under the inspection of the same Government officer, and might be supposed to be part of
one and the same enterprise were it not that there is a Mining Board at Du Toit's Pan, whereas the shareholders at Bultfontein have abstained from troubling
themselves with such an apparatus. They trust the adjustment of any disputes which may
arise to the discretion of the Government Inspector.
At each place there is a little village, very melancholy to look at, consisting of
hotels or drinking-bars, and the small shops of the diamond dealers. Everything is made of
corrugated iron and the whole is very mean to the eye. There had been no rain for some
months when I was there, and as I rode into Du Toit's Pan the thermometer showed over 90°
in the shade, and over 150° in the sun. While I was at Kimberley it rose to 96° and
161°. There is not a blade of grass in the place, and I seemed to breathe dust rather
than air. At both these places there seemed to be a "mighty maze,"---in which
they differ altogether from the Kimberley mine which I will attempt to describe presently.
Out of the dry dusty ground, which looked so parched and ugly that one was driven to think
that it had never yet rained in those parts, were dug in all directions pits and walls and
roadways, from which and by means of which the dry dusty soil is taken out to some place
where it is washed and the debris examined. Carts are going hither and thither, each with
a couple of horses, and Kafirs above and below, ---not very much above or very much
below,---are working for 10s. a week and their diet without any feature of interest. What
is done at Du Toit's Pan is again done at Bultfontein.
At Du Toit's Pan there are 1441 mining claims which are possessed by 214 claimholders.
The area within the reef---that is, within the wall of rocky and earthy matter containing
the diamondiferous soil---is thirty-one acres. This gives a revenue to the Griqualand
Government of something over £2000 for every three months. About 1700 Kafirs are employed
in the mine and on the stuff taken out of it at wages of 10s. a week and their
diet---which, at the exceptionally high price of provisions prevailing when I was in the
country, costs about 10s. a week more. The wages paid to white men can hardly be
estimated, as they are only employed in what I may call superintending work. They may
perhaps be given as ranging from three to six pounds a week. The interesting feature in
the labor question is the Kafir. This black man, whose body is only partially and most
grotesquely clad, and who is what we mean when we speak of a Savage, earns more than the
average rural laborer in England. Over and beyond his board and lodging he carries away
with him every Saturday night 10s. a week in hard money, with which he had nothing to do
but to amuse himself if it so pleases him.
At Bultfontein there are 1026 claims belonging to 153 claimholders. The area producing
diamonds is twenty-two acres. The revenue derived is £6000 a year, more or less. About
1300 Kafirs are employed under circumstances as given above. The two diggings have been
and are still successful, though they have never reached the honor and glory and wealth
and grandeur achieved by that most remarkable spot on the earth's surface called the
Colesberg Kopje, the New Rush, or the Kimberley mine.
I did not myself make any special visit to the Old De Beers mine. De Beers was the
farmer who possessed the lands called Vooruitzuit, of the purchase of which I have already
spoken, and he himself, with his sons, for a while occupied himself in the business;
---but he soon found it expedient to sell his land, ---the Old De Beers mine being then
established. As the sale was progressing, a lady on the top of a little hill called the
Colesberg Kopje poked up a diamond with her parasol. Dr. Atherstone who had visited the
locality had previously said that if new diamond ground were found it would probably be on
this spot. In September 1872, the territory of Griqualand West became a British Colony,
and at that time miners from the whole district were congregating themselves at the hill,
and that which was at once called the "New Rush" was established. In Australia
where gold was found here or there the miners would hurry off to the spot and the place
would be called this or that "Rush."
The New Rush, the Colesberg Kopje---pronounced Coppy---and the Kimberley mine are one
and the same place. It is now within the town of Kimberley, ---which has in fact got
itself built around the hill to supply the wants of the mining population. Kimberley has
in this way become the capital and seat of Government for the Province. As the mine is one
of the most remarkable spots on the face of the earth, I will endeavor to explain it with
some minuteness.
The Colesberg Hill is in fact hardly a hill at all---what little summit once have
entitled it to the name having been cut off. On reaching the spot by one of the streets
from the square you see no hill, but are called upon to rise over a mound, which is
circular and looks to be no more than the debris of the mine, though it is in fact the
remainder of the slight natural ascent. It is but a few feet high, and on getting to the
top you look down into a huge hole. This is the Kimberley mine. You immediately feel that
it is the largest and most complete hole ever made by human agency.
At Du Toit's Pan and Bultfontein the works are scattered. Here everything is so
gathered together and collected that it is not at first easy to understand that the hole should contain the
operations of a large number of separate speculators. It is so completely one that you are
driven at first to think that it must be the property of one firm,---or at any rate be
entrusted to the management of one director. It is very far from being so. In the pit
beneath your feet, hard as it is at first to your imagination to separate it into various
enterprises, the persons making or marring their fortunes have as little connection with
each other as have the different banking firms in Lombard Street. There, too, the
neighborhood is very close, and common precautions have to be taken as to roadway, fires,
and general convenience.
You are told that the pit has a surface area of nine acres; but for your purposes, as
you will care little for diamondiferous or non-diamondiferous soil, the aperture really
occupies twelve acres. The slope of the reef around the diamond soil has forced itself
back over an increased surface as the mine has become deeper. The diamond claims cover
nine acres. You stand upon the marge and there, suddenly, beneath your feet lies the
entirety of the Kimberley mine, so open, so manifest, and so uncovered that if your eyes
were good enough you might examine the separate Operations of each of the three or four
thousand human beings who are at work there. It looks to be so steep down that there can
be no way to the bottom other than the aerial contrivances which I will presently endeavor to explain. It is as though you were looking into a vast bowl, the sides of which are
smooth as should be the sides of a bowl, while round the bottom are various marvelous
incrustations, among which ants are working with all the usual energy of the ant-tribe.
And these incrustations are not simply at the bottom, but come up the curves and slopes of
the bowl irregularly,---halfway up, perhaps, in one place, while on another side they are
confined quite to the lower deep. The pit is 230 feet deep, nearly circular, though after
a while the eye becomes aware of the fact that it is oblong. At the top the diameter is
about 300 yards, of which 250 cover what is technically called "blue,"---meaning
diamondiferous soil. Near the surface and for some way down, the sides are light brown,
and as blue is the recognized diamond color, you will at first suppose that no diamonds
were found near the surface;---but the light brown has been in all respects the same as
the blue, the color of the soil to a certain depth having been affected by a mixture of
iron. Below this everything is blue, all the constructions in the pit having been made out
of some blue matter which at first sight would seem to have been carried down for the
purpose. But there are other colors on the wall which give a peculiar picturesqueness to
the mines. The top edge as you look at it with your back to the setting sun is red with
the gravel of the upper reef, while, below, in places, the beating of the rain and running
of water has produced peculiar hues, all of which are a delight to the eye.
As you stand at the edge you will find large, high-raised boxes at your right hand and
at your left, and you will see all round the margin crowds of such erections, each box
being as big as a little house and higher than most of the houses in Kimberley. These are
the first recipients for the stuff that is brought up out of the mine. And behind these,
so that you will often find that you have walked between them, are the whims by means of
which the stuff is raised, each whim being worked by two horses. Originally the operation
was done by hand---windlasses which were turned by Kafirs, and the practice is continued
at some of the smaller enterprises;---but the horse whims are now so general that there is
a world of them round the claim. The stuff is raised on aerial tramways,---and the method
of an aerial tramway is as follows. Wires are stretched taut from the wooden boxes
slanting down to the claims at the bottom, ---never less than four wires for each box, two
for the ascending and two for the descending bucket. As one bucket runs down empty on one
set of wires, another comes up full on the other set. The ascending bucket is, of course,
full of "blue." The buckets were at first simply leathern bags. Now they have
increased in size and importance of construction,---to half-barrels and so upwards to
large iron cylinders which sit easily upon wheels running in the wires as they ascend and
descend and bring up their loads, half a cart-load at each journey.
As this is going on round the entire circle it follows that there are wires starting
everywhere from the rim and converging to a center at the bottom, on which the buckets are
always scudding through the air. They drop down and creep up not altogether noiselessly,
but with a gentle trembling sound which mixes itself pleasantly with the murmur from the
voices below. And the wires seem to be the strings of some wonderful harp,---aerial or
perhaps infernal,---from which the beholder expects that a louder twang will soon be
heard. The wires are there always, of course, but by some lights they are hardly visible.
The mine is seen best in the afternoon and the visitor looking at it should stand with his
back to the setting sun;---but as he so stands and so looks he will hardly be aware that
there is a wire at all if his visit be made, say on a Saturday afternoon, when the works
are stopped and the mine is mute.
When the world below is busy there are about 3500 Kafirs at work,---some small
proportion upon the reef which has to be got into order so that it shall neither tumble in
nor impede the work, nor overlay the diamondiferous soil as it still does in some places;
but by far the greater number are employed in digging. Their task is to pick up the earth
and shovel it into the buckets and iron receptacles. Much of it is loosened for them by
blasting,which is done after the Kafirs have left the mine at 6 o'clock. You look down and see the swarm of black ants busy at every hole and
corner with their picks moving and shoveling the loose blue soil.
But the most peculiar phase of the mine, as you gaze into its large pit, is the
subdivision into claims and portions. Could a person see the sight without having heard
any word of explanation it would be impossible, I think, to conceive the meaning of all
those straight cut narrow dikes, of those mud walls at right angles to each other, of
those square separate pits, and again of those square upstanding blocks, looking like
houses without doors or windows. You can see that nothing on earth was ever less level than the bottom of the bowl,---and that the black ants in traversing it, as
they are always doing, go up and down almost at every step, jumping here on to a narrow
wall and skipping there across a deep dividing channel as though some diabolically
ingenious architect; had contrived a house with five hundred rooms, not one of which
should be on the same floor, and to and from none of which should there be a pair of
stairs or a door or a window. In addition to this, it must be imagined that the architect
had omitted the roof in order that the wires of the harp above described might be brought
into if every chamber. The house has then been furnished with picks, shovels, planks, and
a few barrels, populated with its black legions, and there it is for you to look at.
At first the bottom of the bowl seems small. You know the size of it as you look,---and
that it is nine acres, enough to make a moderate field,---but it looks like no more than a
bowl. Gradually it becomes enormously large, as your eye dwells for a while on the
energetic business going on in one part, and then travels away over an infinity of
subdivided claims to the work in some other portion. It seems at last to be growing under
you and that soon there will be no limit to the variety of partitions on which you have to
look. You will, of course, be anxious to descend, and if you be no better than a man there is nothing to prevent you. Should you be a lady I would advise
you to stay where you are. The work of going up and down is hard, everything is dirty, and
the place below is not nearly so interesting as it is above. One firm at the mine, Messrs.
Baring Gould, Atkins & Company, have gone to the expense of sinking a perpendicular
shaft with a tunnel below from the shaft to the mine,---so as to avoid the use of the
aerial tramway; and by Mr. Gould's kindness I descended through his shaft. Nevertheless
there was some trouble in getting into the mine, and when I was there the labor in
clambering about from one chamber to another in that marvelously broken house was
considerable and was not lessened by the fact that the heat of the sun was about 140°.
The division of the claims, however, became apparent to me, and I could see how one was
being worked, and another left without any present digging till the claim-owner's
convenience should be suited. But there is a regulation compelling a man to work if the
standing of his "blue" should become either prejudicial or dangerous to his
neighbors. There is one shaft,---that belonging to the firm I have mentioned; and one
tramway has been cut down by another firm through the reef and circumjacent soil so as to
make an inclined plane up and down to the mine.
The ground was originally divided into 801 claims with some few double numbers to
claims at the east end of the mine;---but in truth nearly half of those have never been of
value, consisting entirely of reef, the diamondiferous matter, the extent of which has now
been ascertained, not having traveled so far. There are in truth 408 existing claims; but
there are subdivisions in regard to property very much more minute. There are shares held
by individuals as small as one sixteenth of a claim. The total property is in fact divided
into 514 portions, the amount of which of course varies extremely. Every master miner pays
10s. a month to the Government for the privilege of working, whether he owns a claim or only a portion of a claim. In working this the number of men employed
differs very much from time to time. When I was there the mine was very full and there
were probably almost 4000 men in it and as many more employed above on the stuff. When the
"blue" has come up and been deposited in the great wooden boxes at the top, it
is then lowered by its own weight into carts, and carried off to the "ground" of
the proprietor. Every diamond digger is obliged to have a space of ground somewhere round
the town,---as near his whim as he can get it,---to which his stuff is carted and then
laid out to crumble and decompose. This may occupy weeks, but the time depends on what may
be the fall of rain. If there be no rain, it must be watered,---at a very considerable
expense. It is then brought to the washing, and is first put into a round puddling-trough,
where it is broken up and converted into mud by stationary rakes which work upon the stuff
as the trough goes round. The stones, of course, fall to the bottom, and as diamonds are
the heaviest of stones they fall with the others. The mud is examined and thrown
away,---and then the stones are washed, and rewashed, and sifted, and examined. The
greater number of diamonds are found during this operation;---but the large gems and those
therefore of by far the greatest value are generally discovered while the stuff is being
knocked about and put into the buckets in the mine.
It need hardly be said that in such an operation as I have described the greatest care
is necessary to prevent stealing, and that no care will prevent it. The Kafirs are the
great thieves,---to such an extent of superexcellence that white superintendence is spoken
of as being the only safeguard. The honesty of the white man may perhaps be indifferent,
but such as it is it has to be used at every point to prevent, as far as it may be
prevented, the systematized stealing in which the Kafirs take an individual and national
pride. The Kafirs are not only most willing but most astute thieves, feeling a glory in
their theft, and thinking that every stone stolen from a white man is a duty done to their
chief and their tribe. I think it may be taken as certain that no Kafir would feel the
slightest pang of conscience at stealing a diamond, or that any disgrace would be held to
attach to him among other Kafirs for such a performances. They come to the Fields
instructed by their chiefs to steal diamonds, and they obey the orders like loyal
subjects. Many of the Kafir chiefs are said to have large quantities of diamonds, which
have been brought to them by their men returning from the diggings;---but most of those
which are stolen no doubt find their way into the hands of illicit dealers. I have been
told that the thefts perpetrated by the Kafirs amount to twenty-five per cent on the total
amount found;---but this I do not believe.
The opportunities for stealing are of hourly occurrence and are of such a nature as to
make prevention impossible. These men are sharp-sighted as birds, and know and see a
diamond much quicker than a white man. They will pick up stones with their toes and
secrete them even under the eyes of those who are watching them. I was told that a man
will so hide a diamond in his mouth that no examination will force him to disclose it.
They are punished when discovered with lashes and imprisonment,---in accordance with the
law on the matter. No employer is now allowed to flog his man at his own pleasure. And the white men who buy diamonds from Kafirs are also
punished, when convicted, by fine and imprisonment for the simple offense of buying from a
Kafir, but with flogging also if convicted of having instigated a Kafir to steal.
Nevertheless, a lucrative business of this nature is carried on, and the Kafirs know well
where to dispose of their plunder, though of course but for a small proportion of its
value.
Ten shillings a week and their food were the regular wages here as well as elsewhere.
This I found to be very fluctuating, but the money paid had rarely gone lower for any
considerable number of men than the above-named rate. The lowest amount paid has been 7s.
6d. a week. Sometimes it had been as high as 20s. and even 30s. a week. A good deal of the
work is supplied by contract, certain middlemen undertaking to provide men with all
expenses paid at £1 a week. When mealies have become dear from drought,---there being no grass for oxen on the route,---no money can
be made in this way. Such was the case when I was in Griqualand West. It is stated by Mr.
Oats, an engineer, in his evidence given to the Committee on the Griqualand West
Annexation Bill, in June, 1877,---that the annual amount of wages paid at Kimberley had
varied from £600,000 to £1,600,000 a year. Nearly the whole of this had gone into the
hands of the Kafirs.
Perhaps the most interesting sight at the mine is the escaping of the men from their
labor at six o'clock. Then, at the sound of some welcome gong, they begin to swarm up the
sides close at each other's heels, apparently altogether indifferent as to whether there
be a path or no. They come as flies come up a wall, only capering as flies never
caper,----and shouting as they come. In endless strings, as ants follow each other, they
move, passing along ways which seem to offer no hold to a human foot. Then it is that one
can best observe their costume, in which a pair of trousers rarely forms a portion. A
soldier's red jacket or a soldier's blue jacket has more charms than any other vestment.
They seem always to be good-humored, always well-behaved,---but then they are always
thieves. And yet how grand a thing it is that so large a number of these men should have
been brought in so short a space of time to the habit of receiving wages and to the
capacity of bargaining as to the wages for which they will work. I shall not, however,
think it so grand a thing if any one addresses them as the free and independent electors
of Kimberley before they have got trousers to cover their nakedness.
I must add also that a visitor to Kimberley should if possible take an opportunity of
looking down upon the mine by moonlight. It is a weird and wonderful sight, and may almost
be called sublime in its peculiar strangeness.
Source:
From: Eva March Tappan, ed., The World's Story: A History of the World in Story,
Song and Art, (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1914), Vol. III: Egypt, Africa, and Arabia,
pp. 437-457.
Scanned by Jerome S. Arkenberg, Cal. State Fullerton.
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© Paul Halsall, November 1998