‘The Expenditure of a Million of British Sovereigns in this Otherwise Miserable Place’

Frontier Wars, Public Debt and the Cape’s Non-racial Constitution

in Theoria
Author:
Jeff Peires University of Fort Hare

Search for other papers by Jeff Peires in
Current site
Google Scholar
PubMed
Close
Restricted access

Abstract

This article seeks to enhance the historiography of the Eastern Cape frontier wars by adding war profiteering to land hunger as a motive for settler militancy. Equally important however was the extent to which the exorbitant military expenditure of the Eighth Frontier War (1850–3) aroused the concern of the British Treasury, and drew their attention to the corrupt practices of Colonial Secretary John Montagu, the de facto head of the Cape government. This was precisely the period during which the Cape franchise was under review at the Colonial office, and the article concludes by showing that imperial intervention in favour of a broader more inclusive franchise was due less to democratic concerns than to its desire to put a brake on the Cape’s burgeoning public debt.

Contributor Notes

Jeff Peires is currently Adjunct Professor of History at the University of Fort Hare. He is working on a history of the Eastern Cape.

  • Collapse
  • Expand

Theoria

A Journal of Social and Political Theory

  • Breitenbach, J. J. 1959. ‘The Development of the Secretaryship to the Government at the Cape of Good Hope under John Montagu, 1843–1852’, Archives Yearbook for SA History 1959, II, 269n.

    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • Cathcart, G. 1857. Correspondence of Lieut-General the Hon. Sir George Cathcart, K.C.B. London: John Murray.

  • De Klerk, P. 2014. ‘De Zuid-Afrikaan se standpunt oor stemreg vir bruin mense voor die totstandkoming van die Kaapse koloniale parlement in 1854’, Historia 59: 117.

    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • Government Gazette, 16 October 1851.

  • Imperial Blue Book 1428 of 1852. OPB 1/13 Vol. XII, 1852–1853 Kafir Tribes.

  • Imperial Blue Book 1636 of 1853, OPB 1/13 Vol. XII, 1852–1853 Kafir Tribes.

  • Imperial Blue Book 1640 of 1853. OPB 1/13 Vol. XII, 1852–1853 Kafir Tribes.

  • Keegan, T. 1996. Colonial South Africa and the Origins of the Racial Order. Cape Town: David Philip.

  • Kirk, T. 1972. ‘Self-government and Self-defence in South Africa: The Inter-relations between British and Cape Politics 1846–1854’, D.Phil. diss., Oxford University.

    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • Knaplund, P. 1924. ‘E.G. Wakefield on the Colonial Garrisons, 1851’, Canadian Historical Review (1924): 228236

  • Macdonald, J. 2006. A Free Nation Deep in Debt. Princeton: University Press.

  • Macmillan, W. M. 1927. The Cape Colour Question. London: Faber.

  • Midgley, J. F. 1949. ‘The Orange River Sovereignty (1848–1854)’, Archives Yearbook for SA History 12 (II): 51416.

  • Midgley, J. F. 1981. ‘Green, Henry’, in C. F. Beyers (ed.), Dictionary of South African National Biography, Vol. IV. Pretoria: HSRC Press, 196-197.

    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • Peires, J. B. 1981. The House of Phalo. Johannesburg: Ravan Press.

  • Stubbs, T. 1978. The Reminiscences of Thomas Stubbs,. ed. W. A. Maxwell and R. T. McGeogh Cape Town: Balkema, 1356.

  • Theal, G. M. 1883. Basutoland Records, I: 3156.

  • Trapido, S. 1964. ‘The Origins of the Cape Franchise Qualifications of 1853’, Journal of African History 5: 3754.

  • Select Committee on Kafir Tribes. Imperial Blue Book 55 of 1852. OPB 1/13 Vol. XII, 18521853 Kafir Tribes.

  • Warren, D. 1991. ‘Class Rivalry and Cape Politics in the Mid-nineteenth Century: A Reappraisal of the “Kirk Thesis”’, SA Historical Journal 24: 11227.

    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation

Metrics

All Time Past Year Past 30 Days
Abstract Views 170 58 4
Full Text Views 10 2 2
PDF Downloads 7 2 0