Jacobus Philippus Snyman

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Nickname(s)Hamerkop
Born(1838-01-29)29 January 1838
During the Great Trek
Died19 December 1925(1925-12-19) (aged 87)
Doornhoek, Groot Marico, Transvaal, Union of South Africa
Jacobus Philippus Snyman

Hamerkop
Nickname(s)Hamerkop
Born(1838-01-29)29 January 1838
During the Great Trek
Died19 December 1925(1925-12-19) (aged 87)
Doornhoek, Groot Marico, Transvaal, Union of South Africa
Allegiance South African Republic
Branch Transvaal Army
Years of service1880 – 1902
RankGeneral
UnitWestern Transvaal
CommandsMarico and Rustenburg
Battles / wars
Other workNative Commissioner & District Commissioner of the Marico
Kootjie "Hamerkop" Snyman at a younger age.

General Jacobus Philippus Snyman (Afrikaans pronunciation: [ˈsnəiman]; Kootjie "Hamerkop" Snyman, 29 January 1838  19 December 1925)[1] was one of the dominant military figures in the South African Republic (or Transvaal) during the 19th century. He was the District Commissioner, Native Commissioner, and Commandant for the Marico district and led the Rustenburg and Marico commandos during the Second Boer War.[2] Nicknamed Hamerkop,[3][4] Snyman came to international prominence as the military commander at the Siege of Mafeking from November 1899 to May 1900.[5]

Born in Uitenhage[6][7] during the Great Trek, General Snyman was a young boy when his family trekked from the Cape Colony to Natal, eventually settling in the Marico district of the Western Transvaal. He was the son of Jacobus Philippus Snyman Sr. and Johanna Marthina Bekker.[8]

General Snyman's parents lived in Uitenhage with his maternal grandfather, Johannes Jurgen Bekker, a deeply religious man and leader of the Jerusalemgangers movement. The two families joined the Great Trek under the leadership of J.A. Enslin and made their way to Natal where they arrived in 1838.[9] General Snyman's father and father-in-law (Matthys Gerhardus Potgieter 1794–1868) participated in the Battle of Bloodriver.[10] It was Evert Frederik Potgieter (1799–1863), brother of General Snyman's father-in-law, who found and verified the signed treaty (The deed of cession of the Tugela-Umzimvubu region) located in Piet Retief's pocket following the delegation's massacre by the Zulu king, Dingane.[11] The family eventually settled in the Marico district in the Transvaal, but not before participating in the Battle of Boomplaats in 1848 where they tried, unsuccessfully to drive the British out of the Free State after Britain had annexed the Orange River Sovereignty to the British Crown.[9]

General Snyman's father was a farmer in the Marico district, a pioneer hunter, a leader of the Jerusalemgangers movement in the Marico and one of three leaders of the 'hunter's faction' of the Transvaal Republic. Some time before David Livingstone reached the Victoria Falls, the famous falls were also reached from the South by General Snyman's father and the well-known Commandant Jan Viljoen, whose hunting ground it became.[12] In August 1852, General Snyman's father informed the Transvaal Government that Sechele, ruler of the Bakwêna of Botswana, had received gunpowder, lead and muskets from the missionary David Livingstone.[13][14] In addition, General Snyman's father held successful negotiations with Sechele in November 1852[15] and was a signatory to the Peace Treaty at Mathebe between the South African Republic and Chief Montshiwa of the Barolong Boo Ratshidi, on 14 October 1853.[16] This is the Peace Treaty referred to by Theal in his History of South Africa 1834-1854, p525.[17]

As a young man General Snyman was a professional hunter. He tanned the hides and traded them for sheep which he had purchased in the Free State. He was a successful farmer and known for his breeding of carriage horses that won 1st prize at the annual Agricultural Show.[18]

General Snyman's father, together with Commandant Jan Viljoen, had shown support to Stephanus Schoeman during the Transvaal Civil War, when the Volksraad declared Schoeman's following a rebel faction. This allowed Paul Kruger to summon his burghers to the conflict. Kruger, who was elected commandant-general in April 1863, succeeded in driving Schoeman over the Vaal River. Commandant Jan Viljoen took over the leadership of Schoeman's faction and tried to restore their position by force of arms. Commandant Jan Viljoen led a so-called 'People's Army' against Kruger and his 'State Army' in January 1864, but was defeated at the Crocodile River. Negotiations held at the Crocodile River in January 1864 ended the Transvaal Civil War.[19] General Snyman's mother, Johanna Marthina Bekker, was the niece of Stephanus Schoeman's stepmother.

In 1901 Snyman owned well over eight hundred head of cattle and five thousand sheep. This did not include the holdings of his sons, who worked a large group of farms located near Snyman's stead.[20] He died on 19 December 1925 at the age of 87 on his farm Witrand in the Marico district.[21]

Marriage

On 6 August 1858 at the Nederduitsch Hervormde Kerk at Potchefstroom, Snyman married Dirkie Elizabeth Aletta Potgieter (1840 - 1905)[22] and settled on Witrand, the Snyman family farm. They had ten children. She was the daughter of Matthys Gerhardus Potgieter, a prominent member of the Boer community who served as Heemraad and member of the Natalia Republic Volksraad at Pietermaritzburg. On 12 January 1906 General Snyman married Lydia Magdalena Fouché[6] and on 17 September 1907 he married Helena Jacoba Catharina Pienaar.[7]

Gereformeerde Kerk

General Snyman's family were initially members of the Nederduitsch Hervormde Kerk rather than the Gereformeerde Kerk to which Paul Kruger belonged. The Nederduitsch Hervormde Kerk was the only Dutch church in the vicinity of Rustenburg at the time, founded in 1850 by the Dutch-speaking Voortrekkers who moved into the area due to relative peace and fewer attacks from the native population. Rev. Dirk Van der Hoff was their Minister. The disaffected then made efforts to receive a Minister from the Reformed Church (Gereformeerde Kerk in Afrikaans) in the Netherlands that remained true to the teachings as established at the Synod of Dordrecht. In answer to the request, Rev. Dirk Postma Sr. was sent to South Africa by the church in the Netherlands. He arrived at the end of 1858 and was initially recognized by the Nederduitsch Hervormde Kerk as a Minister of the Rustenburg congregation.

On 10 January 1859, it was decided at a general church meeting in Pretoria that in addition to the book of Psalms the Nederduitsch Hervormde Kerk would recognize and allow the singing of additional Hymns not found in the book of Psalms. With this decision, Rev. Postma Sr. and many who were of the same opinion, could not reconcile and with a letter dated 11 January the aforementioned withdrew from the church community of the Nederduitsche Hervormde Kerk and established the Gereformeerde Kerk in accordance with the teachings revealed at the Synod of Dordrecht in the years 1618 and 1619. It was then decided to hold a general meeting on 10 February 1859 where the new Church was established.

The following month, the Rev. Dirk Postma Sr. visited the Marico district where he was hosted by General Snyman's father. It was during this visit that the Snyman family became members of the Gereformeerde Kerk at Rustenburg and would continue to serve as members and ordained officials of the community helping to establish new congregations in Namibia, Angola and throughout South Africa. General Snyman was ordained Deacon in 1893, serving as a church elder (Ouderling in Afrikaans) and Deacon for more than 32 years. The western wards of the Gereformeerde Kerk of Rustenburg, the oldest congregation in South Africa, were formed into the Marico congregation on Saturday 26 May 1899 under the chairmanship of Rev. Dirk Postma Jr. at the opening of the new church building. As church elder of the Rustenburg congregation General Snyman was re-elected to the position for the Marico congregation where he provided the sum of £700 for the construction of the main church building located at Zeerust.[23] The building was expropriated by the British during the Second Boer War. After the war £500 was paid in war reparations to the congregation.

The Hamerkop Mine

The first base metal mining operation in the South African Republic was the Hamerkop mine in the Marico, which was worked as early as 1866 for the extraction of Lead used in the manufacture of ammunition.[24] It was situated near the head of the Great Marico River, near Jacobsdal on the Klein Marico, on the farm Doornhoek that belonged to General Snyman.[25][26][27] These ore deposits were commonly called 'Lead mines' due to the fact that the Silver bearing Galena attracted the most attention.[28] Aubert, the French consul-general at Pretoria, reported that the Galena from the Marico district returned more than 500 grams (18 ounces) of Silver per ton.[29]

The Barolong

On 15 November 1870, a conference aimed at an agreement on the issue of land boundaries was held on the border near Mafeking at a place called Buurmansdrift attended by General Snyman, Marthinus Wessel Pretorius, Paul Kruger, Hendrik Adriaan Greeff and five other representatives of the South African Republic and the Batswana Chiefs represented by Montshiwa of the Ratshidi Barolong, Moroka of the Seleka Barolong, Izaak Motlhabane, Makgobi of the Maebu Barolong, Phoi and Matlaba of the Rapulana Barolong, Moilwa of the Bahurutshe at Marico, Maiketso of the Batlhaping, Gaseitsiwe of the BaNgwaketse at Kanye, and Andries Rey the representative of David Massouw (Mosweu) of the Koranna at Mamusa.[16]

The Barolong people were led by Tau's sons, two of whom were to become much involved in the race for paramountcy in Bechuanaland. Their names were Montshiwa of the Barolong Boo Ratshidi and Moswete of the Barolong Boo Ratlou. Moswete had been driven off land in the Molopo River region and was bitter with the British about the land he had lost when Governor Robert William Keate designated some of it to be part of Griqualand West in the Keate Award of 1871. Moswete saw a Transvaal deal as an opportunity to kill two birds with one stone and awarded the contentious Molopo land to the South African Republic.

Montshiwa thereupon appealed to the British government for help and protection. None was forthcoming, but in 1877 when Theophilus Shepstone - on behalf of the Crown - annexed the Transvaal, Montshiwa took sides with the British, for which he was to be taught a lesson by the Boers in 1881. Following the end of the First Boer War, the Pretoria Convention of August 1881 set up a Border Commission with power to fix boundaries, including boundaries in the Transvaal / Bechuanaland region. Moswete became impatient at what he considered to be procrastination on the part of the commission and he decided to make a pre-emptive strike to remove Montshiwa's people from territory he, Moswete, claimed for his people. Moswete enlisted Transvaal mercenaries to spearhead the attack. The reward for the mercenaries was to be half the booty which was captured together with grants of land. Montshiwa appealed again for help from the British government, but apart from totally ineffective appeals to the Transvaal to get the mercenaries out of Montshiwa's territory, when the British complained about the occupation of Montshiwa's lands as a breach of the provisions of the Pretoria Convention, the Transvaal took the position that they had no control over, nor could they be expected to control, the mercenaries. Montshiwa fought as best he could, but his warriors were no match for the mercenaries and by October 1882, he had to make peace. He called in the local Transvaal official, General Snyman, for assistance. Snyman settled the terms of peace between Moswete and Montshiwa and both chiefs signed the document. Both had put their lands under the protection of the South African Republic.[30]

As Commandant of the Marico district and Native Commissioner, Snyman commanded the Boers in battles led against Montshiwa (1882-1884).[3] He was responsible for resolving tribal conflicts that arose between the factions on the Western Transvaal frontier and the South African Republic.[31][2] Most notable was the role Snyman played in negotiating peace between the South African Republic, Moswete of the Barolong Boo Ratlou and Montshiwa of the Barolong Boo Ratshidi on 24 October 1882.[16][32] This agreement was known as the Snyman Peace Treaty.[16]

The settlement expropriated a sizeable portion of Montshiwa's land, compelling him to pay a war indemnity of £16,000. In addition, the land taken by conquest from Montshiwa, together with the land taken as a reward from Moswete, was formed into a Republic named the Land of Goshen, with Nicolaas Claudius Gey van Pittius as its Administrator.[16]

State of Goshen

In the Snyman Peace Treaty of 1882, General Snyman proclaimed the boundaries of the Land of Goshen, a Boer republic that opposed British rule in the region. Chief Montshiwa, a British ally, was allotted ten farms of 30,000 morgen each, without prejudice to Chief Moswete, and had to vacate the area.[16] Independence was declared (followed by an official proclamation on 21 November 1882), naming the new nation after the Book of Genesis's Land of Goshen, "the best of the land of Egypt given to Joseph", with its capital at Rooigrond.

The State of Goshen had an estimated population of 17,000, of whom approximately 2,000 were of European origin, and covered an area of 10,400 km2 (4,015 sq mi).[33] The State unified with the neighbouring Republic of Stellaland and became known as the United States of Stellaland (Dutch: Verenigde Staten van Stellaland) from 1883 to 1885.[34]

The land became a focal point of conflict between the British Empire and the South African Republic, the two major players vying over the territory. After a series of claims and annexations, British fears of Boer expansionism ultimately led to its demise and, among other factors, set the stage for the Second Boer War of 1899–1902.

The Bahurutshe

In 1887 General Snyman was granted permission to enter into an agreement with Chief Ikalafeng of the Bahurutshe to obtain mineral rights in the chief's portion of the reserve. President Paul Kruger provided his personal assurance that in the event of minerals being discovered Ikalafeng would only lose access to the limited area of the actual find. Ikalafeng and his Council signed the agreement and in 1891 a new contract was signed increasing the annual payment to £500 a year and transferring all the rights and privileges of the previous contract to the Transvalia Land Exploration and Mining Company, who then took over payment.[15]

The Bahurutshe under Suping were impeded from successfully resettling by a prolonged negotiation over what land they should occupy and on what basis it should be settled. Initially they were given half of a government farm, Hartebeestfontein 195, on which to settle. In 1888 Suping requested that this farm, together with an adjoining farm, Vinkrivier, owned by Snyman, be granted to him as a location. Snyman supported the request and the government gave Chief Suping the offer of purchasing the farm from Snyman. The final transfer occurred in 1894.[15]

Several Hurutshe assisted the Boers in the early stages of the Anglo Boer War. One of Snyman's last acts as Native Commissioner before departing was to call up 40 Hurutshe men who were to report to the landdrost at Lichtenburg to guard and work on the farms of burghers in arms. More men were called up over the following six months, mainly to safeguard farms.[15]

First Boer War

At Paardekraal on 15 December 1880, General Snyman served as Acting-Commandant at a sitting of the Transvaal War Council.[35] Snyman departed Paardekraal in the commando of 400 horsemen under General Piet Cronje. The commando went to Potchefstroom to have the freedom proclamation printed. At the same time, the printing press had to be protected against a possible British attack.

At Mooi Rivier (Potchefstroom), Snyman received his appointment as Commandant of the Zeerust commando (Marico district) and the following day, on 16 December, Heidelberg was secured and proclaimed as the temporary capital of the restored Transvaal Republic. The Transvaal flag was hoisted in the town and the proclamation declaring the restoration was read out. The same day, the first shots of the First War of Independence were fired at Potchefstroom.

On 31 December 1880, Snyman participated as Commandant at the court-martial of Corporal Johannes van der Linde and Christiaan Woite who were found guilty and sentenced to death for high treason. The guilty parties had passed on critical information about the War Council held at Paardekraal to Commandant P. Raaff of the British Volunteer Force.[36]

The war ended and peace was established with the signing of the Pretoria Convention by the Transvaal and British Governments in October 1881. The Transvaal Government invested General Snyman with the authority and resources to enforce the Treaty.[37]

On 27 December 1884, General Snyman in his capacity as Commissioner, informed the Transvaal Government that Koos de la Rey was appointed Vice-Commissioner of the Lichtenburg district.[38]

On 25 July 1885, General Snyman proposed to the Transvaal Legislature (Volksraad in Afrikaans) that Koos de la Rey be appointed Commandant and Native Commissioner of the Lichtenburg district.[39] De la Rey was appointed to the position in 1885.[40][41]

The Second Mapoch War

General Snyman participated in the war between Nyabela, chief of the Ndzundza faction of the Ndebele tribe, and the South African Republic (1882–1883). Nyabela was the leader of the Ndzundza-Ndebele and his mountain fortress, KoNomtjarhelo (Mapochstad), was built by his father Mabhogo (Mapoch).[42] For years, the renegade Mampuru of the Bapedi had been engaged in a power struggle with his half-brother, Sekhukhune. In mid-1882, some of Mampuru's followers attacked Chief Sekhukhune's kraal and murdered him.[43] On two previous occasions, the Transvaal authorities had attempted to arrest him for fomenting disorder, and this latest outrage was the last straw. Mampuru and his supporters sought refuge with Makwani, one of Nyabela's subordinate chiefs. When ordered to extradite the fugitive, Nyabela decided not to do so, giving credence to rumours that he and Mampuru were jointly plotting to coordinate a general uprising of native communities in the Transvaal against the South African Republic.

On 12 October 1882, the Transvaal Volksraad authorised General Piet Joubert to raise a commando. Within two weeks of the commencement of hostilities in November 1882, the KwaPondo bastion (called 'Vlugkraal' by the Boers) located in the Mapoch's Caves became the center of the war.[43] General Piet Joubert arrived with three cannon and a considerable amount of dynamite from Pretoria to help reduce the defenses. On 17 November 1882, a fort was erected no more than two thousand paces away from the Ndebele stronghold. While a second fort was being built near the first, the Ndebele attempted to drive back the besieging force, but were themselves beaten off when the Rustenburg Commando attacked the stronghold through the cave system of the KwaPondo bastion. After two and a half hours of fierce fighting Nyabela lost some forty men and the Republican forces numbered one killed and six wounded. Snyman was one of those wounded in the battle.[44] Soon after this repulse, Nyabela sent out his emissaries to discuss peace terms with General Joubert.[43]

The Jameson Raid

In December 1895, General Snyman informed the Volksraad that the Chartered Company requested that Chiefs Sechele, Montshiwa, Bathoen of the Ngwaketse, Keuning, Gaborone and Khama invade the Marico district and thereby draw the burgher forces there.[45][46] On 29 December 1895 Leander Starr Jameson, the Administrator General of the Chartered Company (of which Cecil Rhodes was the Chairman) for Matabeleland, brought together a force of around 600 men, about 400 from the Matabeleland Mounted Police and the remainder other volunteers.

In an interview given by Snyman in 1897 he stated that Jameson's plan failed because the two men sent to Zeerust on that famous Sunday evening did not cut the telegraph wires, saying, 'If those two men had cut the wires, Jameson would have won his case'.[47] On 5 January 1896 Snyman sent a telegram informing Commandant-General Joubert in Pretoria of the Chartered Company's plan to overthrow the Transvaal Republic. Snyman provided detailed instructions that were found in a book belonging to the Chartered Company.[45]

The Snyman Fence

On 20 January 1882, Commandant-General Piet Joubert, invested Snyman with the authority to uphold and enforce the proclamation dated 20 October 1881 between the South African Republic and the British Empire, known as the Pretoria Convention. He was instructed to secure the borders if necessary by force without respect of persons, and to order the field cornets to direct their burghers to keep themselves in readiness, and to continually patrol the borders, and to watch and take care that no armed persons pass backwards or forwards over the line, and to immediately disarm such persons and disperse them. Also to take possession of all booty cattle and property until receipt of further orders from the Government, and to make regular reports to the Government on all such matters.[37]

Following the failed Jameson Raid, Snyman was mandated with securing the borders of the South African Republic. In his capacity as District Commissioner, Native Commissioner and Chairman of the Rinderpest committee, his role was to secure the border between the Republic and the Bechuanaland Protectorate from invasion, wildlife carrying disease and cross-border stock theft.

On 23 July 1896, Snyman proposed to the Volksraad legislature the construction of a border-fence to decrease the number of border guards and protect livestock from wildlife infected with rinderpest. On 27 July the Volksraad voted for the construction of the border-fence and it became known as The Snyman Fence. The border-fence was erected across the districts of Marico, Rustenburg, Waterberg and the Soutpansberg at an initial cost of £26 000.[48] Sections of the original border-fence continue to stand today as the territorial border between the Republic of South Africa and Botswana.[49][50][51]

Second Boer War

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