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III. The Jameson Raid

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 December 2011

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In the late afternoon of Sunday, 29 December 1895, a little column of mounted men moved out from their camp at Pitsani Pothlugo in the south-eastern corner of the Bechuanaland Protectorate, and headed eastward for the boundary of the South African Republic, a few miles away. At about ten o'clock that night a still smaller column rode off along the northern road from Mafeking, the capital of British Bechuana-land thirty miles or so to the south, and once they were clear of the straggling town, wheeled to the right and also made for the Transvaal border. Riding through the starry night of a High Veld summer, the two columns joined hands at daybreak on republican soil and, after a short halt, pushed on at a smart pace towards Johannesburg.

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Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1940

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References

1 On the Jameson Raid vide Colvin, , [I. D., The Life of] Jameson, 1, 11Google Scholar; Fitzpatrick, , [J. P., The] Transvaal from WithinGoogle Scholar; Garvin, , [J. L., The Life of Joseph] Chamberlain, IIIGoogle Scholar; Hammond, , [J. H., The] Autobiography [of John Hays Hammond]Google Scholar; Williams, , [Basil, Cecil] RhodesGoogle Scholar; Hole, , [H. M., The] Jameson RaidGoogle Scholar. Also British Parliamentary Papers: [Correspondence on the subject of the] Recent Disturbances in the S[outh] A[frican] Republic, 1896, LIX, C 7933Google Scholar; [Report from the] Select Committee [on British South Africa], 1896, IX, 380Google Scholar; [Second Report from the] Select Committee [on British South Africa], 1897, IX, 64Google Scholar; 311; 311-I; 311-II; [Report of] Select Committee of Cape Assembly [on the Jameson Raid, 29 May-17 July 1896], 1897, LXII, c 8380Google Scholar.

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