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The Underground Route to Mining: Afrikaners and the Witwatersrand Gold Mining Industry from 1902 to the 1907 Miners' Strike*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 January 2009

Elaine N. Katz
Affiliation:
University of the Witwatersrand

Extract

This paper challenges the conventional view that the 1907 miners' strike constituted a landmark in the history of Afrikaner employment in the Witwatersrand gold mining industry. According to this view, the participation of Afrikaners during the dispute, as first-time miners and strike-breakers, gained them a permanent and proportionally large niche in the industry, for the first time. In sharp contrast, this paper demonstrates that Afrikaners already constituted a substantial percentage of white underground workers, particularly as a discrete category of workmen, the miners, well before the strike had even begun

The Afrikaner miners lacked training and mining skills. Yet, like the overseas professional miners, most of whom were British-born, they were classed as skilled workmen, eligible for skilled wages. This anomaly occurred because the so-called skills of the overseas professional miners were fragmented by the labour practices peculiar to the Rand. The expertise of the foreign miner derived from his all-round capabilities and experience. These were exclusively defined to constitute his so-called skill, and hence his skilled wage. But on the Witwatersrand, the overseas professional miners were required to draw on only one of their numerous accomplishments in a ‘specialized’, but only semi-skilled, capacity. They were employed either as supervisors of Africans, who performed drilling tasks, or as specialist pit men doing a single pit task among many: pump minding, pipe fitting, timbering or plate laying. Such fragmentation of the foreign miners' a11-round skills facilitated the entry of lesser trained men as miners, notably the Afrikaners.

To become a miner, more specifically a supervisor, the Afrikaner needed only a brief period of specific instruction, which he acquired in one of several ways: through mine-sponsored experiments with unskilled white labour, rather than black; through the informal assistance of qualified miners; and through management-sponsored learner schemes intended to provide a core of compliant Afrikaner miners who would break the monopoly of skills and collective strength of the overseas professional miners. Such training enabled the Afrikaner to earn the compulsory, but readily available, blasting certificate, the award of which was confined to whites. Although most Afrikaners possessed this certificate, the hallmark of a skilled miner, they could not earn the customary white skilled wage because they were obliged to work under a System of contracts and not on day's pay.

The incompetent Afrikaner miners nevertheless obtained billets easily, partly because of the industry's growth, but mainly because the overseas pioneer miners were decimated by the preventable occupational mining disease, silicosis: the locally born simply filled their places. The Afrikaners, of course, were also vulnerable to silicosis; but it was only from 1911 onwards that this gradually developing disease claimed them in significant numbers too.

The overseas miners shunned the Afrikaners not only for ethnic reasons but also for material ones: they feared that the local miners, who were inefficient and had not been trained in the lengthy apprenticeships traditional in the industry, would undercut skilled wage rates. Management also scorned them because of their incompetence. Despite their relatively large numbers – they comprised at least one-third of the miners – the Afrikaners, who were unsuccessful, isolated and spurned, made little impact on the socio-economic and cultural fabric of the industry's work-force, either at the time of the 1907 strike or during its immediate aftermath.

Type
South African History
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1995

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References

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31 See, for instance, TCMA, file W6(c), T. Leggett to Secretary of the TCM, 26 Aug. 1902; Letterbook of City Deep Limited, 1910–11, (in the private possession of E. N. Katz), J. Whitford to Rand Mines Ltd, 24 Feb. 1911; Corner House Archives [CHA], White Labour File [WLF] (now housed, but as yet unsorted, in the Barlow Rand Archives), TCM circular letter, 12 Sept. 1905; and SC 9–1913, 3, qq. 40–1, H. R. Skinner.

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33 TCMA, file W6(c), T. H. Leggett to Secretary of the TCM, 29 Aug. 1902.

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36 TCMA, file W6(c), T. J. Britten to Secretary of the TCM, 11 Sept. 1902, file A1 (b), Secretary of the TCM to J. Erasmus, 15 June 1907, enclosure, confidential letter from the Association of Mine Managers, 6 May 1905; CHA, WLF, L. P. Cazalet to L. Phillips, 27 Oct. 1906; TG 2–1908, 826, 899, 999–1000, qq. 11, 931, 13,164–5, 14,777, R. Raine, R. N. Kotze and G. H. Somers; SC 4–1914, Report of the Select Committee on Working of Miners' Phthisis Act, 1912, 99, q. 581, J. Hindman.

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42 TCMA, file W6(c), ‘Report of the Special Committee’, [Oct.] 1902, T. Leggett to Secretary of the TCM, 29 Aug. 1902.

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46 TG 11–1908, 343, 344, qq. 8451, 8481–4, H. Hay.

47 Ibid., 67, 71, qq. 1655–7, F. H. Hodgkinson.

48 See, for instance, TG 2–1908, 316, 329, 376, 495, 519, qq. 2973, 3181, 3876–86, 5666, 6984, S. S. Crowle, T. Willis, F. Coward and E. Moore.

49 West Briton, (6 06 1907).Google Scholar See, for instance, Mining Industry, 1897, 41, 47Google Scholar, S. J. Jennings and J. P. FitzPatrick; Report of the Council of the Association of Mine Managers, (23 02 1903), appendix 4Google Scholar; West Briton, (6 06 1907);Google ScholarBrowne, , ‘Working costs’, 332–3;Google Scholar and Barlow Rand Archives [BRA], Hermann Eckstein [HE], (134), S. Evans to R. Schumacher, 20 Nov. 1905.

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51 TG 2–1908, 826, q. 11,925, R. Raine.

52 Transvaal Archives Depot [TAD], Secretary of Mines [MM], 649/05, memorandum by H. Weldon, 13 Apr. 1905.

53 PRO, CO 291/02, despatches, Selborne to Elgin, 20 Aug. 1906. See also TG 2–1908, 617, 826, qq. 7553, 11,914–26, W. T. Hallimond and R. Raine.

54 TG 11–1908, 344, q. 8463, H. Hay.

55 Journal of the Chemical, Metallurgical and Mining Society of South Africa, (05 1909), 390, W. S. Price.Google Scholar

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60 TG 2–1908, 976, q. 14,503, J. Davies; TAD, MM, 649/05, memorandum by H. Weldon, 14 Apr. 1905.

61 PRO, CO 291/02, despatches, Selborne to Elgin, 20 Aug. 1906; TAD, MM, 1883/06, minute 2439/06, by H. Weldon to Secretary for Mines, 9 Aug. 1906; TG 2–1908, 227, 643, 985, 1011, 1361–3, qq. 2208, 8022, 14,645, 14,940–1, J. B. Roberts, R. Raine, J. T. Turner, J. G. Hancock and F. Hellmann; Fourie, ‘Deel 1’, 39.

62 TG 2–1908, 976, q. 14,503, J. Davies; TAD, MM, 649/05, memorandum by H. Weldon, 14 Apr. 1905; SC 4–1914, 99, q. 581, evidence of J. Hindman. Calculations also based on UG 19–1912, 51, tables XIV and XV.

63 TG 2–1908, 823, q. 11,856, R. Raine. See also ibid., 611, 643, qq. 7383, 8023, W. T. Hallimond and R. Raine; and TG 11–1908, 344, q. 8463, H. Hay.

64 TG 2–1908, 193, 641, qq. 1870, 7967, G. E. Webber and R. Raine.

65 Journal of the Chemical, Metallurgical and Mining Society of South Africa, (10 1906), 111–12Google Scholar, Saner, C. B.; FRMRC, 1910, vol. 2, 14, 153–5, 236Google Scholar, T. Mathews and M. Trewick, J. Yates and Dr L. G. Irvine; South African Mines, Commerce and Industries, (17 03 1906), 3.Google Scholar

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70 Council minutes of the Association of Mine Managers, 6 Aug. 1907; TG 2–1909, GMEAR … 30 June 1908, 45. See also Journal of the Chemical, Metallurgical and Mining Society of South Africa, (04 1912), 412, J. M. Phillips.Google Scholar

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79 TG 2–1908, 663, q. 7790, S. A. Smit; SC 9–1913, 129, 130, qq. 962, 964, Dr L. G. Irvine. For details on the western suburbs of Johannesburg, see TG 11–1908, 240–1, q. 5369, T. B. Gilchrist.

80 TG 11–1908, 344, qq. 8472–73, H. Hay.

81 PRO, CO 291/102, despatches, Selborne to Elgin, 20 Aug. 1906; Fraser, and Jeeves, , All That Glittered, 164Google Scholar, L. Phillips to Wernher, Beit and Company, 18 June 1906.

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89 TG 2–1908, 887, 992–1002 and passim, q. 12,919, W. T. Anderson and G. H. Somers.

90 TG 11–1908, 344, q. 8485, H. Hay.

91 TG 2–1908, 442, 627E, qq. 4815, 7686, T. Mathews and S.A. Smit; BRA, HE, (138), S. Evans to W. Bradford, 8 Mar. 1905.

92 TG 2–1908, 442, 629, 629, 999–1000, 1013, qq. 4815–29, 7711, 7686, 14,777, 14,975, T. Mathews, S. A. Smit, G. H. Somers and J. G. Hancock.

93 TG 2–1908, 444, qq. 4863–4, T. Mathews.

94 TG 2–1908, 442, 627E, qq. 4815, 7686, T. Mathews and S. A. Smit; BRA, HE, (138), S. Evans to W. Bradford, 8 Mar. 1905.

95 TG 2–1908, 999–1000, G. H. Somers.

96 Ibid., 998, q. 14,765, G. H. Somers.

97 BRA, HE, (138), S. Evans to W. Bradford, 8 Mar. 1905.

98 Fraser and Jeeves, All That Glittered, 163–4, L. Phillips to Wernher, Beit and Company, 18 June 1906.

99 TG 2–1908, 952, 1495, qq. 14,240, 21,601, G. J. Hoffman and W. W. Mein.

100 Journal of the Chemical, Metallurgical and Mining Society of South Africa, (04 1912), 409Google Scholar, J. M., Phillips. See also Fourie, ‘Deel 1’, 86; and London Mining Journal, (19 10 1912), 1015.Google Scholar

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117 Katz, , White Death, 192–3.Google Scholar

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119 Katz, , ‘Miners by default’, 7580.Google Scholar

120 Transvaal Leader, (29 08 1910).Google Scholar

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122 TG 2–1908 315 q. 2946, S. S. Crowle.

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124 UG 19–1912, 36, table 1, ‘All Miners’.

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126 Report of the Miners' Phthisis Commission, 19021903, XXI, paras. 71, 72.Google Scholar

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128 See, for instance, Journal of the Chemical, Metallurgical and Mining Society of South Africa, (12 1906), 186, Dr D. Macaulay and Dr L. G. Irvine.Google Scholar

129 UG 19–1912, 23, para. 23; SC 4–1914, 99, q. 581, J. Hindman.

130 For fuller details, see Katz, , White Death, 7881.Google Scholar

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133 Ibid., 633, q. 7789, S. A. Smit.

134 Ibid., 193, q. 1870, Webber, G. E.; Journal of the Chemical, Metallurgical and Mining Society of South Africa, (10 1906), 112, C. B. Saner.Google Scholar