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<title>Theses and Dissertations (History)</title>
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<dc:date>2013-05-23T11:22:28Z</dc:date>
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<title>A history of silver mining in the greater Pretoria region, 1885-1999</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/10500/6867</link>
<description>A history of silver mining in the greater Pretoria region, 1885-1999
Reeks, Graham Walter
The mining of silver, although not as significant as the mining of gold, has a history of money being made and lost, as well as instances of fraud and theft.&#13;
In the late 1880s, when silver and lead deposits were discovered 100 km south-east of Pretoria, the Barnato family was quick to invest and float a company to exploit the deposit. To the north of Pretoria, Alois Nellmapius, later famous as the founder of the Hatherly distillery, established a company to mine a silver and copper rich deposit. The Strubens, pioneers of the Witwatersrand gold fields, discovered a silver rich copper deposit on their farm ‘The Willows’ east of Pretoria.&#13;
The successful silver mining companies listed on the Stock Exchange in Johannesburg soon attracted the attention of the Randlords of Johannesburg and specifically that of H Eckstein &amp; Co. The development of the company’s activities in silver mining in the 1880s and 1890s forms a significant part of this study.&#13;
The relationship between the mine owners and their managers during the nineteenth century is explored, along with local and international events in politics and economics that had an impact on the mining of silver in South Africa over the period from 1885 to 1999.&#13;
Silver mining in South Africa has had a ‘rise and fall’ life from the 1880s with three significant periods of investment, mining activity and decline. As with most commodities, prices vary over time. The international metals market has been a dominant factor in the life of the silver mines of greater Pretoria. The relationship between rising and falling international metal prices, and the operating lives of the mines, form a theme throughout this dissertation as it will be shown that the operating periods all coincided with periods of strong metal prices. In the one hundred and fourteen years, coupled with large tonnages of base metals – lead, copper and zinc - the mines produced over ninety-three tons of silver.&#13;
Over thirty silver mines and ventures were revealed during the research, but discussing all of them in this dissertation was not feasible. It is therefore limited to the history of the seven mines that produced the greatest amounts of silver and other metals such as lead, copper and zinc and how their individual and interrelated histories together form the dominant part of the history of silver mining in the greater Pretoria region.
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<dc:date>2012-02-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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<title>Provisioning Johannesburg, 1886-1906</title>
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<description>Provisioning Johannesburg, 1886-1906
Cripps, Elizabeth Ann
The rapidity of Johannesburg’s growth after the discovery of payable gold in 1886 created a provisioning challenge. Lacking water transport it was dependent on animal-drawn transport until the railways arrived from coastal ports. The local near-subsistence agricultural economy was supplemented by imported foodstuffs, readily available following the industrialisation of food production, processing and distribution in the Atlantic world and the transformation of transport and communication systems by steam, steel and electricity. Improvements in food preservation techniques: canning, refrigeration and freezing also contributed. From 1895 natural disasters ˗ droughts, locust attacks, rinderpest, East Coast fever ˗ and the man-made disaster of the South African War, reduced local supplies and by the time the ZAR became a British colony in 1902 almost all food had to be imported. By 1906, though still an import economy, meat and grain supplies had recovered, and commercial agriculture was responding to the market.
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<dc:date>2012-02-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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<item rdf:about="http://hdl.handle.net/10500/4943">
<title>With her shoulder to the wheel: the public life of Erika Theron (1907-1990)</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/10500/4943</link>
<description>With her shoulder to the wheel: the public life of Erika Theron (1907-1990)
Tayler, Judith Anne
This thesis is a biographical study of Erika Theron (1907-1990), an Afrikaner woman who played a significant role in many aspects of public life in South Africa in a critical time in the country‘s history. The study seeks to give recognition to her achievements, which have received scant attention in a historiography with a masculine bias. At the same time it examines her changing role from collaborator to critic of the apartheid system.&#13;
Certain defining features of Theron‘s life have been highlighted. First, Theron grew up in a staunchly Afrikaner nationalist, service-oriented family which encouraged loyalty to her own people and civic responsibility. Second, she was unusual among Afrikaner women of her generation, in that she was highly educated, independent and ready to assume leadership roles. She became a pioneer in a number of fields, attaining high professional rank and holding important public offices – frequently as the first woman to do so in the country.&#13;
The thesis focuses on five areas of Theron‘s public life. After returning from post-graduate studies abroad, she worked with Hendrik Verwoerd in the campaign to uplift poor whites, particularly the rehabilitation and re-integration of the Afrikaner poor. She thereafter commenced a long career as a social work academic, which included a number of milestones for her new discipline, for the profession of social work and for the advancement of women in academia. From the 1950s she served on the town council of Stellenbosch, including terms as deputy mayor and mayor. She played an important role in historic conservation but was also instrumental in the rigorous institution of apartheid structures in the town during the early days of National Party rule. In the early 1970s she served as chairman of the Commission of Enquiry into Coloured Affairs which influenced her personal views on the country‘s race policies. She became a public critic of many aspects of the apartheid system and vocal advocate for coloured rights.
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<dc:date>2010-11-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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<title>The World Council of Churches and its programme to combat racism : the evolution and development of their fight against apartheid, 1969–1994</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/10500/4340</link>
<description>The World Council of Churches and its programme to combat racism : the evolution and development of their fight against apartheid, 1969–1994
Mufamadi, Thembeka Doris
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<dc:date>2011-02-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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