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J. B. M. Hertzog

 
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia:

James Barry Munnik Hertzog


(born April 3, 1866, near Wellington, Cape Colony — died Nov. 21, 1942, Pretoria, S.Af.) Prime minister of the Union of South Africa (1924 – 39). His political principles were "South Africa First" (i.e., ahead of the British Empire) and the "Two Streams Policy," under which British and Afrikaner would be free from domination by each other. He served in the cabinet of Louis Botha (1910 – 12), but he broke with Botha because of his nationalist sympathies and formed the National Party. As prime minister, Hertzog gave South Africa its flag, made Afrikaans an official language, promoted apartheid, and affirmed the equality of British and Afrikaner rights. In 1933 he was forced to accept a coalition with Jan Smuts, and in 1939 he resigned over the issue of neutrality in World War II.

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Gale Encyclopedia of Biography:

James Barry Munnik Hertzog

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James Barry Munnik Hertzog (1866-1942) was a South African soldier and political leader. His government isolated Africans from the political process and laid the groundwork for the separatist apartheid system, which allowed the white minority to oppress blacks.

James Hertzog was born in the Wellington district of the Cape Province on April 3, 1866, a descendant of German immigrants. Educated at Stellenbosch University near Cape Town, Hertzog studied law in Holland, France, and Germany. Returning to South Africa in 1893, he served as reporter to the Transvaal High Court and subsequently became a judge of the High Court of the Orange Free State. Hertzog resigned this post when the Anglo-Boer war broke out in 1899, enlisted for service, and assumed command of the burgher forces in June 1900. The Treaty of Vereeniging, which ended the war, set him on a public career that was to make Afrikaner nationalism the most important influence in South African politics.

Advocate of Afrikaner Nationalism

At the time, an Afrikaner leader was judged mainly by his attitudes to the British connection, the relations between the Afrikaners and the English minority, and inevitably the race problem. Hertzog's thinking on these had developed during his student days. "A distinctive nation," Oswald Pirow, his confidant and lifelong friend, quotes him as having written from Europe, "has thus come into being, with a distinctive language of a separate and independent character." Hertzog, who had been pleased to speak Dutch in Stellenbosch, then rejected "the folly of trying to introduce into South Africa a highly synthetic language like Nederlands."

For Hertzog, the destiny of the Afrikaner was defined in terms of "a severe and sustained struggle for dominance in South Africa." What Hertzog really had in mind emerged during a heated session of the Vereeniging peace conference. Angered by Boer demands for the equal treatment of the English and Dutch languages, Lord Milner, the British administrator, shouted: "I want only one official language in South Africa!" Hertzog's retort was "So do I!"

Louis Botha invited Hertzog to join his Cabinet when the Union (now Republic) of South Africa was formed in 1910. The partnership was doomed almost from the beginning. Where Botha cooperated with Britain, conciliated the English minority, and treated the Africans with paternalistic benevolence, Hertzog preferred a different political style. He was in a hurry to free South Africa from domination by "foreign fortune seekers," wanted the Afrikaners and the English to develop along separate though equal cultural lines, and insisted on segregating the Africans.

A keen admirer of John Milton's puritanical sternness and an untiring reader of Carlyle's Frederic the Great, Hertzog moved to his goals with a rigidity and single-mindedness which thrilled his followers, exasperated his enemies, and finally brought about his downfall. His version of language equality created crises in the Free State's educational system, which forced Botha to resign (1912) and reconstitute his Cabinet - without Hertzog.

The Nationalist party, led by Hertzog, came into being in 1914. It formed an alliance with the mainly English-speaking Labour party after the Rand disturbances in 1922. The alliance emerged victorious from the 1924 elections. Hertzog became Afrikaner nationalism's first prime minister. Two years later he was in London, pressing the Imperial Conference for clarification of the status of members of the British Commonwealth. The Statute of Westminster (1931), which recognized South Africa's independence, and the legislation giving the country a separate flag constitute the crowning achievements in Hertzog's struggle to remove the humiliations of Vereeniging.

Apostle of Apartheid

Hertzog's attitude to the African was rooted in the long history of conflict between black and white and in the Afrikaner's fear of miscegenation. Urgency was given to it by his fear of an African-English alliance against the Afrikaner. In the Cape, where the Africans had the vote, they used it against Afrikaner nationalism. One of the three British columns which had harassed Hertzog's armies in the Free State had been African. The first Nationalist-Labour Cabinet had fallen (1928) because the English-speaking labor minister had met a black delegation from Clements Kadalie's Industrial and Commercial Workers Union.

Hertzog's government introduced the bans to isolate and silence political dissent, removed the Africans from the common voters' roll in the Cape, and passed legislation upholding the industrial color bar. His successors were to build on these foundations to cast apartheid in its present form.

The depression forced Hertzog to form a coalition government with Gen. Jan C. Smuts, who led the South African party. The coalition developed into the United party (1934). The clouds of war were rising in Europe. Hertzog advocated a policy of neutrality. He adopted this attitude, he told the Imperial Conference in 1937, "because England continues to associate itself with France in a policy with reference to East and Central Europe which is calculated to endanger Germany's existence or which refuses to eliminate any injustice flowing from the Treaty of Versailles." With this in mind he tabled a neutrality motion in Parliament on Sept. 4, 1939, which was rejected by 80 votes to 67. His government fell.

He later joined D. F. Malan to form the Reunited party, which split in 1940 when the militants rejected Hertzog's moderate policies toward the English in favor of what he had earlier termed Afrikaner "dominance in South Africa." The remnants of his followers formed the Afrikaner party and persuaded Hertzog to lead it. Speaking out for national socialism for the Afrikaners, Hertzog alienated both the Afrikaner militants and those fighting Hitler. Embittered and lonely, Hertzog died on Nov. 21, 1942.

Further Reading

The most authoritative work on Hertzog is Christian Maurits van den Heever, General Hertzog (1946). Oswald Pirow, James Barry Munnik Hertzog (1958), discusses the intrigues that brought about Hertzog's downfall. Lawrence E. Neame, General Hertzog: Prime Minister of the Union of South Africa since 1924 (1930), is an English view of the Boer statesman.

Additional Sources

Coetzer, Alta, Generaal Hertzog in beeld, Johannesburg: Perskor; 1991.

Esterhuysen, Matthys van As., The era of the generals = Die era van die generaals: a portrayal of the medals and commemorative awards in honour of General Louis Botha, Jan Christiaan Smuts and James Barry Munnik Hertzog …, Pretoria: National Cultural History and Open Air Museum, 1974.

Nienaber, Petrus Johannes, 1910-ed. Gedenkboek Generaal J. B. M. Hertzog, Johannesburg, Afrikaanse Pers-Boekhandel, 1965.

Generaal J.B.M. Hertzog: sy strewe en stryd, Johannesburg: Perskor, 1987.

Meiring, Piet, Generaal Hertzog, 50 jaar daarna, Johannesburg: Perskor, 1986.

Scholtz, Gert Daniel, Generaals Hertzog en Smuts en die Britse Ryk, Johannesburg: Randse Afrikaanse Universiteit, c1974.

Columbia Encyclopedia:

James Barry Munnik Hertzog

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Hertzog, James Barry Munnik (hûrt'sŏg, hĕrt'sôkh), 1866-1942, South African military and political leader. Before the South African War, in which he commanded a division of the Boer forces (1899-1902), he had been a judge in the Orange Free State. As minister of education in the Orange River Colony (1907-10), he insisted upon the teaching of Dutch as well as English in the schools. In the first cabinet of the Union of South Africa he was minister of justice (1910-12), but his active resistance to Louis Botha, then premier, and to the supremacy of Great Britain brought about a crisis, and he was dropped from the government. Hertzog then took the lead in organizing the National party, opposed to imperialism and aiming at a state independent of the British Empire. After 1924, when by an alliance between that party and the Labour party a coalition government was formed, he was prime minister for 15 years until Sept., 1939. His administrations protected domestic industries, passed measures of racial segregation, and disenfranchised the Bantu of the Cape Prov. Hertzog was at first inclined to appease Hitler, favoring a return of German colonial territories, but he advocated neutrality in World War II. Parliament then repudiated his anti-British stand.

Bibliography

See biographies by C. M. van den Heever (1946) and O. Pirow (1958).

Wikipedia on Answers.com:

J. B. M. Hertzog

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The Right Honourable
James Barry Munnik Hertzog
KC
3rd Prime Minister of South Africa
In office
30 June 1924 – 5 September 1939
Monarch George V
Edward VIII
George VI
Governor General 1st Earl of Athlone
6th Earl of Clarendon
Preceded by Jan Christiaan Smuts
Succeeded by Jan Christiaan Smuts
Personal details
Born 3 April 1866(1866-04-03)
Wellington, Cape Colony
Died 21 November 1942(1942-11-21) (aged 76)
Pretoria, Transvaal Province, Union of South Africa
Political party National Party
United Party
Religion Dutch Reformed Church
Statue of Hertzog in the gardens of the Union Buildings, Pretoria

James Barry Munnik Hertzog, better known as Barry Hertzog or J. B. M. Hertzog (3 April 1866 near Wellington, Cape Colony – 21 November 1942 in Pretoria, Union of South Africa) was a Boer general during the second Anglo-Boer War who later went on to become Prime Minister of the Union of South Africa from 1924 to 1939. Throughout his life he encouraged the development of the Afrikaner culture, determined to protect the Afrikaner from British influence. He is named after Dr. James Barry who performed the first successful cesarean section in Africa by a British surgeon, in which both the mother and child survived the operation. In 2007 a building was built in Paarl and named after him to honour his legacy.[1]

Contents

General Hertzog

Hertzog first studied law at Victoria College in Stellenbosch, Cape Colony. In 1889 he went to the Netherlands to read law at the University of Amsterdam, where he prepared a dissertation on the strength of which he received his doctorate in law on 12 November 1892.[2][3]

He had a law practice in Pretoria from 1892 until 1895, when he was appointed to the Orange Free State High Court. During the Boer War of 1899–1902 he rose to the rank of general, becoming the assistant chief commandant of the military forces of the Orange Free State. Despite some military reverses, he gained renown as a daring and resourceful leader of the guerilla forces continuing to fight the British. Eventually, convinced of the futility of further bloodshed, he signed the May 1902 Treaty of Vereeniging.

Politician

With the country now at peace, Hertzog plunged into politics as the chief organiser of the Orangia Unie Party. In 1907, the Orange River Colony gained self-government and Hertzog joined the cabinet as Attorney-General and Director of Education. His insistence that Dutch as well as English be taught in the schools met bitter opposition. He was appointed national Minister of Justice in the newly formed Union of South Africa. He continued in office until 1912. His antagonism to imperialism and to Premier Botha led to a ministerial crisis. In 1913 he led a secession of the Old Boer and anti-imperialist section from the South African Party.

At the outbreak of the South African rebellion in 1914, he stayed neutral. In the years following the war, he headed the opposition to the government of General Smuts.

Prime minister

In the general election of 1924, his National Party defeated the South African Party of Jan Smuts and formed a coalition government with the South African Labour Party, which became known as the Pact Government. In 1934, the National Party and the South African Party merged to form the United Party, with Hertzog as Prime Minister and leader of the new party. As prime minsiter, Hertzog presided over the passage of a wide range of social and economic measures which did much to improve conditions for working-class whites. According to one historian, “The government of 1924, which combined Hertzog’s NP with the Labour Party, oversaw the foundations of an Afrikaner welfare state.”[4]

Amongst the measures introduced by Hertzog and his ministers included:

  • The Wages Act (1925), which laid down minimum wages for unskilled workers, although it excluded farm labourers, domestic servants, and public servants. It also established a Wage Board that regulated pay for certain kinds of work, regardless of racial background (although whites were the main beneficiaries of this legislation).[5]
  • The Old Age Pensions Act (1927),[5] which provided retirement benefits for white workers. Coloureds also received the pension, but the maximum for Coloureds was only 70% that of whites.[6]
  • The establishment of the Iron and Steel Corporation (1930), which helped to stimulate economic progress.[5]
  • The institution of ‘penny postage’, automatic telephone exchanges, a COD postal service, and an experimental airmail service which was later made permanent.[7]
  • The withdrawal of duties on imported raw materials for industrial use, which encouraged industrial development and created further employment opportunities, but at the cost of a higher cost of living.[5]
  • The introduction of various forms of assistance to agriculture. Dairy farmers, for instance, were aided by a levy imposed on all butter sales, while an increase in import taxes protected farmers from international competition.[5] Farmers also benefited from preferential railway tariffs[8] and from the widening availability of loans from the Land Bank. The government also assisted farmers by guaranteeing prices for farm produce.[5]
  • The establishment of work colonies for those in need of social salvage.[9]
  • The widening of the suffrage, with the enfranchisement of white women.[5]
  • The establishment of a Department of Labour.[5]
  • The establishment of secondary industries to improve employment opportunities, which did much to reduce white poverty and enabled many whites to join the ranks of both semi-skilled and skilled labour.[5]
  • The establishment of the Department of Social Welfare (1937) as a separate governmental department to deal with social conditions.[5]
  • Increased expenditure on education for both whites and coloureds. Spending on coloured education rose by 60%, which led to the number of coloured in children in school grow by 30%.[6]
  • An extension of worker’s compensation.[10]
  • Improvements in the standards specified under a contemporary Factory Act, thus bringing the Act into line with international standards with regard to the length of the working week and the employment of child labour.[9]
  • Increased protection of white urban tenants against eviction at a time when houses were in short supply.[9]
  • The overhauling of a law on miners' phthisis.[9]
  • The opening up of the civil service to Afrikaners through the promotion of bilingualism.[6]
  • The introduction of grants for the blind and the disabled in 1936 and 1937, respectively.[11]
  • The introduction of unemployment benefits (1937).[12]

Although the social and economic policies pursued by Hertzog and his ministers did much to improve social and economic conditions for whites, they did not benefit the majority of South Africans, who found themselves the targets of discriminatory labour laws that entrenched white supremacy in South Africa. A Civilised Labour Policy was pursued by the Pact Government to replace back workers with whites (typically impoverished Afrikaners), and was enforced through three key pieces of legislation: the Industrial Conciliation Act No 11 of 1924, the Minimum Wages Act No. 27 of 1925, and the Mines and Works Amendment Act no. 25 of 1926.[13] The Industrial Conciliation Act No 11 of 1924 created job reservation for whites while excluding blacks from membership of registered trade unions (which therefore prohibited the registration of black trade unions.[14] The Minimum Wages Act No. 27 of 1925 bestowed upon the Minister for Labour the power to force employers to give preference to whites when hiring workers,[15] while the Mines and Works Amendment Act No. 25 of 1926 reinforced a color bar in the mining industry, while excluding Indian miners from skilled jobs.[16] In a sense, therefore, the discriminatory social and economic policies pursued by the Pact Government helped pave the way for the eventual establishment of the Apartheid state.

Constitutionally, Hertzog was a republican who believed strongly in promoting the independence of the Union of South Africa from the British Empire. His government approved the Statute of Westminster in 1931, and replaced Dutch as the second official language with Afrikaans in 1925, as well as instating a new national flag in 1928. His government approved women's suffrage for white women in 1930, thus hardening the dominance of the white minority. Property and education requirements for Whites were abandoned in the same year, with those for non-Whites being severely tightened, and in 1936 Blacks were completely taken off the common voters' roll. Separately elected Native Representatives were instead instated, a policy repeated in the attempts of the later apartheid regime to disenfranchise all non-Whites during the 1950s. Through this system of gradual disenfranchisement spanning half a century, the South African electorate was not made up entirely of Whites until the 1970 general election.

On 4 September 1939, the United Party caucus refused to accept Hertzog's stance of neutrality in World War II and deposed him in favour of Smuts.

References

  1. ^ Die storie van James Barry Munnik at www.paarlpost.com
  2. ^ Hertzog, J.B.M. (1892). De 'income'-bond, zijn rechtskarakter en de waarde zijner economische en juridische beginselen. Amsterdam: Universiteit van Amsterdam. 
  3. ^ Album academicum van het Athenaeum Illustre en van de Universiteit van Amsterdam. Amsterdam: R.W.P. de Vries. 1913. pp. 173. 
  4. ^ Contemporary South Africa by Anthony Butler
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j http://home.intekom.com/southafricanhistoryonline/pages/classroom/pages/projects/grade12/lesson10/05-pact.htm
  6. ^ a b c Afrikaners: biography of a people by Hermann Giliomee
  7. ^ http://ancestry24.com/articles/f-h-p-creswell/
  8. ^ http://www.cssr.uct.ac.za/sites/cssr.uct.ac.za/files/pubs/wp154.pdf
  9. ^ a b c d South Africa: a modern history by T. R. H. Davenport
  10. ^ An economic history of South Africa: conquest, discrimination and development by C. H. Feinstein
  11. ^ Fighting poverty: labour markets and inequality in South Africa by Haroon Bhorat
  12. ^ http://www.ssa.gov/policy/docs/progdesc/ssptw/2010-2011/africa/southafrica.pdf
  13. ^ http://africanhistory.about.com/od/apartheid/a/Pact-Government.htm
  14. ^ http://africanhistory.about.com/od/apartheidlaws/g/No11of24.htm
  15. ^ http://africanhistory.about.com/od/preapartheidlaws/g/No27Of25.htm
  16. ^ http://africanhistory.about.com/od/preapartheidlaws/g/No25Of26.htm


External links

Political offices
Preceded by
Jan Smuts
Prime Minister of South Africa
1924–1939
Succeeded by
Jan Smuts
Party political offices
Preceded by
party created
Leader of the United Party
1934–1939
Succeeded by
Jan Smuts



 
 
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Daniel François Malan (South African politician & statesman)
Nicolaas Havenga
South Africa (country)

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