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THOMAS FRANCOIS BURGERS (1834-1881)

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Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 813 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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THOMAS FRANCOIS BURGERS (1834-1881)  , president of the
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Transvaal Republic, was born in Cape Colony on the 15th of
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April 1834, and was educated at Utrecht, Holland, where he took the degree of doctor of
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theology . On his return to South Africa he was ordained minister of the Dutch Reformed Church, and stationed at Hanover in Cape Colony, where he exercised his ministrations for eight years . In 1862 his preaching attracted attention, and two years later an ecclesiastical tribunal suspended him for heretical opinions . He appealed, however, to the colonial government, which .had appointed him, and obtained
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judgment in his favour, which was confirmed by the privy council of England on
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appeal in 1865 . On the resignation of M . W .
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Pretorius and the refusal of President Brand of the Orange
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Free State to accept the office, Burgers was elected president of the Transvaal, taking the oath on the 1st of
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July 1872 . In 1873 he endeavoured to persuade Montsioa to agree to an alteration in the boundary of the Barolong territory as fixed by the Keate award, but failed (see BECHUANALAND) . In 1875 Burgers, leaving the Transvaal in charge of Acting-President Joubert, went to
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Europe mainly to promote a scheme for linking the Transvaal to the coast by a railway from Delagoa
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Bay, which was that
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year definitely assigned to
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Portugal by the MacMahon award . With the Portuguese Burgers concluded a treaty, December 1875, providing for the construction of the railway . After meeting with refusals of
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financial help in
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London, Burgers managed to raise 9o,000 in Holland, and bought a quantity of railway plant, which on its arrival at Delagoa Bay was mortgaged to pay freight, and this, so far as Burgers was concerned, was the end of the
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matter . In
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June 1876 he induced the raad to declare war against Sikukuni (Secocoeni), a powerful native chief in the eastern Transvaal .

The

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campaign was unsuccessful, and with its failure the republic fell into a condition of lawlessness and insolvency, while a Zulu
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host threatened invasion . Burgers in an address to the raad (3rd of March 1877) declared " I would rather be a policeman under a strong government than the president of such a state . It is you—you members of the raad and the Boers—who have lost the country, who have sold your independence for a drink."
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Sir
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Theophilus Shepstone, who had been sent to investigate the condition of affairs in the Transvaal, issued on the 12th of April a proclamation annexing the Transvaal to
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Great Britain . Burgers fully acquiesced in the necessity for annexation . He accepted a pension from the
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British government, and settled down to farming in Hanover, Cape Colony . He died at Richmond in that colony on the 9th of December 1881, and in the following year a
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volume" of short stories, Tooneelen uit ons dorp, originally written by him for the Cape Volksblad, was published at the Hague for the benefit of his
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family . A patriot, a fluent
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speaker both in Dutch and in
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English, and possessed of unbounded energy, the failure of Burgers was due to his fondness for large visionary plans, which he attempted to carry out with insufficient means (see TRANSVAAL:
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History) . For the annexation period see John Martineau, The
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Life of Sir Bartle Frere, vol. ii.
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chap. xviii . (London, 1895) .

End of Article: THOMAS FRANCOIS BURGERS (1834-1881)
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