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See also: Transvaal Republic, was See also: born in Cape Colony on the 15th of See also: April 1834, and was educated at See also: Utrecht, See also: Holland, where he took the degree of
See also: doctor of See also: theology
.
On his return to See also: South See also: Africa he was ordained See also: minister of the Dutch Reformed See also: Church, and stationed at
See also: Hanover in Cape Colony, where he exercised his ministrations for eight years
.
In 1862 his preaching attracted See also: attention, and two years later an ecclesiastical tribunal suspended him for heretical opinions
.
He appealed, however, to the colonial See also: government, which .had appointed him, and obtained See also: judgment in his favour, which was confirmed by the privy council of See also: England on See also: appeal in 1865
.
On the resignation of M
.
W
.
See also: Pretorius and the refusal of President Brand of the Orange See also: Free See also: State to accept the office, See also: Burgers was elected president of the Transvaal, taking the See also: oath on the 1st of See also: 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 See also: Keate award, but failed (see BECHUANALAND)
.
In 1875 Burgers, leaving the Transvaal in See also: charge of Acting-President See also: Joubert, went to See also: Europe mainly to promote a scheme for linking the Transvaal to the See also: coast by a railway from Delagoa See also: Bay, which was that See also: year definitely assigned to See also: Portugal by the See also: MacMahon award
.
With the Portuguese Burgers concluded a treaty, See also: December 1875, providing for the construction of the railway
.
After meeting with refusals of See also: financial help in See also: 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 See also: matter
.
In See also: June 1876 he induced the raad to declare war against Sikukuni (Secocoeni), a powerful native chief in the eastern Transvaal
.
The See also: campaign was unsuccessful, and with its failure the republic See also: fell into a condition of lawlessness and insolvency, while a Zulu See also: host threatened invasion
.
Burgers in an address to the raad (3rd of See also: 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."
See also: Sir See also: 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 See also: Great Britain
.
Burgers fully acquiesced in the See also: necessity for annexation
.
He accepted a pension from the See also: British government, and settled down to farming in Hanover, Cape Colony
.
He died at See also: Richmond in that colony on the 9th of December 1881, and in the following year a See also: volume" of See also: short stories, Tooneelen uit ons dorp, originally written by him for the Cape Volksblad, was published at the Hague for the benefit of his See also: family
.
A patriot, a fluent See also: speaker both in Dutch and in See also: 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: See also: History)
.
For the annexation See also: period see See also: John Martineau, The
See also: Life of Sir Bartle See also: Frere, vol. ii. See also: chap. xviii
.
(London, 1895)
.
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