The Boers (Dutch for farmers) moved out of
the Cape Colony of Southern Africa and into the Orange Free State, Transvaal
and Natal, to escape British colonial rule. One of these Boers, Daniel Jacobs,
made his home on the banks of the Orange River, near to the small settlement of
Hopetown, where he made a precarious living on the pasturelands of the veldt.
His home was not much more than a hovel, roughly divided into two rooms, with
sacking for a roof and a packed earth floor that was smeared once a week with a
polishing mixture of dung and water.
Boers trekking |
Parents and children slept together on a
rough frame overlaced with rawhide strips, there was a chest of drawers, a
crude table and chairs, a mirror and very little else in the way of furniture.
Their food was corn meal porridge, supplemented occasionally with a lump of
boiled mutton and rice, coarse wheaten bread and black, bitter coffee. When the
sheep and goats were turned out of the kraal to browse on the scant scrub and
thorns of the veldt, they were shepherded by African servants, as the Boer and
his vrouw were loathe to trouble themselves with manual labour if there were
other people around to do it for them.
Some Africans taking a break |
Their children ran as wild as their
livestock, ranging over the rocks and sand, and in lieu of playthings, they
hunted for shiny pebbles along the banks of the river, each of them building
their own collection of smooth agates, rosy-red carnelians, bronze jaspers and
creamy chalcedonies, carmine garnets and sparkling rock-crystals.
The Dangers of Africa - Lions, leopards, rhinos ... and tigers! |
The farmer’s
wife was especially taken with a particularly bright white pebble, and she told
a neighbour, Schalk van Niekerk, about the stone. He asked to see it, but one
of the children had thrown it out into the dust of the yard, and van Niekerk
had to hunt in the dirt before it came to light. He was also taken with the
gleam of the thing and offered to buy it, but the vrouw wouldn’t hear of it and
gave it to her neighbour, who put it into his pocket and carried it off home.
John O'Reilly |
He thought it might have a little value and passed it on to a travelling
salesman, John O’Reilly, who showed it to several people in Hopetown and in
Colesberg, a settlement further along the Orange River, but all who saw it were
not impressed and no one would part with as much as a penny for the stone,
which might, at best, be a topaz. The Civil Commissioner of Colesberg, Mr
Lorenzo Boyes, discovered that the stone would scratch glass and declared it to
be a diamond, but his idea was laughed aside by Dr Kirsh, the town apothecary,
who bet Boyes a new hat that the pebble was nothing more than a topaz. Boyes
accepted the bet, put the stone into an unsealed envelope and posted it off the
colony’s principal mineralogist, Dr W Guybon Atherstone, at Grahamstown.
Dr W Guybon Atherstone |
When
the post-boy delivered the letter, the stone fell out of the envelope and
rolled away, Atherstone picked it up, read the letter and examined the pebble.
Then he took up his pen and wrote this reply to Boyes.
“I congratulate you on the stone you have sent to me. It is a veritable diamond, weighs twenty-one and a quarter carats, and is worth £5oo. It has spoiled all the jewellers' files in Grahamstown, and where that came from there must be lots more. Can I send it to Mr. Southey, Colonial Secretary?”
From there, the stone passed
into the possession of the Governor of the Cape, who paid the estimated value
put forward by Atherstone, and which was confirmed by M Henriette, the French
consul. The stone was then sent to the Paris Exhibition, where there was a
little interest in it, although it did not cause a sensation, as odd, isolated
discoveries of diamonds were nothing new.
Lorenzo Boyes |
In the meantime, Lorenzo Boyes
departed for Hopetown and van Niekerk’s farm, and spent a fortnight sorting
piles of pebbles but no further diamonds were found, although a good many Boers
popped rock-crystals into their pockets, in the vain hope that they might just
be lucky and have found another of the blink klippe (bright stones). Ten
months later, another diamond was found, thirty miles from Hopetown, at the
confluence of the Vaal and Orange Rivers, and Boyes was off again, but again
failed to find a companion stone.
Map of South Africa |
During 1868, a few more small stones were
found, and then, in March 1869, a Griqua shepherdboy found a magnificent white
diamond, weighing 83.5 carats, for which van Niekerk gave him five hundred
sheep, ten oxen and a horse. The thrifty Boer returned to Hopetown and sold the
stone on to the Lilienfield Brothers for £11,200, who sent it to England, where
it was eventually sold to the Countess of Dudley for £25,000.
Star of South Africa |
The rough diamond
was reduced to 46.5 carats when it was cut into a oval three-sided brilliant
shape, and it was mounted with 95 smaller brilliant-cut diamonds into a head
ornament; known as the Dudley Diamond, it is now better known as the Star of
South Africa. It was sold again, in 1974, for just over three quarters of a
million pounds (the equivalent of £1.75 million in today’s money).
Thus began
the systematic search for diamonds in South Africa, along the Vaal River, as
parties of organised prospectors sifted through the alluvial gravels.
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