Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-dzt6s Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-27T08:27:18.815Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Activities of the London Missionary Society in South Africa, 1806-1836: An Assessment

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 May 2014

Jack Boas*
Affiliation:
Department of History, University of California, Riverside, California

Extract

Seemingly oblivious to outside pressure and censure, the present-day Nationalist government of South Africa remains firmly wedded to a policy of separate development, known as apartheid, for its white and nonwhite populations. Criticism from abroad is inevitably parried with the assertion that South Africa has its own means of dealing with questions of race, based on more than 300 years of historical experience. Traditionally this attitude has been upheld and shared by South African historians, particularly by those of Dutch extraction, who comb South Africa's past in search of material to justify the prejudices and policies of today. “History,” writes a contemporary South African historian, “has become a tool to perpetuate the laager mentality of a minority group embattled forever against British imperialists, missionaries, Kaffirs, Communists, liberals, and the world in general” (Patterson 1957, p. 37).

More specifically, South Africa's current inflexible position on apartheid may be related to events that took place in the early part of the nineteenth century. During this period, British efforts to bring about the “equalization” of the native peoples led to the “first clash of significance” between the British and the Afrikaners (Van Jaarsveld 1964, p. 8), as the descendants of the Dutch Boers call themselves; and because the agents of the London Missionary Society at the Cape and in England agitated for many of the reforms introduced by the home government in its South African colony, the Afrikaners have held them responsible for setting in motion the events leading to the Great Trek of 1836.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 1973

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

References Cited

Cachet, Leon F. De Worstelstrijd der Transvalers (The Struggle of the Transvaler). Amsterdam, 1882.Google Scholar
Campbell, John. Travels in South Africa. Vols. I and II. Andover, 1816.Google Scholar
Campbell, John. Travels in South Africa. Vols. I and II. London, 1822.Google Scholar
De Kiewiet, C. W. A History of South Africa: Social and Economic. Oxford, 1950.Google Scholar
Goddard, Burton L., ed. The Encyclopedia of Modern Christian Missions. Camden, New Jersey, 1967.Google Scholar
Lovett, Richard. The History of the London Missionary Society: 1795-1895. Vol. I. London, 1899.Google Scholar
MacMillan, W. M. The Cape Colour Question: A Historical Survey. London, 1927.Google Scholar
MacMillan, W. M. Bantu, Boer, and Briton: The Making of the South African Native Problem. 2nd ed. Rev. and enl. Oxford, 1963.Google Scholar
Marquard, Leo. The Story of South Africa. Rev. ed. London, 1968.Google Scholar
Moffat, Robert. Missionary Labours and Scenes in Southern Africa. London, 1842.Google Scholar
Morison, John. The Fathers and Founders of the London Missionary Society. Vol. I. London, n.d.Google Scholar
Muller, C. F. J. Die Britse Owerheid en die Groot Trek (British Supremacy and the Great Trek). Cape Town, 1948.Google Scholar
Neumark, Daniel. Economic Influences on the South African Frontier: 1652-1836. Stanford, 1957.Google Scholar
Ngubane, Jordan K. An African Explains Apartheid. New York, 1963.Google Scholar
Patterson, Sheila. The Last Trek: A Study of the Boer People and the Afrikaner Nation. London, 1957.Google Scholar
Philip, John. Researches in South Africa. Vols. I and II. London, 1828.Google Scholar
Preller, Gustav S. Piet Retief: Lewensgeskiedenis van die Grote Voortrekker (Piet Retief: Biography of the Great Pioneer). Cape Town, 1930.Google Scholar
Pretorius, and Kruger, D., eds. Voortrekker-Argiefstukke: 1829-1849 (Archival Documents of the Voortrekkers). Pretoria, 1937.Google Scholar
Records of the Cape Colony (RCC). 36 vols. Edited and compiled by Theal, George McCall. London, 18991905.Google Scholar
Theal, George McCall. History of South Africa Since September 1795. Vol. I. London, 1908.Google Scholar
Theal, George McCall., ed. and comp. Belangrijke Historische Documenten over Zuid Afrika (Important Historical Documents of South Africa). Vol. III. London, 1911.Google Scholar
Theal, George McCall., ed. Documents Relating to the Kaffir War of 1835. London, 1912.Google Scholar
van Biljon, P. Grensbaken Tussen Blank and Swart in Suid-Afrika. (Boundaries Between White and Black in South Africa). Johannesburg, 1947.Google Scholar
Van Jaarsveld, F. A. The Awakening of Afrikaner Nationalism: 1868-1881. Cape Town, 1961.Google Scholar
Van Jaarsveld, F. A. The Afrikaner's Interpretation of South African History. Cape Town, 1964.Google Scholar
van Oordt, J. W. G. Slagtersnek: Een bladzijde uit de voorgeschiedenis der Zuid Afrikaanse Republiek (Slagtersnek: A Page out of the Prehistory of the South African Republic). Amsterdam, 1897.Google Scholar
Walker, Eric A. The Great Trek. London, 1938.Google Scholar
Wilson, Monica and Thompson, Leonard. The Oxford History of South Africa to 1870. Vol. I. Oxford, 1969.Google Scholar