Paul Kruger


Stephanus Johannes Paulus Kruger (Afrikaans pronunciation: [ˈkry.(j)ər]; 10 October 1825 – 14 July 1904) was a South African politician. He was one of the dominant political and military figures in 19th-century South Africa, and President of the South African Republic (or Transvaal) from 1883 to 1900. Nicknamed Oom Paul ("Uncle Paul"), he came to international prominence as the face of the Boer cause—that of the Transvaal and its neighbour the Orange Free State—against Britain during the Second Boer War of 1899–1902. He has been called a personification of Afrikanerdom, and remains a controversial figure; admirers venerate him as a tragic folk hero.

Born near the eastern edge of the Cape Colony, Kruger took part in the Great Trek as a child during the late 1830s. He had almost no education apart from the Bible. A protégé of the Voortrekker leader Andries Pretorius, he witnessed the signing of the Sand River Convention with Britain in 1852 and over the next decade played a prominent role in the forging of the South African Republic, leading its commandos and resolving disputes between the rival Boer leaders and factions. In 1863 he was elected Commandant-General, a post he held for a decade before he resigned soon after the election of President Thomas François Burgers.

Kruger was appointed Vice President in March 1877, shortly before the South African Republic was annexed by Britain as the Transvaal. Over the next three years he headed two deputations to London to try to have this overturned. He became the leading figure in the movement to restore the South African Republic's independence, culminating in the Boers' victory in the First Boer War of 1880–81. Kruger served until 1883 as a member of an executive triumvirate, then was elected President. In 1884 he headed a third deputation that brokered the London Convention, under which Britain recognised the South African Republic as a completely independent state.

Following the influx of thousands of predominantly British settlers with the Witwatersrand Gold Rush of 1886, "uitlanders" (out-landers) provided almost all of the South African Republic's tax revenues but lacked civic representation; Boer burghers retained control of the government. The uitlander problem and the associated tensions with Britain dominated Kruger's attention for the rest of his presidency, to which he was re-elected in 1888, 1893 and 1898, and led to the Jameson Raid of 1895–96 and ultimately the Second Boer War. Kruger left for Europe as the war turned against the Boers in 1900 and spent the rest of his life in exile, refusing to return home following the British victory. After he died in Switzerland at the age of 78 in 1904, his body was returned to South Africa for a state funeral, and buried in the Heroes' Acre in Pretoria.

Stephanus Johannes Paulus Kruger was born on 10 October 1825 at Bulhoek, a farm in the Steynsburg area of the Cape Colony, the third child and second son of Casper Jan Hendrik Kruger (1801–1852), a farmer, and his wife Elsje (Elisa; née Steyn; 1806–1834).[1] The family was of Dutch-speaking Afrikaner background, of German, French Huguenot and Dutch stock.[1][2] Also counted amongst its ancestry was some Khoi blood, which came down to it from his ancestress Krotoa.[3] The Kruger paternal ancestors had been in South Africa since 1713, when Jacob Krüger, from Berlin, arrived in Cape Town as a 17-year-old soldier in the Dutch East India Company's service. Jacob's children dropped the umlaut from the family name, a common practice among South Africans of German origin. Over the following generations, Kruger's paternal forebears moved into the interior.[1] His mother's family, the Steyns, had lived in South Africa since 1668 and were relatively affluent and cultured by Cape standards.[1] Kruger's great-grand-uncle Hermanus Steyn had been president of the self-declared Republic of Swellendam that revolted against Company rule in 1795.[4]


Great Trek routes of the 1830s and 1840s
Voortrekkers; a 1909 depiction
Andries Pretorius, a great influence on the young Kruger
Kruger as a field cornet, photographed c. 1852
M W Pretorius, who became the Transvaal's first President in 1857
Stephanus Schoeman, a fierce opponent of Kruger during the 1860s
Kruger, photographed as Commandant-General of the South African Republic, c. 1865. The loss of his left thumb is visible.
President Thomas François Burgers, whose election dismayed Kruger
South Africa in 1878
E J P Jorissen, Kruger's colleague in the first deputation to London, pictured in 1897
Piet Joubert, Kruger's associate in the second deputation
Sir Garnet Wolseley, who headed the British Transvaal administration from 1879 to 1880
Piet Cronjé, pictured later in life
Kruger, photographed c. 1880
Kruger House, the family home in Pretoria (2008 photograph)
Lord Derby, with whom the third deputation concluded the London Convention
Bismarck, one of the many European leaders Kruger met in 1884
Gold mining at Johannesburg in 1893
President Francis William Reitz of the Orange Free State
Cecil Rhodes, the Prime Minister of the Cape Colony from 1890
The Raadsaal, the Transvaal government building in Church Square, Pretoria
Joseph Chamberlain, the British Colonial Secretary
Leander Starr Jameson, leader of the eponymous raid into the Transvaal in 1895–96
President Marthinus Theunis Steyn of the Orange Free State
Jan Smuts, Kruger's State Attorney from 1898
Sir Alfred Milner, the British High Commissioner for Southern Africa
British press depiction of Kruger attempting to appease the uitlanders; Joseph Chamberlain looks on, unimpressed, in the background
Spanish press depiction of Kruger and Chamberlain
A Boer trench during the siege of Mafeking
Kruger leaving for Europe in 1900—he would never return. At right is his secretary Madie Bredell.
Oranjelust, Kruger's home in Utrecht, photographed in 1963
Statue of Paul Kruger in Church Square, Pretoria
The famous Kruger National Park in Limpopo was named after him