South Africa
(Republic South Africa) FIRST STAMPS ISSUED Union
of South Africa, 4 November 1910 (2½d value only; full definitives,
1913). Republic of South Africa, 31 May 1961.
CURRENCY Until 1961, British. From 14 February 1961, 100 cents =
1 rand. The Cape of Good Hope, Natal, the
Orange Free State and Transvaal car together to form the Union of South Africa,
with Dominion status, on 31 May 1910. The Union left the Commonwealth 31 May
1961 and became a republic (RSA).
From 1948 when the National Party
came to power, South Africa's social and political structure was based on
'apartheid' or racial segregation. Opposition reached a peak in 1960 with the
Sharpeville massacres, but despite this clamp down by the Government, rioting
continued and a State of Emergency was declared in July 1985 in 36 Districts
and nationwide on 12 June 1986.
This policy was reflected by
continuous attempts to expel the South African representation from the Union
Postal Union. Such attempts by the African bloc at the Union's Congresses
failed for two main reasons. First, there was no mechanism with in the UPU
Constitution for the expulsion of a member country and, secondly, South Africa
remained a member of the United Nations and could renew its membership after
each Congress merely by signifying that it would adhere to the revisions of the
Constitution.
Effectively, the majority of the
membership of the UPU banned South Africa in the 1980s, but it was reaccepted
by the membership after a visit to that country by an appointed Committee in
1994.
The country's first multiracial
general election had been held in April 1996 and the ANC gained 62% of the vote
for the National Assembly and a similar percentage in theSenate. Nelson
Mandela, who had been released from prison in 1991, became the first ANC
President of the Republic. He was replaced by Thabo Mbecki on 16 June
1999.
Interprovincials Stamps
of the pre-Union colonies were in use irrespective of origin throughout the
Union from 18 August 1910 to 1 September 1913 (and were not demonetized until
31 December 1937).
Walfisch Bay
(Walvis Bay) FIRST STAMPS Cape of Good
Hope from 1884.
CURRENCY 1884, as Cape Colony. 1910, as South Africa. 1923,
as South West Africa. 1977, as South Africa until it became part of
Namibia
in 1994. Claimed by the Dutch in 1796, this
British settlement of 1800 was annexed to Cape Colony on 12 March 1878 and was
incorporated into the Union of South Africa in 1910. Stamps used here can be
recognized by cancellation.
Governed from August 1992 by the
joint South African-Namibian-Walvis Bay Administration Body until 28 February
1994, when South Africa renounced its claim to sovereignty over the enclave and
it became part of South West Africa.
Used stamps of Cape from 1884
(original. oblit. barred oval 300).
Used stamps of South Africa from
1910 to 1922 (invalid after 31 January 1923).
Used stamps of South West Africa I
January 1923-31 August 1977.
Since 1 September 1977 has used
stamps of South Africa. From 21 March 1990 used the stamps of
Namibia. German South-West
Africa (Deutsch-Sudwestafrika) FIRST STAMPS 1888.
FIRST STAMPS ISSUED March 1897.
CURRENCY German.
Proclaimed a German
protectorate on 24 April and flag raised 7 August 1884. Overrun by South
African troops 1914-15.
Mail is known carried by casual
ship between 7 August 1884 and 6 July 1888, when the first POs opened. Joined
UPU in 1886. Used stamps of Germany from July 7 1888.
POs closed by captures August
1914-20 July 1915; PO at Olukonda was the last to fall.
South West
Africa FIRST STAMPS ISSUED 1
January 1923. Issues were bilingual in English and Afrikaans, but since
1970 have borne the abbreviations SWA instead.
CURRENCY Until 1961, British. From 14 February 1961, South
African. Ex-German colony mandated by the
League of Nations to South Africa after World War I. Nazi activities by German
settlers in 1934-5 led South Africa to administer it as a province. Despite
United Nations' decisions to the contrary, this situation still obtains.
Movements towards indepedence under the name Namibia have been blocked. The
name Namibia has so far appeared only on stamps of sympathetic countries and on
an issue of the United Nations publicly announcing by its inscription 'direct
responsibility' for Namibia as a UN trust territory before independence.
Used stamps of South Africa from
c. 19 September 1914 (at Luderitzbucht) to 1922 (invalid after 31 January
1923). Namibia FIRST STAMPS
ISSUED 21 March 1990.
CURRENCY On independence, as South Africa. 1 October 1993, 100
cents = 1 Namibian Dollar (at parity with the South African Rand).
The United Nations
terminated the South African Trusteeship over South West Africa in 1967. An
Administrator General was appointed in 1977 to govern the territory until
independence. He began repealing all the legislation based on racial
discrimination. Elections were held in 1978 for a Constitutional Assembly which
was dissolved in 1982. A Transitional Government was installed in 1985 and
Namibia became independent within the Commonwealth on 21 March 1990.
Transkei FIRST STAMPS
ISSUED 26 October 1976.
CURRENCY As South Africa.
Territories under
the protection of Cape Colony in 1858-65, then abandoned. Annexed to the Colony
in 1879-84, but reserved ti its black population from 1913. Transkei received
internal self-government from South Africa in 1963 and was made an independent
republic on 26 October 1976. It is not yet recognized by the UN or the UPU, but
its stamps are accepted as valid for international mail.
The territory was reincorporated
into the RSA on 27 April 1994. The Transkei Postal Service continued with RSA
adhesives until June 1996 when it was fully incorporated into the RSA
system. Bophuthatswana
FIRST
STAMPS ISSUED 6 December 1977. CURRENCY As South
Africa. Tribal homeland territories of
South Africa, lying west of Pretoria in the Rustenburg - Mafeking - Vryburg -
Kuruman area, given autonomy in 1977. The territory was reincorporated into the
RSA on 27 April 1994. The Postal Service of Bophuthatswana continued with RSA
adhesives until June 1996 when it was fully incorporated into the RSA
system.
Venda FIRST STAMPS
ISSUED 13 September 1979. CURRENCY 1979, as
South Africa. The Venda Territory Authority was
established in 1969 and was granted internal self-government on 1 February
1973. Venda became fully independent on 13 September 1979.
The territory was reincorporated
into the RSA on 27 April 1994. The Venda Postal Service continued with RSA
adhesives until June 1996 when it was fully incorporated into the RSA
system. Ciskei FIRST STAMPS
ISSUED 2 December 1981. CURRENCY 1981, as
South Africa.
Territorial
authority within South Africa was established in 1961 and autonomous government
was granted in 1972. Ciskei became fully independent on 4 December 1981. As in
the case of Venda, this independence has not been accepted internationally, but
stamps have been accepted for carriage of mail outside South Africa. The
territory was reincorporated into the RSA on 27 April 1994. The Ciskei Postal
Service continued with RSA adhesives until June 1996 when it was fully
incorporated into the RSA system.
Swaziland FIRST STAMPS
ISSUED 18 October 1889. Withdrawn 7 November 1894. Separate stamps
revived 2 January 1933.
CURRENCY Until 1961, British. From 14 February 1961, South
African. Came under the joint protection of
Britain and the South African Republic after 1884, then from 1902 solely under
Transvaal (though not incorporated). On 1 December 1906 became a British
protectorate, again administered from Cape Province. It was made a 'protected
state' on 25 April 1967 and became an independent kingdom within the
Commonwealth on 6 September 1968.
Used stamps of Transvaal 1894-1910. Used stamps of South Africa after 1910.
Stellaland
FIRST
STAMPS ISSUED February 1884. CURRENCY
British. Free-booter Boer republic round
the settlement of Vryburg set up on 10 January 1883. Annexed for Britain by
Warren's Force, which reached Vryburg on 7 February 1885. Proclaimed part of
British Bechuanaland as Crown Colony 30 September 1885.
Cancellation was by pen and ink.
Stamps are known used by Warren's Force and cancelled at Kimberley in transit.
Stocks withdrawn on 2 December 1885 were sold to Whitfield, King & Company
of Ipswich.
Cape of Good
Hope (Cape Colony) FIRST STAMPS ISSUED 1
September 1853. CURRENCY
British. To travellers in the 16th century
the Cape was a landmark on the way to the Indies. Table Bay, a good watering
place, was settled by a Dutch expedition under Jan van Riebeeck in 1652. Boer
farmer commandos steadily subdued or pushed back the Bantu and Hottentot
natives. When the French Revolutionary armies occupied the Netherlands in 1795,
Britain took the Dutch colony under protection. It was returned to the Batavian
Republic in 1803, but re-occupied in 1806 without disturbing the already
traditional ways of the Boer farmlands. The Cape was given to Britain under the
Treaty of Paris (1814). An influx of British settlers in 1820 and subsequently
the adoption of English as the official language, the abolition of slavery in
1834 and the fixing of the territorial frontier drove the Boers into making the
Great Trek northward. Cape Colony rapidly developed British institutions with
responsible government by 1872. In 1910 it became part of the Union of South
Africa.
Postal History The
first message recorded as having been passed from one vessel to another by
leaving it under Post Office Tree (Mossel Bay) was in 1601. Letters are known
from c. 1619, but the earliest government postal system was set up by the Dutch
in Cape Town on 28 September 1791. Prepayment was an early feature of the
British system. Country POs linked by horse riders spread from 1816; by 1855
there were more than 100. Named 'Paid' hand-stamps were introduced in 1817,
'Ship Letter' and 'Packet Letter' hand-stamps a little earlier. Monthly steam
packets to England were introduced in 1850, railway TPOs in 1883. Early
triangular stamps were obliterated with a triangle of bars incorporating the
initials CGH. Circular town date stamps, introduced in the 1850s, were placed
alongside. The number of POs had risen to 500 by 1864 when the Cape numeral
series of 'killers' was introduced to cancel the 'rectangulars'. Cape Colony
joined the UPU in 1895 and adopted Imperial Penny Postage on 1 September
1899. |
|
Griqualand
West
FIRST STAMPS Cape of Good Hope from 1871. FIRST STAMPS ISSUED
March 1877. CURRENCY
British. Much disputed territory with a
long history of strife between Griquas, Boers, the London Missionary Society
and diamond prospectors, Griqualand West was annexed in October 1871and
administered as a British Crown Colony until incorporated into Cape Colony in
October 1880.
Used stamps of Cape from October
1871 to 1877 including a MS overprint of September 1874 peculiar to Griqualand
West. Oval date stamps are known of Diamond Fields, Du Toits Pan, De Beer's N
R, and Kimberley. Stamps of Cape overprinted 'G' were issued in March
1877.
In October 1880 the remaining
stamps overprinted 'G' were withdrawn from Kimberley and reissued to POs in
Cape Colony for use.
New
Republic FIRST STAMPS ISSUED
January 1886. CURRENCY
British. Part of Zululand set up in 1884 as
an independent state by secessionist Boers. A reduced area was demarcated and
recognized by Britain in 1886. Annexed to South African Republic in 1888,
transferred to Natal in January 1903.
Stamps had local validity only;
letters leaving the Republic needed, in addition, stamps of Transvaal or
Natal. Natal FIRST STAMPS
ISSUED 26 May 1857. CURRENCY
British. A British settlement was founded
in 1824 and by 1835 its small town had been named D'Urban (later Durban) after
the governor of the Cape. Piet Retiefs breakaway from the Great Trek brought
the Boers to Natal in 1837. After their massacre by Dingaan's Zulus and the
reprisal at Blood River, the settlement was contested by British, Boer and Zulu
in a three-cornered struggle that ended in annexation to Cape Colony in 1844.
The Boer population trekked out to Transvaal in 1848. Natal became a separate
colony in 1856. Zululand was incorporated in 1897, New Republic and Blood River
Territories after 1902. Natal has been a state of South Africa since the Union
of 1910.
Postal History Private
posts were run between stations of the American Missionary Service, while an
external service to Cape Town by casual ship was started in 1846 by the Natal
Witness with receiving offices at Pietermaritzburg and Durban. From 1849 an
overland post route was operated every two weeks via Harrismith and Wynberg to
Colesburg and the Cape. The first official inland horse-post began on 1
February 1850, but inland communications remained uncertain and slow until the
coming of the railways in 1880. Regular monthly sailings to the Cape and
England began in the 1860s. From 1872 both regular Cape packet services
continued to Durban. A route via Mauritius existed in 1864-8, and in the 1870s
there was a short-lived link via Zanzibar and Aden. From 1890 both western and
eastern routes were continous.
Three local handstruck marks (for
Pietermaritzburg, Durban and Lady-smith) are known from 1852. Date stamps
incorporating the town name were used on covers from 1860, though stamps were
obliterated with numeral cancellers. Combined numbered and dated marks
followed, using the same numbers: the locations of 1-73 in these series are
recorded.
Zululand FIRST STAMPS
ISSUED 1 May 1888. CURRENCY
British. The Zulus exterminated their
native rivals c.1820. After early clashes with British and Boers there
continued an uneasy peace punctuated by border cattle raids from c.1840, until
missionary interference and diplomatic incompetence provoked the Zulu War. In
1879 a British resident was appointed. On 9 May 1887 Zululand was declared
British and on 31 December 1897 it was annexed to Natal.
Postal History A postal
service was started on 1 May1888, Zululand being included with Natal in the UPU
from that date. A PO had already been established at Eshowe in 1887. There were
21 POs open during the period of separate stamp issues. Use ceased on 30 June
1898, after which stamps of Natal were used.
Orange Free
State FIRST STAMPS ISSUED
January 1868. CURRENCY
British. The Boer settlements north of the
Orange River, founded c. 1828 and which grew as a result of the Great Trek,
were recognized as an independent country in 1854. Despite previously friendly
relationships with Cape Colony, it sided with Transvaal in the Second Boer War.
Annexed to the British Empire on 24 May 1900 after Lord Roberts had occupied
Bloemfontein, its name was changed temporarily to Orange River Colony. It has
been a state of the Union since 1910.
In the 19th century most
obliteration was by barred numeral or barred alphabetical cancellers, nearly
all of which have been located and listed. In 1868-74 mail between Orange Free
State and Cape Colony (and mail via Cape Colony going overseas) needed stamps
of both countries in combination of rates.
The Free State became a British
colony as Orange River Colony in 1900.
Orange River
Colony FIRST STAMPS see Orange
Free State. FIRST STAMPS ISSUED August 1900 (overprinted on Cape of
Good Hope). CURRENCY 1868,
sterling. Formerly Orange Free State, this
colony combined with other territories to form the Union of South Africa in
1910. Subsequently, the stamps of the territories were freely used throughout
the Union; these were replaced by stamps of the Union in 1913.
Transvaal (Zuid
Afrikaansche Republiek) FIRST STAMPS ISSUED August
1869. (Their delivery appears to have been delayed, and they were sold
direct to collectors for cash to pay the printer, a very early example of the
practice). CURRENCY
British. Four Boer republics were founded
by Voortrekkers who crossed the Vaal in 1836.
The Boers defeated the Zulus at
Blood River in 1838, thereby avenging the treacherous slaughter of Retief and
his followers in 1837. The Boers and the Zulus drove the Matabele beyond the
Limpopo. The independence of the republics was recognized in 1852 and they
united as the Zuid Afrikaansche Republiek (South African Republic) in 1858.
Bankrupt and faced with imminent Zulu attack in 1877, this was annexed to
Britain as Transvaal. Misrule led to revolt in December 1880 (First Boer War);
Britain was defeated in battle and forced to restore independence to the ZAR
('Second Republic'). The country became divided between the ruling Calvinist
Boers and the rich unrepresented taxpaying 'Uitlanders' of the newly discovered
Gold District (Rand). The Second Boer War broke out on 12 October 1899, and
Transvaal was again annexed on 31 May 1902. It became a state of the Union in
1910.
Postal History Mail is
known from 1859; handstruck town marks from 1864; and by 1866 there were 12 POs
dependent on Potchefstroom. A full government service was started on 31 August
1869. Control was moved to Pretoria in 1870 and a mail-cart service instituted
to Orange Free State and Natal About 30 POs were given numeral obliterations in
1874. Until Transvaal joined the UPU in 1893, stamps of the transit country
were needed in addition on mail destined for overseas.
Second Boer War
(1899-1902) Brought about by the intransigence of both Briton and Boer,
this conflict was notable for its fluid guerrilla tactics and the bitterness
with which it was fought. Boer prisoners were confined In Ceylon, Bermuda and
St Helena. Censorship of mail was widespread for the first time. Much mail was
captured, detained, or damaged in transit, and covers of the period are widely
collected and studied by postal historians. Several places changed hands more
than once, occasioning overprints (V.R.I., signifying Victoria Regina
Imperatrix, was often used to show British occupation). During the numerous
sieges stamps were produced locally in emergency.
Mafeking Town in
Bechuanaland besieged 12 November 1899 by the Boers, relieved 17 May
1900.
STAMPS ISSUED 24 March - 17 May 1900.
Vryburg Town in
British Bechuanaland which changed hands twice. STAMPS ISSUED during brief
Boer occupation November 1899, and during British occupation May
1900.
Pietersburg Town in
northern Transvaal to which Kruger's government withdrew from Pretoria.
Authorized
Boer provisionals, printed at the local newspaper office, were issued 20 March
- 9 April 1901.
Lydenburg Town in
eastern Transvaal occupied by British forces 6 September 1900. Stamps of Transvaal
surcharged issued September 1900.
Rustenburg Small
town west of Pretoria invested by the Boers in June 1900 but relieved 22
June.
Stamps of Transvaal overprinted V.R.I. issued 23 June 1900.
Schweizer
Reinecke Town southwest of Pretoria besieged 1 August 1900 - 9 January
1901.
Stamps of Transvaal or Cape overprinted BESIEGED in rough uneven type were
issued in August 1900.
Volksrust Town in
southern Transvaal near the Natal border. Revenue stamps of Transvaal
overprinted V.R.I. were issued in March 1902.
Wolmaransstad Town
in western Transvaal, occupied by British troops, from which the Boers had
removed all stocks of stamps. Stamps of Transvaal requisitioned
from a local firm and overprinted were issued in June - July 1900.

South Africa 1910 Click
map for larger view
|