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Chapter 15 - The franchise

from PART TWO - Colonial crisis and the establishment of a new order, 1848–1853

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 April 2018

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Summary

Document 74: Meeting at Zuurbraak to discuss the new constitution

This petition was drawn up subsequent to a public meeting in which the inhabitants of Zuurbraak were addressed by F.W. Reitz, a local landowner and politician, who had been elected to the Cape's Legislative Council but had resigned following the breakdown of discussions to achieve a constitution for the Cape that would include as wide a class of voters as possible. Even though they were (with the poorer Afrikaners) precisely the class that Reitz and men of similar mind wished to see enfranchised, the mission residents at Zuurbraak and elsewhere were wary of the devolution of power in the colony from the British government to its inhabitants, since they feared domination by the landowning whites and the end of the potential restraint that direct rule, overseen by London, imposed on the white colonists.

To the Queen's Most Excellent Majesty

The humble petition of the ‘Zuurbraak’ Missionary Institution, Swellendam, Cape of Good Hope

Humbly sheweth

That your Majesty's Petitioners desire to approach your Majesty's throne with a sincere and fervent assurance of their continued loyalty and devotion, and with feelings of the deepest gratitude for the many favours under your Majesty's reign.

That your Majesty's petitioners have learnt with feelings of profound sorrow that reports, founded upon the wicked rebellion of the Kat River settlement, are in circulation to their disadvantage as a class. That such reports are doubly painful, as your Majesty's petitioners disavow in the most solemn manner any sympathy with rebels, whose wicked acts your petitioners cannot too strongly condemn.

That your Majesty's petitioners have learnt that a representative form of Government has been conceded to this colony, and your Majesty's petitioners most humbly pray that they, as loyal, peaceable and well conducted subjects, may not be excluded from the rights and privileges granted by the constitution. Wherefore they humbly pray that the Twenty-five Pounds qualification so justly termed by your Majesty's Attorney-General ‘The heart of the constitution’, may not upon any account be altered by the present Legislative Council of this colony.

Type
Chapter
Information
These Oppressions Won't Cease
An Anthology of the Political Thought of the Cape Khoesan, 1777–1879
, pp. 150 - 151
Publisher: Wits University Press
Print publication year: 2017

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