Transvaal:
The Matabeles and the Transvaal, 23
Fight at Vechtkop, 23
Andries Pretorius and the British Government,
23-24
The Sand River Convention, 24-26, 128
British Breaches of the Convention, 26,
29
Diamond Fields, 26, 39-40, 41
Sale of Guns to Natives, 26
British Annexation, 26-31, 95
Boer Protest, 29
The Zulus and the Transvaal, 27-31
The War of Freedom, 32
Annexation cancelled, 32
The Pretoria Convention, 33, 35, 128
The London Convention, 34, 35, 101, 128
The Suzerainty, 34-36
The “South African Republic,”
34
The Goldfields, 37-48, 60
The National Union Movement, 44
Sir Henry Loch’s Indiscretion, 45-46
The Conspiracy and the Jameson Raid, 46-48,
49
National Sentiment, 49
The Cry of Disloyalty, 51
The Transvaal to be humiliated, 51
The Suzerainty Question revived, 52 et
seq.
Appeal for Arbitration, 53-60
Uitlander Grievances, 60-61, 70-88
Reply to Mr. Chamberlain, 109
The Industrial Commission, 61
The Dynamite Concession, 61, 62-63
The Netherlands Railway Co., 61, 63
Import Duties, 61, 63
Liquor Law, 61, 64-65
Gold Thefts, 61, 64
The South African League, 66-81
The Lombard Affair, 70-73
The Edgar Case, 70, 73-77
The Amphitheatre Occurrence, 70, 77-81
Equal Political Rights, 83
The Franchise, 84-85, 86
Bloemfontein Conference, 85
Attitude of Sir Alfred Milner, 52, 86
Bad Faith of the British Government, 87-88
Final Dispatch of State Secretary Reitz,
127
Conclusion, 89-98
Trek into Natal in 1836, 10-13
Trichardt Trek, 12, 23
Uitlanders, see under Transvaal
Umbeline, Zulu Chief, 28
Warden, Major, 18
Waterboer, (Chief), 26
Wolseley, Lord, quoted, 27
Zululand and the Zulus:
Dingaan and the Boer Trek into Natal,
3
Secoecoeni, Zulu Chief, 27, 30
The Zulus and the Transvaal, 27-28
The Zulu War, 28