monetary sacrifice to accept the position of State
Attorney, he stipulating that he should have a free
hand in reorganizing the detective and police forces.
During the months in which Mr. Esselen continued in
office admirable reforms were introduced, and a very
appreciable influence was exercised on the condition
of affairs in Johannesburg. It is inadvisable
to state explicitly the nature of the objections which
existed against some of the officials employed under
the former regime; it is sufficient that they
were proved to be participators in the offences which
they were specially employed to suppress. Mr.
Esselen’s first step was to appoint as chief
detective an officer borrowed from the Cape Colonial
Government, Mr. Andrew Trimble, who in a very little
while showed that courage and honesty of purpose could
not only effect considerable reforms, but could provoke
the undisguised and fierce hostility of a very large
section of the community. The canteen keepers
were up in arms; the illicit gold buyers left no stone
unturned; the hangers-on of the Government lost no
opportunity in their campaign against Mr. Esselen and
his subordinate and their reforms. The liveliest
satisfaction however was expressed by all those whose
interest it was to have matters conducted decently
and honestly, and who had no interest in crime except
so far as its suppression was concerned. Representation
was secured for the Chamber of Mines upon one of the
licensing bodies, and here, too, a very appreciable
result followed. During Mr. Esselen’s term
of office all went well as far as the public were
concerned, but influences were soon at work to undermine
the two reforming officials. It was represented
to the President that Mr. Trimble had once been in
the British army; that he was even then a subject
of the Queen, and entitled to a pension from the Cape
Government. The canteen interest on the goldfields,
playing upon the prejudices of the Boers, represented
that this was unfitting the dignity of the Republic.
The President, who was too shrewd to be caught with
such chaff, was perfectly ready to support them for
the sake of the liquor interest, which for him constitutes
a very useful electioneering and political agency
throughout the country. Mr. Esselen was sent
for, and it was represented to him by the President
that the employment of a British subject in such a
responsible office as that of chief detective was
repugnant to the burghers. The reply was that
it was competent for the Executive to naturalize Mr.
Trimble at once and so remove the objection, the Government
having power in special cases to dispense with the
conditions of the Naturalization Law—a
power frequently exercised in the case of their Hollander
friends. The President, in reply, stated that
it could not be done, and he appealed to Mr. Esselen
to select a man of another nationality—’a
Frenchman, German, or even an American’—this
last being a concession wrung from him by Mr. Esselen’s
soothing suggestion that the Chief of Police should