1901 in South Africa

The following lists events that happened during 1901 in South Africa.

Cape Colony

 * Governor of the Cape of Good Hope and High Commissioner for Southern Africa:Alfred Milner then Walter Hely-Hutchinson (governor from 6 March but not high commissioner).
 * Prime Minister of the Cape of Good Hope: John Gordon Sprigg.

Natal

 * Governor of the Colony of Natal: Charles Bullen Hugh Mitchell (until 6 May), Henry Edward McCallum (starting 6 May).
 * Prime Minister of the Colony of Natal: Albert Henry Hime.

Orange Free State

 * State President of the Orange Free State: Martinus Theunis Steyn.
 * Administrator of British-occupied Orange River Colony and UK High Commissioner for Southern Africa: Alfred Milner, 1st Viscount Milner.

South African Republic

 * State President of the South African Republic: Paul Kruger (in exile); Schalk Willem Burger (acting).
 * Administrator of British-occupied Transvaal and UK High Commissioner for Southern Africa: Alfred Milner, 1st Viscount Milner.

Events

 * January
 * 9 – Herbert Kitchener reports that Christiaan de Wet has shot a British peace envoy and flogged two more who had gone to his commando to ask the Burghers to halt fighting.
 * 15 – HMS Sybille, a 3,400-ton Apollo-class cruiser, strikes a reef about 5 km south of Lamberts Bay.
 * 31 – General Jan Smuts and his commandos capture Modderfontein.


 * February
 * 1 – Bubonic plague breaks out in Cape Town.
 * 26 – The Middelburg peace conference fails as Boers continue to demand autonomy.


 * May
 * 31 – Officially unrecognized Zulu king Dinuzulu kaCetshwayo refuses British instructions to take up arms against the Boers.


 * June
 * 18 – Emily Hobhouse reports on the high mortality and cruel conditions in the Second Boer War concentration camps
 * 25 – Boer armies invaded the Cape Colony and attacked the British settlement of Richmond for a day, then retreated as British forces approached.


 * July
 * 2–6 – Nine Boer prisoners-of-war are murdered by Australian members of the Bushveldt Carbineers in the Spelonken area near Louis Trichardt.
 * 16 – The Fawcett Commission is established to look at living conditions of women and children, including water supply, sanitation, medical care and the mortality and birth rates in the concentration camps.


 * August
 * 4 – Lieutenant-general Paul Methuen destroys the village of Schweizer-Reneke under the British scorched earth policy.
 * 20 – General Koos de la Rey's 84-year-old mother is sent to a concentration camp at Klerksdorp.


 * September
 * 17 – Commandant-General Louis Botha and General Cecil "Cherry" Cheere Emmett join forces to invade Natal.


 * October
 * Mahatma Gandhi embarks at Durban for Mauritius en route to Bombay.


 * November
 * 1 – Standard Bank opens its second branch in Johannesburg on Eloff Street.
 * 9 – The electric tramline in Cape Town is extended from Sea Point to Camps Bay.
 * 18 – Boer commandos invade the Cape Colony and come to within 50 miles of Cape Town.


 * December
 * 22 – On Peace Sunday Charles Frederic Aked (1864–1941), a Baptist minister in Liverpool, says: "Great Britain cannot win the battles without resorting to the last despicable cowardice of the most loathsome cur on earth; the act of striking a brave man's heart through his wife's honour and his child's life. The cowardly war has been conducted by methods of barbarism... the concentration camps have been Murder Camps." A crowd follows him home and breaks the windows of his house.

Births

 * 24 January – Harry Calder, South African cricketer. (d. 1995)
 * 9 September – Hendrik Frensch Verwoerd, Prime Minister of South Africa. (assassinated 1966) (born in the Netherlands)

Deaths

 * 19 May – Marthinus Wessel Pretorius, first president of the South African Republic and founder of Pretoria, at age 81.

Railway lines opened

 * 13 March – Natal – Stanger to Kearsney, 8 mi.
 * 27 July – Natal – Mtwalume to North Shepstone, 20 mi.
 * 9 September – Cape Western – Malmesbury to Moorreesburg, 30 mi.

Locomotives

 * Cape
 * Six new Cape gauge locomotive types enter service on the Cape Government Railways (CGR):
 * Six 4-4-0 3rd Class Wynberg Tender locomotives in suburban service in Cape Town.
 * Eight redesigned American-built 6th Class 4-6-0 steam locomotives. In 1912 they would be designated Class 6G on the South African Railways (SAR).
 * 21 6th Class 4-6-0 steam locomotives, built to the older designs with plate frames. In 1912 they would be reclassified to Class 6H on the SAR.
 * Ten American-built 6th Class 4-6-0 bar framed locomotives. In 1912 they would be designated Class 6K on the SAR.
 * Four 6th Class 2-6-2 Prairie type locomotives that are soon modified to a 2-6-4 Adriatic type wheel arrangement. In 1912 they would be designated Class 6Z on the SAR.
 * The first of sixteen 8th Class 2-8-0 Consolidation type locomotives. In 1912 they would be designated Class 8X on the SAR.
 * The Namaqua Copper Company acquires its first locomotive, a 0-4-2 saddle-tank shunting engine named Pioneer.


 * Natal
 * The Natal Government Railways (NGR) rebuilds one of its Class G 4-6-0 tank locomotives to a Class H 4-6-2T Pacific wheel arrangement. In 1912 it would be designated Class C1 on the SAR.
 * The Natal Harbours Department places a single 0-6-0 side-tank locomotive named Edward Innes in service as harbour shunter in Durban Harbour.
 * The Zululand Railway Company, contracted for the construction of the line from Verulam to Tugela River, acquires one 2-6-2 tank locomotive.


 * Transvaal
 * The Imperial Military Railways places 35 tank locomotives in service, built to the design of the Reid Tenwheeler of the NGR.