On the 25th of April 1899 Danie Theron, a Krugersdorp attorney, was found
guilty of assaulting Mr W. F. Monneypenny, the editor of The Star
newspaper, and fined £20. Monneypenny, who had only been in the South Africa
for two months, had written a highly derogatory editorial against the "ignorant
Dutch". Theron pleaded extreme provocation and his fine was paid by his
supporters in the courtroom.
So starts the story of one of the Anglo-Boer War's most
illustrious heroes.
Danie Theron, who had served in the 1895 Mmalebôgô (Malaboch) War, was a
true patriot - believing in the just and divine right of the Boer to stand
against British interference: "Our strength lies in the justice of our
cause and in our trust in help from above."1
Before the outbreak of war, Theron and a friend, J. P. "Koos"
Jooste (a cycling champion), asked the Transvaal government if they could raise
a cycling corps.
(Bicycles had first been used by the US army in the Spanish War, 1898, when a
hundred black cyclists under the command of Lt James Moss were rushed in to help
with riot control in Havana, Cuba.) It was Theron's opinion that using bicycles
for despatch riding and reconnaissance would save horses for use in combat. In
order to gain the necessary permission Theron and Jooste had to convince the
highly sceptical burghers that bicycles were as good, if not better, than
horses. In the end, it took a 75 kilometre race from Pretoria to the Crocodile
River Bridge2 in which Jooste, on a bicycle, beat an experienced
horse rider, to convince Commandant-General Piet Joubert and President J. P. S.
Kruger that the idea was sound.
Each of the 108 recruits to the "Wielrijeders Rapportgangers Corps"
(Cycle Dispatch Rider Corps) was supplied with a bicycle, shorts, a revolver
and, on special occasion, a light carbine. Later they received binoculars,
tents, tarpaulins and wire cutters. Theron's corps distinguished themselves in
Natal and on the western front, and even before the war had started had provided
information about British troop movements beyond the Transvaal's western border.1
By Christmas 1899, Capt Danie Theron's dispatch rider corps were experiencing
poor deliveries of supplies at their outposts on the Tugela. On the 24th
December Theron complained to the Supplies Commission that they were severely
neglected. He explained that his corps, who were always in the vanguard, were
far from any railway line where supplies were unloaded and his wagons regularly
returned with the message that there were no vegetables since everything had
been carted off to the laagers surrounding Ladysmith. His complaint was that his
corps did both dispatch riding and reconnaissance work, and that they were also
called upon to fight the enemy. He wanted to offer them better sustenance than
dried bread, meat and rice. The result of this plea earned Theron the nickname
of "Kaptein Dik-eet" (Captain Gorge-yourself) because he
catered so well for his corps' stomachs!1
As the Anglo-Boer War progressed, Capt Danie Theron and his scouts were moved
to the western front and the disastrous confrontation between the British forces
under Field Marshal Roberts and the Boer forces under General Piet Cronje. After
a long and hard struggle up the Modder River by the British forces, the siege of
Kimberly had finally been broken and Cronje was falling back with a vast train
of wagons and many women and children - the families of the Commandos. General
Cronje almost slipped through the British cordon, but eventually was forced to
form a laager by the Modder near Paardeberg, where they dug in ready for a
siege. Roberts, temporarily indisposed with the 'flu, passed command to
Kitchener, who faced with a drawn-out siege or an all-out infantry attack, chose
the latter. Kitchener also had to deal with rearguard attacks by Boer
reinforcements and the approach of further Boer forces under General C. R. de
Wet.
Next page > Part 2: From
Paardeberg to a hero's death. > Page 1, 2
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