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Secret History

Rhodes, Populism and the Election that Changed the World

Season 1, Ep. 9

The multi-racial 1898 election in the Cape Colony was the most factional in its history. What was more, it was an election that found the mining magnate and self-professed racist, Cecil John Rhodes, prostrating himself before an entirely black audience. But just why he ended up at this meeting near Kimberley, accusing the black newspaper editor John Tengo Jabavu of ‘Krugerism’, is a highly complex colonial story.

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    Sir George Yonge - aka The Lofty Twaddler - was so flagrantly (and hopelessly) corrupt, that he lasted little more than a year as Governor of the Cape Colony. But while there is much comedy in his actions (he was surprised when the Dutch objected to him doubling the tax on brandy, for example) Yonge also had a dark side: he was fired because of his involvement in a slave smuggling ring.
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  • 4. Robert Grendon's Dream

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    The wrecking of Cape Town: Meet the 1647 castaways who were the real founding fathers of colonial South Africa and learn about their unusual interactions with the indigenous inhabitants.