Betsie Verwoerd


Elizabeth "Betsie" Verwoerd was the spouse of the Prime Minister of South Africa from 2 September 1958 until the assassination of her husband Hendrik Verwoerd on 6 September 1966.
Betsie was of Danish descent and born on 17 May 1901 to Wynand Johannes and Anna Francina Susanna Schoombee in Middelburg in the Cape Colony.
Betsie met her future husband while both were attending Stellenbosch University in the early 1920s. They were married in Hamburg, Germany, where Verwoerd was studying, on 7 January 1927. The couple spent their honeymoon travelling Europe, visiting the United Kingdom and the United States. They returned to the Union of South Africa in 1928. They had five sons and two daughters. Anna Verwoerd married Carel Boshoff, who later founded the Afrikaner settlement of Orania.
Between 1938 and 1941, Betsie Verwoerd served as a kommandant in the Ossewabrandwag, an Afrikaner nationalist organisation that was later opposed to South Africa's entry into World War II. Her husband was never a member, and though he initially welcomed the group, he would go on to criticise its "Nazi tendencies".
Her husband was assassinated on 6 September 1966. Afterwards, she occasionally performed such official duties as opening the Hendrik Verwoerd Dam in 1972.
In 1992, she moved to Orania, the Afrikaner settlement founded by her son-in-law. She was visited by the first black president of South Africa, Nelson Mandela, at her home in 1995.
Betsie Verwoerd died at her home on 29 February 2000 at the age of 98. Nelson Mandela expressed his sadness at her death, stating he had been impressed with her "pure Afrikaner hospitality" when he visited her in 1995.
After her death, her house in Orania was converted into a museum. A primary school in Randfontein was previously named in her honour; it was later renamed Laerskool Westgold. A street in Goodwood, Cape Town, still retains her name.