Dan Sleigh


Daniel Sleigh was a South African historian, writer and conservationist. Sleigh is widely known for his writing and publications dealing with the history of the Cape in South Africa, which are in Afrikaans.
His 2002 novel Eilande is regarded as one of the quintessential historical novels set in time when the Dutch East India Company established a resupply outpost at the southwestern tip of Africa, now Cape Town.

Early life

He was born on the farm Geelbeksfontein on the West Coast on 3 November 1938. He was born to Francis and Susanna Sleigh, whose fathers were both ship captains. He matriculated at Vredenburg High School.

Education & Career

Upon finishing high school, Sleigh joined the South African Navy. During his time in the navy, he travelled across Mombasa, Kenya and south of the Prince-Edward Islands along the Indian Ocean. After completing his service in the Navy, he went onto work as a bank clerk at Barclays Bank and a barman at Saldanha Hotel. He also worked as a fisherman and truck driver.
From 1960 until 1962, Sleigh studied to become a Physical Education teacher at the Paarl Training College. He went on to work as a physical education teacher in the early 1960s, teaching at Mariental High School in Namibia and the Marist Brothers College in Rondebosch, Cape Town.
In 1969 he completed his BA Degree in History and English Literature at the University of South Africa. Sleigh then completed a MA Degree cum laude, followed by a Doctorate in History in 1987 at the University of Stellenbosch. His research dealt with the Dutch Seaborne Empire, with a specific focus on the first Dutch colonial period at the Cape and the influence of maritime services on indigenous communities.
He took on several roles within the field of education, including the Head of the Centre for Conservation Education and Provincial Co-ordinator for Conservation Education for the Western Cape Education Department, where he retired in 1996.
Following his official retirement, he worked at the Cape Archives where he transcribed archives of the Dutch East India Company, laying the basis for his historical novels.

Writing

He made his literary debut in 1974 with the volume of poetry entitled Duif oor water. This was followed by a series of novels for youth and adults and works of history throughout the 1970s and 1980s, like Tussen twee vlae and Onder die bittervaan. His 1980 history Jan Kompanjie: Die Wêreld van die Verenigde Oos-Indiese Kompanjie formed a key account of the VOC and the Dutch colonial era.
His massive 2002 novel, Eilande, was published 20 years after Sleigh had begun it. It won many awards, starting with the Sanlam/Insig/Kwela Groot Romanwedstryd before publication. Once it was published, it won the WA Hofmeyer Prize, the RAU prize, the M-Net Prize and the Helgaard Steyn Prize. His later works, Wals met Matilda and 1795, would go on to win most of the same prizes, making him one of the most awarded novelists in Afrikaans.

Death

On Friday 28 July 2023, Sleigh was found dead by a family member in his house. The cause of his death was not disclosed.

Awards

Poetry

1971 Duif oor water, Tafelberg
Prose: Novels

1972 Die nege-maande-mars, Tafelberg

1973 ’n Man om te hardloop, Tafelberg

1977 Sersant Barodien, Kaapse Korps, Tafelberg

1978 ’n Kanon vir Barbier, Tafelberg

1979 Vryburger Tas, Tafelberg

2002 Eilande, Tafelberg

2010 Afstande, Tafelberg

2011 Wals met Matilda, Tafelberg
Prose: Youth novels

1974 Tussen twee vlae, Tafelberg

1975 Onder die bittervaan, Tafelberg

1976 Anselm en die jut, Van der Walt
Fiction

2016 1795, NB Publishers
Non-fiction

1978 Jan Kompanjie: die wêreld van die Verenigde Oos-Indiese Kompanjie, Tafelberg

1979 Ruiters teen die Ryk, Nasou

1988 The Huguenots, Maskew Miller Longman

1993 Die buiteposte, HAUM

1996 The Forts of the Liesbeeck Frontier, Castle Military Museum

1999 The Ride Against an Empire, Castle Military Museum

2022 Retoervloot: Kaapstad en die VOC in 1713, NB Publishers
Translations
Eilande into English and Dutch

Afstande into Dutch