Tobias Smuts


Tobias Smuts was a Second Boer War Boer general and member of the Eerste Volksraad for the South African Republic.

Family

Tobias Smuts was born in 1861 the fourth son of Adriaan Smuts and Rachel Margaretha Joubert among in total six sons and seven daughters. A young namesake brother Tobias Smuts had died as a baby in 1848. Smuts married Johanna Jacoba Bührmann on 25 November 1884 at Ermelo and had three sons and two daughters by her.

Career

Smuts served as a field cornet in the Houtbosberg expedition in Northern Transvaal north of Pietersburg. Later in the war against the indigenous Makhado people he was a commander for the district of Ermelo. Smuts was elected a member for Ermelo to the First Volksraad in early 1899.

Second Boer War 1899-1902

At the outbreak of the war in October 1899 Smuts joined the Ermelo Command to Natal Colony, was present at the Battle of Modderspruit near Ladysmith, and took part in the reconnaissance of Estcourt. Then he fought at the Tugela River front as a common burgher.
He was made an assistant commander of the Ermelo Commando, and after the Battle of Colenso was promoted by Louis Botha to fighting general on the Upper Tugela, where he had command from a distance over the Battle of Spion Kop. When Transvaal Commandos transferred from Natal to the Orange Free State, Smuts led them as Assistant Commander General and joined in the fighting near Brandfort. Afterwards he returned to Pretoria to take part in the last session of the Volksraad there. In the army officer's meeting of 2 June 1900 in Pretoria Smuts agreed with the proposal of Danie Theron to fight on. Presidents Paul Kruger and Marthinus Steyn, who first considered peace negotiations with the British, concurred.
Smuts fought in the lost Battle of Donkerhoek, and afterwards was sent to the Wakkerstroom area. Under the command of general Chris Botha Smuts led the remaining Ermelo, Carolina, Standerton, and Swaziland Commandos but was unable to stop the superior force of British second-in-command Redvers Buller marching north. It proved impossible to expel Buller's troops from their camps along the railway, so Smuts had to fall back all the time.
Smuts stayed in the field in the eastern districts of Transvaal up to the ending of the war by the Treaty of Vereeniging signed on 31 May 1902.

Publication

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Literature

  • A.E., Onze Krijgs-officieren. Album van portretten met levens-schetsen der Transvaalse Generaals en Kommandanten, Volksstem, Pretoria 1904. In Dutch with a preface by Louis Botha. PDF on Wikimedia Commons. Page 37.
  • J. H. Breytenbach, Die Geskiedenis van die Tweede Vryheidsoorlog in Suid-Afrika, 1899–1902, Die Staatsdrukker Pretoria, 1969–1996. In Afrikaans.
  • * Kommandant T. Smuts on pages 242, 272, 308note, 309note, and 325.
  • *. General T. Smuts, on pages 56, 58, 97, 107, 112, 134, 139, 189, 253, 259-260, 265, 267-286, 289, 292, 290, 295-298, 301, 305-309, 314-317, 322, 334, 343, and 402.
  • * General Tobias Smuts on pages 146-148, 173, 178, 182-183, 186-189, 262, 289-295, 355, 395, 402, 418, 442, 465-466, 501-503, 530, 538, 541, 553-554. Photograph 26.
  • * General Tobias Smuts on pages 75, 165-166, 176, 182, 184, 188, 190, 194, 198, 203, 292-295, 297-300, 308-311, and 315-316.
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