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Item Ref# CS8225
Paul Kruger Sarreguemines Character Jug
This is an antique character jug depicting Paul Kruger - the face of the Boer resistance against the mighty British Empire. The jug's handle is in the form of a pipe – often associated with the Boervolk men. The jug (pichet) is French made and has Depose, (meaning registered or copyright) incised into the base along with the number 115.
Height: 19.5cm
It dates from the late 19th century. |
A Boer's resolve for Independence – to the very end!
Paul Kruger was seventy-five years old, but there were many of his burghers several years older than he who went to the front with their commandos and remained there for several months at a time.
A great-grandfather serving in the capacity of a private soldier, may appear like a mythical tale, but there were several such men. Old Jan van der Westhuizen, of the Middleberg laager, was active and enthusiastic at eighty-two years, and felt more than proud of four great-grand-children.
Piet Kruger, a relative of the President, and four years his senior, was an active participant in every battle in which the Rustenburg commando was engaged while it was in Natal, and he never once referred to the fact that he fought in the 1881 war and in the attack upon Jameson's men. Four of Kruger's sons shared the same tent and fare with him, and ten of his grandsons were burghers in different commandos.
Jan C. Van Tander, of Boshof, exceeded the maximum of the military age by eight years, but he was early in the field, and was seriously wounded at the battle of Scholtznek on December 11th.
General Joubert himself was almost seventy years old but as far as physical activity was concerned there were a score of burghers in his commando, each from five to ten years older, who exhibited more energy in one battle than he did during the entire Natal campaign. The hundreds of bridges and culverts along the railway lines in the Transvaal, the Orange Free State, and Upper Natal were guarded day and night by Boers more than sixty years old, who had volunteered to do the work in order that younger men might be sent to localities where their services might be more necessary.
Other old Boers and cripples attended to the commissariat arrangements along the railways, conducted commissariat waggons, gathered forage for the horses at the front, and arranged the thousands of details which are necessary to the well-being and comfort of every army, however simple its organisation.
Scripture |
And they that know thy name will put their trust in thee: for thou, Lord, hast not forsaken them that seek thee. Psalm 9:10 |