D1.8.43: [Untitled]
Metadata
D1.8.43: [Untitled]
Newspaper Clippings
Bleek suggests the House of Assembly's third vote of no confidence in the present government indicates disharmony between executive and legislative government. The general distrust informing the resolution on railways stems from Governor Wodehouse and his colonial administration's (i.e., executive government) disaffecting unpopularity. This friction makes Responsible Government inevitable. Disregarding public opinion has made Wodehouse ineffective, and the subsequent abandoning of railway works amounts to wasteful expenditure. Despite mitigative rhetoric calling this a delay, Frederick Bourne (the Colonial Railway Engineer) lacks public and parliamentary support. His wasteful expenditure amid the Wellington line's construction (1864) struck the contractor, whose engineer, Marcus Smith, is lauded for his execution quality. Bourne, unendeared to the public, may suffer professionally as the Governor's friend. The House of Assembly's halting of railway works shrinks the job market with no immediate remedy, which may prompt immigration. Private sector work is also scarce, making public works a vital employer. Water harvesting for agricultural irrigation could generate employment and was previously raised by Hon. TH Vigne.
Printed newsprint glued on paper
05 October 1865
Two cut-out columns of printed newsprint mounted on foolscap folio (warped).
Railway (halted railway works), vote of no confidence (the legislature distrusts the executive), Responsible Government, Mr Bourne (John Frederick Bourne), Marcus Smith (a railway engineer), Mr Berg (his New Zealand-bound emigrant vessel), unemployment (at the Cape)
Pressed clippings of Victorian current affairs opinion pieces by Wilhelm Bleek. Published in Het Volksblad on Thursday, October 5th, 1865. Bleek's personal politics both here, and elsewhere in his columns for Het Volksblad, appear critical of then Governor, Sir Philip Wodehouse (Sir George Grey's successor). Perhaps as a journalist manifesting, Bleek believes Responsible Government to be mere months away. It would only materialise under the Molteno Ministry in 1872. Ironically, Frederick Bourne is better remembered for his Simon's Bay Roman Rock Lighthouse than his work as a railwayman (George, 1966: 168; Tony Murray in Heritage Portal: 2013).
Van de Sandt de Villiers & Co.

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