All Stories

  1. ‘Tell England, Ye Who Pass this Monument’: English-speaking South Africans, Memory and War Remembrance until the Eve of the Second World War
  2. ‘The Last Outpost’
  3. ‘An Unknown People’: Reconstructing British South African Identity
  4. ‘Their Finest Hour?' English-speaking South Africans and World War II
  5. An identity threatened: White English-speaking South Africans, Britishness and Dominion South Africanism, 1934–1939
  6. ‘Munition Factories … Turning Out a Constant Supply of Living Material’: White South African Elite Boys' Schools and the First World War
  7. Captain Henry Birch-Reynardson, Official Secretary to the Governor-General of South Africa, 1927–1933: A British Official in an ‘Independent’ Dominion
  8. The Anglo-Zulu War and its Aftermath
  9. South African British? Or Dominion South Africans? The Evolution of an Identity in the 1910s and 1920s
  10. African reasons for purchasing land in Natal in the late 19th, early 20th centuries
  11. Betrayed Trust: Africans and the State in Colonial Natal
  12. ‘Of great value to his generation’: the life of Frederick Rowland OBE, 1871–1937
  13. Unravelling the Past to Explain the Present? Two Studies in Zulu History
  14. Chiefship in early colonial Natal, 1843–1879
  15. The attitude of thekholwapetty bourgeois elite to the franchise and authority in late-colonial Natal
  16. Violence and the State in Colonial Natal: Conflict Between and Within Chiefdoms
  17. The rise of African indebtedness in Natal during the late colonial period
  18. Lynette van Niekerk
  19. The Undermining of the Homestead Economy in Colonial Natal
  20. African purchases of Crown lands in Natal 1880–1903
  21. Maurice Boucher