William Philip Schreiner CMG PC KC (30 August 1857 – 28 June 1919) was a South African barrister and politician who served as the eighth Prime Minister of the Cape Colony from 1898 to 1900, during the Second Boer War.

William Philip Schreiner
Premier WP Schreiner
Schreiner c. 1898
8th Prime Minister of the Cape Colony
In office
13 October 1898 – 17 June 1900
MonarchVictoria
GovernorThe Viscount Milner
Preceded byJohn Gordon Sprigg
Succeeded byJohn Gordon Sprigg
Personal details
Born
William Philip Schreiner

30 August 1857
Wittebergen Mission Station,
Cape Colony
Died28 June 1919(1919-06-28) (aged 61)
Llandrindod Wells, Wales
United Kingdom
Political partySouth African Party
SpouseFrances Hester Reitz
RelationsOlive Schreiner (sister)
ChildrenOliver Schreiner
Alma materUniversity of the Cape of Good Hope
University of London
Downing College, Cambridge
ProfessionBarrister, Politician

Early life

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Schreiner was born at Wittebergen Mission Station near Herschel, Eastern Cape. He was the tenth child of two missionaries Gottlob Schreiner and his wife, the former Rebecca Lyndall, and a younger brother of the writer Olive Schreiner. He was educated at Templeton High School, Bedford, the South African College in Cape Town, the University of the Cape of Good Hope, the University of London and Downing College, Cambridge. He took a First in the London LL.B. examination and was senior jurist in the Cambridge Law Tripos.[1] He was admitted to the English bar in 1882, returned to Cape Town as an advocate of the Cape Supreme Court and established a thriving law practice.

Political career

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Schreiner became a parliamentary draughtsman in 1885, and acted as legal adviser to the Governor of Cape Colony and High Commissioner for Southern Africa in 1887. In the 1891 New Year Honours he was made a Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George (CMG).[2] His proximity to parliamentarians gave him an entrée to political life, and in 1893 he was elected member of the Cape Parliament for Kimberley. That same year he became attorney-general in Cecil Rhodes's cabinet, which was supported by Jan Hendrik "Onze Jan" Hofmeyr and the Afrikaner Bond until the Jameson Raid, when Rhodes's imperial ambitions became clear, causing the resignation of Schreiner and the rest of the ministers in January 1896.

Schreiner was elected member for Malmesbury in 1898 and later that year became prime minister himself, heading a cabinet that included John X. Merriman and Jacobus Wilhelmus Sauer. As prime minister Schreiner favoured negotiation rather than hostilities, to the chagrin of the governor and high commissioner, Alfred Milner, who was actively fomenting war. Schreiner was forced to resign from the premiership and from Parliament in June 1900.

He failed to win a seat in 1904, but returned in 1908 as the member for Queenstown. He now adopted a liberal Bantu policy, influenced by a visit he had made in 1899 to the Transkei and the African leader John Tengo Jabavu. Schreiner advocated integration and equal rights for all "civilised" men. His dedication to this ideal was proved by his resignation from the National Convention in order to represent Dinuzulu, who was due to stand trial before a special court set up by the Government of Natal for his alleged treasonous participation in the rebellion of 1906.

Schreiner felt that the Union Government and Parliament proposed for South Africa would not uphold the liberal Bantu policy of the Cape Colony, so he went to London to oppose the passage of the South Africa Act through the British Parliament in 1909. He brought together a multiracial delegation of nine prominent Cape politicians to call for the Cape franchise which allowed all men of property to vote, irrespective of race, to be implemented in the whole of South Africa.[3] Schreiner led the group to London, but the delegation was unsuccessful in its appeal, despite receiving considerable support from the infant Labour Party and other liberal British organisations.[4] It was from this delegation that the South African Native National Congress was formed in 1912.[5]

With the forming of the Union in 1910 he became one of the first senators nominated to look after black interests. Having already been made a member of the Privy Council of the United Kingdom which allowed him to be addressed as the "Right Honourable", in the 1911 New Year Honours he was granted use of "The Honourable".[6]

 
A portrait of Schreiner by John St Helier Lander, ca. 1898

Later life

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Schreiner was on holiday in England at the outbreak of the First World War and was asked by Gen. Botha to fill the post of High Commissioner for South Africa in London.[7][8] For his work during the war as High Commissioner, King Albert I of Belgium awarded Schreiner the Grand Officer of the Order of the Crown.[9]

He died in Llandrindod Wells, Wales, on 28 June 1919, the day the Treaty of Versailles was signed.[10]

Schreiner was married in 1884 to Frances Hester Reitz, a sister of President F. W. Reitz. They had four children, including Oliver Schreiner, who became a judge.

Notes

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  1. ^ "Schreiner, William Philip (SCRR878WP)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  2. ^ "No. 26120". The London Gazette. 1 January 1891. p. 2.
  3. ^ Report of Commission of Inquiry regarding Cape Coloured Population of the Union, U.G. 54 – 1937, Government Printer, Pretoria, 1937, p. 213, para 1037
  4. ^ "Radical Objects: A Menu for Change – The South African Deputation to London, 1909". History Workshop. 16 November 2013.
  5. ^ Martin Plaut, Promise and Despair, the First Struggle for a Non-Racial South Africa, Jacana Press, 2016
  6. ^ "No. 12317". The Edinburgh Gazette. 3 January 1911. p. 3.
  7. ^ "NEW HIGH COMMISSIONER". The Herald. Victoria, Australia. 14 November 1914. p. 12. Retrieved 12 April 2020 – via Trove.
  8. ^ "SOUTH AFRICAN HIGH COMMISSIONER'S DEATH". The Brisbane Courier. Queensland, Australia. 30 June 1919. p. 11. Retrieved 12 April 2020 – via Trove.
  9. ^ "No. 13447". The Edinburgh Gazette. 20 May 1919. p. 1741.
  10. ^ "Olive Schreiner Letters Online". www.oliveschreiner.org. Retrieved 30 March 2024.

References

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Political offices
Preceded by Prime Minister of Cape Colony
1898–1900
Succeeded by
Diplomatic posts
Preceded by High Commissioner of South Africa to the United Kingdom
1914–1919
Succeeded by