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Jacobsdal
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==Military action== {{Moresources|section|date=August 2023}} Jacobsdal saw plenty of military action during the [[Second Anglo-Boer War]] of 1899–1902 because it was close to the two strategic towns of [[Kimberley, Northern Cape|Kimberley]] and [[Mafeking, South Africa|Mafeking]]. The wounded from the battles of [[Battle of Belmont (1899)|Belmont]]/[[Battle of Graspan|Graspan]], [[Battle of Modder River|Modder River]], [[Battle of Magersfontein|Magersfontein]] and [[Battle of Paardeberg|Paardeberg]] were nursed in the town. The local hotel, known as the Garfield Hotel then, and owned by Mrs. Sarah Ann Streak, provided board and lodging to the Transvaal and Free State Ambulance, as well as Despatch riders.<ref name="COMPENSATION BRITISH SUBJECTS ORANGE FREE STATE 1904">TAB/CJC/LEER/179/01/CJC752/1 CLAIMS FOR COMPENSATION BRITISH SUBJECTS ORANGE FREE STATE. JACOBSDAL. WILLIAM BROOKEN STREAK. 1904-1904.</ref> In November 1899, Boers from Jacobsdal erected a cairn of a heap of stones (klipstapel), each burgher scratching his name on a stone, before departing for the battle of Roodelaagte. 20 km north west of Jacobsdal lies the Magersfontein battlefield where in December 1899 General [[Piet Cronjé]] blocked [[Paul Methuen, 3rd Baron Methuen|Lord Methuen]]'s advance on Kimberley.<ref>Free State Department of Tourism, 'Free State' (pdf), undated 200-?; Barker, ''A Concise Dictionary of the Boer War''.</ref> However, two months later, General Cronje was outflanked by his enemy General French's dash to relieve the [[siege of Kimberley]], and retreated to Jacobsdal from Kimberley. On 15 February 1900 as the British approached the town he departed from Jacobsdal with 5000 men, women and children. Later that day the British captured the town, making Jacobsdal the first Orange Free State town to be occupied. Major General WAVELL and his British Troops occupied the Garfield Hotel in the town in February and March 1900 causing damage to the roof due to its use for Heliographing and flagsignalling between 16 February and 5 March 1900.<ref name="COMPENSATION BRITISH SUBJECTS ORANGE FREE STATE 1904"/> Two days later, Cronje's men came under fire at Paardeberg Drift from French who was in pursuit of him and the battle of Paardeberg commenced. Cronje surrendered on 27 February after enduring 9 days of shelling by 40,000 British troops. 4,000 Boers surrendered and were taken off into exile at British [[prisoner-of-war camp]]s around the world.<ref>Barker, ''A Concise Dictionary of the Boer War''.</ref> During the British occupation, the occupiers were surprised by an attack by the Boers that resulted in the death of 23 British soldiers. The British retaliated by burning down twenty houses and interning all the town's women and children in a [[concentration camp]] in Kimberley. The men were sent to POW camps inside and outside South Africa. Later in 1900 the British erected a blockhouse near the town on the road to Paardeberg. Its rectangular shape is one of only 12 [[blockhouse]]s with that shape in South Africa. Besides the cairn, there are other memorials to the war in Jacobsdal. A memorial to the dead from the Battle of Roodelaagte stands in front of the [[NG church]]. In 1968, a memorial was erected in the Jacobsdal cemetery which commemorates British and colonial men who were buried in the cemetery. The town has long had a well known Landbouskool, one of only three agricultural high schools in the province. During the Second World War, Italian prisoners of war were held near Jacobsdal and [[Koffiefontein]]. Their labour was used to construct the Riet River Irrigation Scheme which extended the existing water scheme. After the war, white war veterans were rewarded with the receipt of an irrigation plot of 24 morgen each.
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