Hello garren thanks for that diamond story. I had not herd that story before.
Tratt patience my friend....
The following story has possile beginings in meeting between two of the most influential men in Africa in the 19th century.
Cecil John Rhodes Born on the 5 July 1853 – 26 March 1902, was an English businessman, mining magnate and politician in South Africa. He was the founder of the diamond company De Beers, which today markets 40% of the world's rough diamonds and at one time marketed 90%.
He was an ardent believer in British colonialism, he was the founder of the southern African territory of Rhodesia which was named after him in 1895. Hey not many people can claim they had a country claimed after him
Being in such a position power he became the powerful force as a states man in Southern Africa. In one such conflict between the Boers and Mogato, the paramount chief of the Zoutpansborg, and who controls an army of 30,000 native warriors, was determined to " resist the influence of the Boer government of Transvaal, who feared Boer reversal of policy would create a native uprising. Sadly history tells us a war did ensue called the Magato War.
Rhodes at the time was interested in keeping the peace because of his mining interests in his De Beers diamond mines visited the chief. In course of the conversation ith Magato while visiting him, Magato showed Rhoades a bucketfull of diamonds. Rhodes tried many times after to buy this treasure but Magato always refused. Many others tried with the same results. It must of been a bit of up yours to Rodes because Magato openly told him the diamonds was pilfered by his native workers who worked at Rhodes de Beer Diamond mines.
Magato in a war with boers died around 1895 and it was said he divided up the diamonds in the Parcels for his most loyal surviving followers to hide them from the greedy whitemen. One such white man was alegely a Boer officer called Swartz who paid with his life in the attempt to search for some of the diamonds. The Second Boer war broke out that spelt the end of the Boer republics. Rhodes died in 1902 and The story of Magato's diamonds was largely forgotten in the horrors of the second Boer war.
Or had it?
By 1904 a newspaper story came out about Rhodes encounter with Magato.
To be cont....
Crow