

Consequently, the territory known as Griqualand West was proclaimed on 27 October 1871. Following the mediation that was overseen by the Governor of Natal, the Keate Award went in favour of Waterboer, who placed himself under British protection.
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The Free State Boers in particular wanted the area, as it lay inside the natural borders created by Orange and Vaal Rivers. The Cape Colony, Transvaal, Orange Free State and the Griqua leader Nicolaas Waterboer all laid claim to the diamond fields. As the land was lowered, so the hillock became a mine – in time, the world-renowned Kimberley Mine.

Within a month, 900 claims were cut into the hillock, which were worked frenetically by two to three thousand men. Rawstorne took the news to the nearby diggings of the De Beer brothers – his arrival there sparking off the famous "New Rush" which, as historian Brian Roberts puts it, was practically a stampede. Henry Richard Giddy recounted how Esau Damoense (or Damon), the cook for prospector Fleetwood Rawstorne's "Red Cap Party", found diamonds in 1871 on Colesberg Kopje after he was sent there to dig as punishment. įleetwood Rawstorne's "Red Cap Party" of prospectors on Colesberg Kopje This diamond was sold by van Niekerk for £11,200, and later resold in the London market for £25,000. It proved to be a 21.25-carat (4.3 g) diamond, and became known as the Eureka. : 16 The pebble was purchased from Jacobs' father by Schalk van Niekerk, who later sold it on again. He showed the pebble to his father, who then sold it. In 1866, Erasmus Jacobs found a small brilliant pebble on the banks of the Orange River, on the farm De Kalk leased from local Griquas, near Hopetown, which was his father's farm.
