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Anglo American Corporation
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1917 onwards. The
Anglo American Corporation was founded in 1917, when Ernest Oppenheimcr
had attained the age of 37. The formation of the corporation was to
prove to be the turning point of his life: it also was a turning point
in the history of South African mining. This chapter deals with the
formation of the corporation; it was indirectly the result of the close
association of Dunkelsbuhler and Company, the partnership firm with
which the Oppenheimcr family had long been closely connected, with two
gold-mining houses —the Consolidated Mines Selection Company and the
Rand Selection Company. The personal relations between Ernest
Oppenheimer and W. L. Honnold, an eminent American expert connected
with the two companies mentioned, led to the association of American
capital with the new enterprise. At that time the centre of interest in
gold-mining circles was the development of production on the Far East
Rand. The Anglo American Corporation's interests were first centred
there, but it and its associated companies have since spread far beyond
this limited area. The main lines of development are indicated, for,
from the first, Ernest Oppenheimer had intended his firm to be a
factor, not only in gold-mining, but in diamond affairs as well. In
fact, however, no simple formula can describe the developments of the
forty-five years since the date of the formation of the corporation.
♦ I ♦
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he relations between gold-
and diamond-mining in South Africa have always been intimate, though
not necessarily at all times formal. The earliest discoveries of gold
and diamonds
___.1_____.___..__........ . 1 .it.. 1 r -.1 . ■ 1 . ,.
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tooK
place almost contemporaneously, and long beiore cither industry had
reached an advanced stage of technological or financial development
there was a rudimentary flow of labour and of capital from one to the
other according to the relative prospects opening up at the moment. The
Australian, Californian and other 'diggers' who were originally
attracted by the prospects of the 'Tati' and the 'northern gold-fields'
hurried to the Vaal and to Kimberley when prospects there appeared to
be brighter: when the first depression—in 1872 and 1873—occurred on the
diamond fields, some alleviation of the resulting economic distress
there was occasioned by the migration of diggers to Lydenburg and
Pilgrims' Rest in the eastern Transvaal. The Barberton 'gold-boom' and
the early Rand discoveries did some-
75
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