Portal logo
THE RUSH TO KIMBERLEY
177
Parliament that no lands containing valuable minerals should be considered waste lands of the crown for purposes of sale. This did not apply to Griqualand West, as there was no min­eral or precious stones act or ordinance in force in this terri­tory until Ordinance No. 3 of 1871, of the Orange Free State Government.1 Whether there were mineral reservations in the diamond-bearing-farm deeds was not questioned by the inrush-ing diggers. They would not suffer exclusion without a fight, but they were willing to pay small license charges to the farm own­ers for the privilege of working allotted claims. The size of these claims was fixed by agreement with representative " Diggers' Committees," chosen by the pros­pectors in mass meeting, and these committees determined also the simple mining regulations and camp rules. One committee had charge of the Dutoitspan and Bultfontein mining camps, and another directed the mining at De Beers and the Colesberg Kopje, pitching its official tent midway between these two dia­mond beds.2
The Orange Free State claimed the new diamond fields as part of its territory, but its right of control was not vigorously asserted in practice. There was a rising issue from the time of the discovery at Dutoitspan touching the ownership of the district containing the diamond-bearing farms and the diggings on the line of the Vaal. The South African Republic claimed
1  "On Veld and Farm," Frances MacNab, London, 1897.
2  "The Diamond Diggings of South Africa," Pay ton, 1872.