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The mining engineer and petrologist Frederick Henry Hatch (1864
1932) left the Geological Survey of Great Britain in 1892,
relocating to South Africa. He worked for De Beers and with John
Hays Hammond for Cecil Rhodes, finding important new gold fields in
Matabeleland and Mashonaland. Control of the gold mines was a
significant factor in the tension between Dutch and English
settlers that would result in the Second Boer War in 1899. Prior to
this, Rhodes and Hammond were behind the abortive Jameson Raid, but
Hatch had returned to England briefly and was not implicated. This
1895 work, written with South African mining engineer J. A.
Chalmers, reveals the extent of gold reserves in the Transvaal, and
the engineering skills needed to exploit them. It deals with
geological, economic and legal aspects of the mining industry,
remaining of interest to historians of South Africa and the British
Empire.
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