This articleusesbare URLs, which are uninformative and vulnerable tolink rot. Please consider converting them tofull citations to ensure the article remainsverifiable and maintains a consistent citation style.Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting, such asreFill (documentation) andCitation bot (documentation).(August 2022) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
| Harrismith Commando | |
|---|---|
Harrismith Commando emblem | |
| Active | 1899-2008 |
| Disbanded | 2008 |
| Country | |
| Allegiance | |
| Branch | |
| Type | Infantry |
| Role | Light Infantry |
| Size | One Battalion |
| Part of | South African Infantry Corps Army Territorial Reserve, Group 25 |
| Garrison/HQ | Harrismith |
Harrismith Commando was alight infantryregiment of theSouth African Army. It formed part of theSouth African Army Infantry Formation as well as the South African Territorial Reserve.
This unit originated upon the mobilisation orders of the Orange Free State Republic in 1899.
This commando was initially sent to occupy mountain passes of theDrakensberg between the Orange Free State and the BritishColony of Natal. English speakers of Harrismith were sent to the Oliviershoek Pass or serve in theTown Guard.
The first engagement of the war was at Besters Station with an advance onLadysmith when this commando occupied Middle Hill. 100 men from the commando were part of the initial assault.
The first Free Stater to die in the Anglo Boer War, Fred Johnson, came from this commando.[1]
This Commando was also involved in the battle of Rietfontein which[2] took place on 24 October 1899 between six commandos of the Free State Army commanded by General APiet Cronje and a BritishFlying Column dispatched fromLadysmith under the command ofSir George White.[3][4][5]
The Free State forces consisted of the following commandos:
In 1900, the commando together with those from Vrede and Heilbron were again assigned the defence of the mountain passes.
The remnants of the Harrismith Commando was captured in a sweep operation between block house lines by a British column on 13 February 1902.[6]
By 1902 all Commando remnants were under British military control and disarmed.
By 1912, previous Commando members could however join shooting associations.
By 1940, such commandos were under control of the National Reserve of Volunteers.
These commandos were formally reactivated by 1948.

During this era, the unit was mainly used for rural area force protection, police assistance and stock theft control. The unit was also engaged in securing the Lesotho border.
The unit resorted under the command of the SADF's Group 25.
This unit, along with all otherCommando units was disbanded after a decision by South African PresidentThabo Mbeki to disband all Commando Units.[7][8] The Commando system was phased out between 2003 and 2008 "because of the role it played in the apartheid era", according to theMinister of Safety and SecurityCharles Nqakula.[9]
Harrismith Commando was the last commando to be disbanded, in March 2008.[10]

| From | Honorary Colonels | To |
| From | Commanding Officers | To |
| 1899 | Commandant C.J. de Villiers | nd |
| 1900 | Commandant Phillip Botha | nd |
| 1902 | Commandant Truter | nd |
| 1994 | Lt Colonel A.J. Jordaan | 2008 |
| From | Regimental Sergeants Major | To |
On 11 June 2017, a Reconciliation Memorial was unveiled at Platrand nearLadysmith. This memorial honours the fierce battle that occurred on 6 January 1900 between theDevonshire Regiment and the Harrismith Commando on that site.[11]
The towns market square has a monument, adjacent Warden Street, to the memory of those who served in the Harrismith Commando. An obelisk in the same street in front of the Dutch Reformed Church lists the names of the men of the Harrismith Commando who died in the Anglo Boer war. Of the 73 names, 19 are listed as having died at Platrand, 32 killed or mortally wounded elsewhere and 22 who died in prisoner of war camps overseas and buried in India and Sri Lanka.[12][13]
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)