Vereeniging (locally/fəˈrɪərnəxəŋ/fə-REER-nə-khəng;[2]Afrikaans pronunciation:[fəˈriənəχəŋ]) is a city located in the south ofGauteng province,South Africa, situated where theKlip River empties into the northern loop of theVaal River. It is also one of the constituent parts of theVaal Triangle region and was formerly situated in theTransvaal province. Vereeniging is the third largest city in Gauteng. The nameVereeniging is theDutch word meaning "association", although the spelling has since changed tovereniging, with a singlee.
Vereeniging is situated in the southern part of Gauteng Province, and forms the southern portion of thePretoria-Witwatersrand-Vereeninging (PWV) conurbation, and its neighbors areVanderbijlpark (to the west),Three Rivers (east),Meyerton (north) andSasolburg (south). The city is currently one of the most important industrial manufacturing centres in South Africa, with its chief products being iron, steel, pipes, bricks, tiles and processed lime.
The predominant language in Vereeniging isEnglish followed closely bySesotho language andAfrikaans.
In 1879, George William Stow was commissioned by theOrange Free State government to look for coal deposits in the Bethlehem district[3]: 17 With no deposits found he moved northwards toMaccauvlei on the Vaal River and then crossed the river to theTransvaal side. On the farmLeeuwkuil, he found acoal deposit twelve feet thick.[3]: 17 But the Orange Free State government believed that the deposit was too far away and there was a lack of transport so turned down the idea of mining there.[3]: 17
Stow settled inKimberley to find a job, where he metSamuel Marks. After hearing Stow's story, Marks saw an opportunity to use the coal for energy generation at the Kimberley diamond fields.[3]: 17 Marks formedDe Zuid Afrikaanshe en Oranje Vrystaatsche Kolen and Mineralen Vereeniging (The South African and Orange Free State Coal and Mineral Association) and sent Stow to purchase the farms where the coal was found.[3]: 17 On 25 November 1880 he purchased the 12,000 acre farmLeeuwkuil for £5,000.[3]: 18 Marks' agent J.G. Fraser also purchased the 6,000 acreKlipplaatdrift farm from Karl August Pistorius in October 1881 for £15,500. This was opposite the farmMaccauvlei.[3]: 18
From 1881, coal was taken by ox-wagon to Kimberley, and by 1882 there was so much development around the mining area that a village was surveyed on the two former farms. TheVolksraad agreed to name it Vereeniging, a shortened version of the company's name.[3]: 18
TheTreaty of Vereeniging ending theSecond Boer War (1899–1902) was negotiated here by delegates of theSouth African Republic, theOrange Free State, and theBritish Empire. During the conflict, aconcentration camp was set up in the area by the British in September 1900, and by October 1901 it housed 185 men, 330 women, and 452 children. Conditions at the camp were very poor: drinking water was brought by cart from a fountain (there was no direct water supply although it was situated next to the Vaal River) and there were only 24 latrines. Most inmates lived in bell-tents but there was a dispensary and a school.
The concentration camp was situated where the Mittal Steel plant (Vaal Works) is situated. Today, the Maccauvlei Golf Course is on the opposite side of the Vaal River to where the concentration camp was, and a Garden of Remembrance is situated at Maccauvlei. All the British soldiers killed in and around Vereeniging during the war were re-buried on this site.[citation needed]
Since 1999 its municipal services were provided by theEmfuleni Local Municipality. In 2018 the municipality was placed under administration[4] after years of wasteful practices[5] and poor service delivery. In February 2022 it was reported that Vereeniging had 14 out-of-service police vehicles for visible policing, and only 20 operational vehicles.[6]
In December 2010 and January 2011 the southern part ofGauteng and Mpumulanga experienced a higher than normal rainfall. This resulted in the need to release more water from the nearbyVaal dam. As a consequence, parts of Vereeniging, Three Rivers and the rest of the towns downstream were flooded.[7]
Flooding along Sugarbush Drive, Three Rivers Proper
The city's motto isPer Pacem ad Industriam (Through Peace to Industry). It is currently one of the most important industrial manufacturing centres in South Africa, with its chief products beingiron,steel, pipes, bricks, tiles and processedlime. Severalcoal mines are also still situated in the area, with reserves being estimated at four billion tons. Other mines nearby extract fire-clay,silica and building stone. Vereeniging also has severalEskom thermalpower plants that supplyelectricity to the nearbygoldmines.
Since 1999, Vereeniging has been part of the Emfuleni Local Municipality, along withVanderbijlpark, Sharpeville, Sebokeng and the smaller Three Rivers.
The latest annual crime statistics for Vereeniging Police Precinct was issued by the South African Police Service (SAPS) in 2021. The SAPS crime report[9] showed the following information:
Type of crime
2018/2019
2019/2020
2020/2021
Murder
23
16
12
Sexual Offences
86
47
61
Assault with the intent to inflict grievous bodily harm
Vereeniging established a municipality in 1912. By 1931, the town council had assumed anemblem depicting bridge across a river, and two clasped hands.
The town council obtained a coat of arms from theCollege of Arms in October 1955, registered it with the Transvaal Provincial Administration in October 1957[10] and with theBureau of Heraldry in June 1987.[11]
The arms were :Sable, on a fess wavy Or a barrulet wavy Tenne, the fess between in chief a thunderbolt between two picks, Or, and in base a steel pipe palewise proper between two cogwheels, also Or. In layman's terms, the design is a black shield displaying, from top to bottom, a golden heraldic thunderbolt between two picks, a wavy orange stripe edged in gold, and an upright golden pipe between two cogwheels.
The crest was a dove of peace perched on two clasped hands; the supporters were a lion and a zebra standing on a grassy base strewn with veld flowers; and the motto wasPer pacem ad industriam.