Chapter Four: The Birth of a Republic
Excerpt taken from
The Birth of a Republic
Author:
George Langbroek, Curator of the Washingtonian Museum in Washington City
Published:
1989
Thomas Jefferson, First President of Georgia
Independence
In July 1795, Georgia experienced a visit from a collection of exiles from the mother country. Various high level aristocrats, nobles from within the republic, merchants, and both naval and army officers arrived in a manner similar to the Amerikaners.
The leader of the Dutch, Willem van Oranje-Nassau, former leader of the United Provinces before it's fall, entered Cape Town and demanded it's submission to his authority as leader of the country. This did not go over well with many, especially the Amerikaners.
Thomas Jefferson and his Boer and Amerikaner associates, had been gathering in Cape Town with the concurrent administrator, whose name has fallen to history since 1795. Willem and his "Orangists" demanded Jefferson's compliance, along with that of his associates. The stand-off between the Amerikaners and Boers continued for several days before Britain arrived off the shores of South Africa.
The British diplomat came ashore to Cape Town and issued a statement from His Majesty. The colony of South Africa was to be handed over to the British Empire immediately, and all Amerikaner "wanted persons" were to be handed over immediately to face pending justice that had been denied some decade prior.
William conversed with his men for a short time, before also conversing with Jefferson and John/Johan Adams. In the end, William sided with the Amerikaners and Boers, and refused Britain's request. The small naval detachment belonging to the Dutch exiles attacked the small British naval task-force assigned to take over the Cape, and sank it.
On July 4, 1795, Thomas Jefferson and the National Assembly which had formed, issued the
Declaration of Independence; similar to the one written in 1776, this one, however, was worded differently, instead of speaking out against a tyrannical overlord, this instead spoke out against the threats that beheaved Europe and the world. Namely, French radicalism and British imperialism. Willem, still acting in capacity as the exiled Dutch leader, gave his assent to the independence of Georgia. France, when word reached them, declared the independence of Georgia to be false, as it was
their colony, but they took no action against them.
However, this newly independent Georgia suddenly received massive outpour of support from Austria and Italy. Napoleone's Italy immediately recognized the independence of Georgia, as did the Dutch exile government, which took refuge in Cape Town.
Britain was initially tempted to go to war with the Cape, but a French raid on Britain's coastlines forced them to abstain from a war against Georgia, but Britain's distaste for this state was not completely gone.
Die Konvensie van 1795
After the Declaration of Independence, the newly independent Georgia held a Constitutional Convention to debate government. Without issue, the form of government was indeed decided to be a federal republic. The Georgians wanted nothing to do with monarchy anymore, that much was clear.
More problematic was the discussion over African rights -- while the American colonies had issues with race, the southerners being adamant about slavery, that did not exist in Georgia; the country was small, and slavery wasn't really a thing, beyond a couple hundred slaves. The biggest question was, should African aborigines be given constitutional rights?
Jefferson was a strong proponent of giving it to them -- stating that if Georgia wished to make itself a power to be reckoned with, it would have to expand into the interior, and even then, it couldn't oppress the aborigines -- they would one day outnumber them, instead, he stated, cultural assimilation was the answer. The delegates of the meeting were in agreement about this, and the agreement was easy.
Slavery was a five minute discussion -- it would never be permitted. Jefferson had held slaves during his time in America, but he did not wish to allow that system to perpetuate, especially as he had been far too reluctant of a slave holder. Many Patriots and moderate Boers agreed with this interpretation, and agreed.
The largest and stickiest discussion between the delegates was the power of the executive -- the President of Georgia. Jefferson and his "Vryheid Party" advocated a stronger executive office, while Adams and his "Konfederasie Party" advocated a weaker executive, and more power to the provinces. The debate carried on longer than all others, but Jefferson expressed that without a strong central government, the state would lack the capacity to do many things, however, he also stated that the state still had duties to the provinces and would grant them right to operate under their own within the law.
This debate lead to the Constitutional Convention voting on Jefferson's proposal. After another week of debating, they determined that starting in January 1796, every five years, elections would be held to determine the President. Every three years, all members of Parliament would be up for re-election. And after the election, every President would be sworn in on April 1st. The election system would be, until the country grew and expanded, determined by direct voting -- the person with the most votes would win. Proposals for a some sort of arbitrary system where each province would get a number of electoral votes was rejected after being considered "ridiculous".
The very final piece of negotiation was of course, the flag. The flag was created by a Boer artisan, and was approved with very little dissent.
Flag of the Republic of Georgia
Presidentsverkiezingen van 1796 / Presidential Election of 1796
The first election of Georgia was monumentous. Before the arrival of the Amerikaners, the Dutch Cape Colony had a population of about 60,000. After their arrival, and the arrival of the Dutch exiles, that population had swelled to just over 73,000 people. The first Georgian census had the population at 73,244. The parliament was convened with 74 seats, one per one thousand people in the country, with an extra seat rollover.
The 1796 election saw the pitting of Thomas Jefferson's Vryheid Party, against Adams' "Nasionale Demokratiese Party", which had renamed itself after the defeat of Adams' Confederate proposal.
Thomas Jefferson (Vryheid) - 62,584 votes
Johan Adams (ND) - 10,660 votes
The election result saw Jefferson winning plurality in all the four provinces, winning 62,584 votes, to Adams' 10,660. Jefferson was inaugurated as President of Georgia on April 1, 1796, to much cheer. Because there was no national anthem yet, many Boers sang
Het Wilhelmus. The day of the inauguration, a proposal entered Parliament to make an instrumental version of that song the national anthem. However, several Amerikaners proposed writing a new anthem. This early debate would be interesting for the state.
One of the first things done besides the anthem debate, was the Settlement Act of 1796, which proposed claiming and settling a certain region of Southern Africa for the Georgian state. Cartographers in Cape Town organized this means, and an expedition went east to look at how far they should claim.
As the first President, Jefferson was responsible for the future of the state, and he took his responsibility seriously. But for the first time, the Boers and Amerikaners looked forward to the future.