The early CCF under representative government The colonial forces were established after Britain granted the Cape Colony "representative government" in 1853. The colony was encouraged to assume some of the responsibility for its own defence, and in 1855 three separate military organisations were formed: • the para-military
Frontier Armed and Mounted Police (FAMP) • the Burgher Force • the Volunteer Force The FAMP was responsible for maintaining law and order in the districts along the frontier with the
Xhosa territories in the
Transkei. The Burgher Force was a district-based militia, whose units could be mobilised when necessary to maintain order in their home districts. The Volunteer Force was also district-based, but consisted of privately formed and self-financed units which placed their services at the government's disposal. About three dozen volunteer units were formed between 1855 and 1861. They included: • the
Cape Rifle Corps (later the ''Duke of Edinburgh's Own Volunteer Rifles'') (1855– ) • the
Port Elizabeth Rifles (later ''Prince Alfred's Guard'') (1856– ) • the
Cape Town Artillery (later ''Prince Alfred's Own Cape Field Artillery'') (1857– ) • the
Port Elizabeth Volunteer Artillery (1860–1879) In 1858, the FAMP was mobilised to restore order in the Transkei, after a wave of
cattle-killing and crop-destruction by the Xhosa, following a prophecy that this would make the Whites disappear. The Volunteer Force collapsed in the early 1860s, during an economic recession which made part-time soldiering unaffordable. By 1867, only a handful of units were left, in Cape Town and
Port Elizabeth. Although the economy recovered after diamonds were discovered in
Griqualand West in 1869, the Volunteer Force remained dormant.
The CCF under responsible government A degree of independence from Britain was achieved in 1872, when the
Cape Colony attained "
Responsible government" under the leadership of its first Prime Minister,
John Molteno. The new administration encouraged the revival of the local Cape forces, and especially the Volunteer Force. The administration foresaw unrest across the border in the Transkei and, in the case of a war with the
Xhosa, it hoped to minimise British Imperial interference by resolving any conflicts locally. The volunteer revival was particularly marked in the eastern districts closest to the frontier, where more than two dozen units were formed between 1875 and 1877. They included the
First City of Grahamstown Volunteers (1875– ); and the
Buffalo Corps of Rifle Volunteers (later the
Kaffrarian Rifles) (1876– ), and
Grahamstown Volunteer Horse Artillery (1876–1895). The neighbouring British-ruled province of Griqualand West also raised a small volunteer force. The Cape Colony Government was also of the opinion that small, highly mobile,
mounted commandos, recruited from local people (such as the
white farmers,
Mfengu and
Khoi who lived in the border regions) were best suited to the
more irregular warfare in the mountainous frontier. For all but the largest conflicts, such mounted gunmen with their local knowledge were thought preferable to the long, slow and cumbersome
columns of
British Imperial troops. ==1877–1881==