The
Cape Colony government founded the second, so-called "colonial", in 1855, as the para-military
Frontier Armed and Mounted Police (FAMP).
Frontier Armed and Mounted Police (1855–78) The function of this locally recruited multiracial force was to maintain law and order in the districts along the colony's frontier with the
Xhosa kingdoms in the
Transkei. A new constitution that prohibited discrimination on the basis of race and instituted the non-racial
Cape Qualified Franchise partially assuaged some of the
Xhosa people's grievances, leading to a period of relative peace on the frontier. Nevertheless, conflicts did erupt over the following decades, and the FAMP played a central role in policing them. The FAMP was operationally deployed in the
Transkei in 1858, against the
Koranna in 1869, in apprehending the
Zulu chief
Langalibalele in 1873, in
Griqualand West in 1875, and in the
9th Frontier War (1877–1878). When the Cape attained "
Responsible Government" in 1872, its new Prime Minister
John Molteno shifted the focus of government policy to internal development, rather than territorial expansion. Nonetheless, his government expanded the FAMP, whose efficiency and military capacity Molteno had a very high opinion of. The new government was also of the opinion that a competent FAMP force would remove the need for any outside British intervention in the region. Consequently, by 1876, the FAMP had grown to have units stationed at Komga, Queenstown, Palmietfontein,
King Williams Town, Peddie, Butterworth, Kenhardt, Fort Murray, Ealing Post and Kokstad. An artillery unit was added in 1874. The FAMP were also re-organised for rapid mobility; lightly equipped and possessing considerable local knowledge, they formed a very effective police force for the rough and mountainous frontier terrain.
Cape Mounted Riflemen (1878–1913) Finally in 1878, the FAMP were fully militarised, as a unit of the
Colonial Forces, and renamed
Cape Mounted Riflemen. A change in the Cape Government in 1878, and the new
Sprigg Government's expansionist policies, led to outbreaks of conflict, both within the Cape Colony, and around its borders. These conflicts were part of a wider surge of warfare across
southern Africa, stemming from the attempt by the London Colonial Office to enforce a system of British-controlled Confederation onto the region. The CMR were involved in several of the more local conflicts, which directly involved the Cape Colony. In 1879, the CMR fought in the
Moorosi campaign, where they gained much distinction. They also fought in the
Basutoland Gun War (1880–1881), the
Matabeleland campaign (1893–1894), the
Bechuanaland campaign in 1897, and the
Second Boer War (1899–1902). During these wars, the CMR came to comprise the dominant portion of the whole of the
Cape Forces. As before, during peacetime the CMR served as a police force. ==Union Defence Force==