during the Second Boer War At the age of 17, while visiting his father in
Pretoria, at the start of the
Second Boer War, the Field-Cornet's office said he was too young to fight and refused to enlist him. He met his father with the President of the
Transvaal,
Paul Kruger, who took him straight to the room of the
Commandant-General Piet Joubert. Joubert personally handed him a new
Mauser carbine and a
bandolier of
ammunition. He and one of his brothers then joined the Boer forces
"by virtue of having thrown our belongings through a carriage window and climbing aboard". During the initial phase of the War, he fought several battles, including the engagement at Surprise Hill (
Vaalkop) and in the Boer
victory at Spionkop. After a string of Boer defeats in
set-piece warfare and the British capture of
Pretoria, Reitz was one of the fighters who remained in the field. He joined
General Smuts who decided to conduct
guerrilla operations, not in the territories of the Boer republics, but in the
Cape Colony. They faced immense difficulties, both from British forces and from nature, and when the majority did break through to the Cape they were on their last legs.
Battle of Elands River On 17 September 1901, Smuts' commando encountered the
17th Lancers in the vicinity of
Tarkastad. Smuts realised that the Lancers' camp was their one opportunity to re-equip themselves with horses, food and clothing. A fierce fight, subsequently to be known as the
Battle of Elands River, took place, with the Lancers being caught in a cross-fire and suffering heavy casualties. Stunned by the onslaught, the remaining Lancers put up a
white flag. Reitz encountered Captain Sandeman, the Lancers' commander, and his
lieutenant Lord Vivian among the wounded. In his book
Commando, Reitz recounts how Lord Vivian pointed out his
bivouac tent and told him it would be worth his while to take a look at it. Soon, Reitz, who that morning had been wearing a grain-bag, riding a foundered horse, and carrying an old
Gewehr 1888 rifle with only two rounds of ammunition left, was dressed in a
cavalry tunic and riding
breeches, with a superb
mount, a
Lee-Metford sporting rifle, and full
bandoliers. Reitz reports that he met Lord Vivian again in London in 1935, on excellent terms, and again in 1939 whilst in Britain on an official trip as Deputy Prime Minister of South Africa.
Thomas Pakenham, in his introduction to the 1983 Jonathan Ball edition of
Commando, reports a more elaborate story. In this touching account, Vivian overcomes Reitz's reluctance to take Vivian's possessions, and presents Reitz's original rifle to him in London in 1943. As Vivian died in 1940 this is impossible, although Pakenham may have simply got the year wrong, as Reitz did meet Lord Vivian again during his 1939 trip.
Siege of Okiep At the end of the war, after remarkable adventures, Smuts' commando had made itself a relatively comfortable base in the west of the Cape Colony and was besieging the garrison of
Okiep, Northern Cape. ==Defeat and exile==