Early growth and disunity (1823–1857) The Separatist movement in parliament gradually formed as a loose and informal alliance of settler representatives, who advocated for a separate colony for the Eastern Province. The settler representatives felt that a separate colony, with its own parliament, would allow them to pursue their policies of a higher franchise qualification, expansion eastwards, and a greater Imperial military presence. The movement almost immediately fragmented, and continued to coalesce and re-divide throughout its history, due to the regional interests of different towns, and to a range of ideological differences. The largest and most radical faction was based near the eastern frontier, in the town of Grahamstown, and was therefore variously known as "the frontier party" or "the Grahamstown party". It was characterised by unusually conservative ideology, as well as an association with the Wesleyan church and the Grahams Town Journal newspaper of
Robert Godlonton. A more moderate faction was based in Port Elizabeth and its surrounding towns, where the English commercial elite was more concerned with infrastructure and the opening up of markets, than with the simple annexation of territory. Both factions, and the separatist movement overall, was opposed by the second largest political grouping in the Eastern Cape, which drew its support from the Afrikaans speaking Cape Dutch and Coloured voters, as well as more liberal English colonists. Their greatest support lay in the Graaff Reinet area, and the faction came to be known as the "Stockenstromites", after the policies of
Andries Stockenstrom. There were also disagreements in terms of ideology and policy. Firstly, there was disagreement as to which town should be the future capital and seat of parliament for the proposed colony; smaller Eastern towns feared domination by either
Port Elizabeth or
Grahamstown (often even more than they resented
Cape Town's domination). Secondly, a region of the eastern province formed its own lobby which agitated for a separate “Midlands” colony. Most importantly, subgroups of the Separatist League put forward other solutions to fight the perceived domination of the Western Province. One such group began a political struggle for a system of three parliaments – one for each province and then one overall parliament for the whole
Cape Colony. Another group moderated their demands to merely asking that the current parliament be moved away from Cape Town, to a central location midway between east and west. Another smaller group pushed for parliament to rotate, between
Port Elizabeth and
Cape Town. While most of the movement continued in their separatist aims, these disagreements weakened the league. The separatists also faced opposition from the growing “
responsible government” movement, which was based in the west and advocated greater independence for a united Cape.
Apogee (1857–1870) The league had a rare moment of unity in 1857 when
Robert Godlonton led all eastern members of the Legislative Council in resigning in protest. In 1860, opposition to a new tax on wool led to even greater unity when the most powerful business owners in the Eastern Province's wool industry united in opposition to the tax. The Eastern Province MPs, who constituted a large segment of the aforesaid businessmen, formally institutionalised the movement as the "Separatist League" later in 1860. The League supporters remained in a minority however. It was only in the 1860s, when it gained imperial support, in the person of conservative governor
Sir Philip Wodehouse, that it gained an advantage over the liberal majority. Wodehouse sought to divide the Cape and roll back its legislative independence. Working together with Wodehouse's government, the League reached the apogee of its power. It established an office in
Port Elizabeth for their central committee, under permanent secretary Dr W. Way, and a less formal office (the “Eastern Province Club House”) in
Cape Town. They briefly operated as a relatively united front, to take advantage of the support from the imperial government. In 1864 they were successful in causing Parliament to be convened in
Grahamstown, rather than Cape Town, for the first time. Here, their settler supporters were present in force, and
Robert Godlonton's powerful influence on the press helped the League to dominate that year's parliament. Molteno succeeded in rallying the liberals though and eventually prevented the attempts to institutionalise the division. For roughly a decade, the Cape's political system was in paralysis. Wodehouse sought to impose the league's proposals, together with various attempts to curtail the independence of the Cape overall, and the
responsible government party used its majority to block the proposals and cut off funding to the Governor's office. After the eventual triumph of the responsible government party in 1871, the Cape received its first elected executive government and several members of the separatist league defected to the responsible government party.
Decline (1870–1874) , are shown in this 1878 cartoon by the pro-imperialist Lantern newspaper. newspaper. Depicted as the witches of Macbeth are the two main press outlets - the Argus of the western cape represented by Patrick McLoughlin on the right and the
Grahamstown Journal of the eastern cape represented by
Robert Godlonton on the left (The face of the litigious Godlonton is not shown). In between them is the Cape's anti-confederation Prime Minister John Molteno. Rising prosperity in the early 1870s led to a decline in the separatist movement’s support. Divisions also arose again, between the main towns of the eastern province. However the principal blow to the movement was the new Cape Prime Minister’s bill of 1874 to break up the two-way division of the Cape, into seven new Provinces (the large, uneven number 7 was specifically chosen to encourage fluidity of regional allegiance, to prevent either deadlock, or entrenched divisions). This “
Seven Circles Act” removed the political division which had sustained the separatist movement and made its continued existence unsustainable. Imperial Emissary
James Froude made a brief attempt to resurrect the Separatist League in 1878. At the time, the
Colonial Office was implementing a plan to bring all the states of
southern Africa into a single
confederation (much like the
Canadian Confederation). The united, independence-oriented Cape had opposed this policy, and it was at the time by far the largest and most powerful entity in the region. In order to curry support for the confederation plan, government agents were dispatched to the Cape; Froude arrived from London and mobilised the remaining separatists who were still politically active. On behalf of government officials in London, he promised audiences in
Port Elizabeth that if they supported the confederation scheme, the eastern province would be reinstated and established as a separate colony from the Cape, within the planned confederation. The promise came to nothing however, and the confederation attempt eventually led to the outbreak of the
South African Wars. One result of the failed confederation attempt was the new political and racial consciousness of the Cape’s Afrikaner population, and the rise of the
Afrikaner Bond. Partly because of this, the East-West regional division was replaced with a divide between white South Africans of Afrikaner and British descent. ==Analysis and legacy==