In 1890 he moved to South Africa, initially settling in
Cape Town. He immediately became known as a zealous proponent of socialism. Bain moved north to
Kimberley and soon after to the Transvaal (which had after the victory at
Majuba in 1881 regained its independence from Britain as the
Zuid Afrikaanse Republiek). He settled in
Johannesburg, which had become a major
mining settlement after the discovery of
gold in 1886, and became active in the Labour Union, launched in August 1892. During the 1890s Bain was politically active in a range of ways, including spying for the
Kruger government in the Transvaal and Natal. He became editor of the
Johannesburg Witness in 1899 and became a leading figure in Johannesburg Trades Council (founded October 1893). With Tom Mathews (
Cornish-born ex-US mining union activist in
Butte,
Montana) and Johannesburg Trades Council's secretary Robert Noonan (aka
Robert Tressell, author in 1914 of
The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists) he founded the
International Independent Labour Party. When the
Second Boer War broke out between the ZAR and Britain in October 1899, Bain joined the Transvaal forces and fought for his adopted country. On 31 July 1900, the day Johannesburg fell to the British, he was captured there and faced the prospect of a charge of
treason, but was eventually treated as a
POW on the basis of his naturalisation to the Transvaal. He was held in
Ceylon, and after his release in 1903 returned to Johannesburg. From then to 1905 Bain maintained a low profile in the labour movement. But in 1906 the
Transvaal Independent Labour Party was formed and, after its merger with another grouping, Bain was elected president. Bain went to work on a mine outside Pretoria in 1908 and remained active in politics and
trade unions. == Industrial action ==