Conservation Pre-Game Reserve (1867-1898) A Game Commission was established in 1891 with J.M.. Malan of Rustenberg as chairman, which resulted in the establishment of the game law of 1891. There were already individual farmers as far back as 1867 who published notices in the
Staatscourant to prohibit hunting and so try to preserve the game on their own land. In total 200 owners protected game on about 300 farms between 1867 and 1881 in this manner. One of these farmers was pioneer Alexander Marsh Robertson who owned two adjacent farms, Rolfontein and Elandsberg, extending over 7600
morgen (6510.92 hectares) in the
Wakkerstroom district. Robertson was the first farmer to fence part of his property to create a game camp in the eastern
Transvaal, some 500 morgen (428.35 hectares) using leadwood and barbed wire. The creation of the game camp however was serendipity. Robertson initially erected the fence to restrain his horses, but the fence also provided the added benefit of protecting the ground game. Game in this camp increased significantly due to the protection offered by the fence.
President Paul Kruger regularly toured the rural areas to visit his people. He heard about the success of Robertson's "game camp" and wrote to Albertus Stoop, his son Tjaart's future father-in-law, himself a keen conservationist and neighbour of Robertson, to arrange a visit to Rolfontein so that he could see the experiment first hand and stay the night. Kruger was very impressed with Robertson's unexpected success and continued to show great interest in the Wakkerstroom farmer's efforts to preserve game over the next few years. He visited Rolfontein again in 1892, and it was at this visit, at a great braai held in his honour that he spoke to the importance of Rolfontein in protecting smaller game and proceeded to lay out, for the first time in a public forum, his plan to establish the first Game Reserve in Africa along the Sabi River to preserve the big game that needed a much larger protected habitat to thrive. The reserve was located in the southern one-third of the modern park.
James Stevenson-Hamilton became the first warden of the reserve in 1902. During the following decades all the native tribes were removed from the reserve and during the 1960s the last were removed at
Makuleke in the
Pafuri triangle. In 1918 a commission was established to review the Sabi Reserve. The first secretary of the commission was
J. A. de Ridder, a civil servant. Counterintuitively, the commission actually recommended reducing the size of the park in order to allow greater commercial exploitation of the land. In 1923, the Minister for Lands,
Deneys Reitz, led a survey expedition around the reserve and devised a scheme whereby the government would exchange state land outside the reserve with that of the local private landowners in order to establish a true national park. During the same year, the first large groups of tourists started visiting the Sabi Game Reserve, but only as part of the
South African Railways' popular "Round in Nine" tours. The tourist trains travelled the Selati railway line between
Komatipoort on the Mozambican border and
Tzaneen in the then northern
Transvaal. Following a
change of government in 1924, Reitz's scheme was implemented by the new Lands Minister,
Piet Grobler. The name
Kruger was officially proposed by
Judge J.A.J de Villiers at a meeting of the National Monuments Commission and especially appealed to Grobler himself as a great-grandnephew of Paul Kruger. Behind the scenes it had been championed by English-speaking naturalists in order to win Afrikaner support for the Park.
Kruger National Park By the passage of the National Parks Act of 1926, Sabi Game Reserve, the adjacent Shingwedzi Game Reserve, and farms were combined to create Kruger National Park. The previous Sabi Reserve Warden, James Stevenson-Hamilton, became Warden of the new park. A Board of Trustees was appointed to run the park, chaired by Senator W. J.C. Brebner (chairman), and including a range of politicians, naturalists and philanthropists: Deneys Reitz,
Oswald Pirow, H.B. Papenfus, R. A. Hockly,
Sir Abe Bailey, W.A. Campbell,
Alwin Karl Haagner,
Gustav Preller, and A.E. Charter, who served as secretary. In 1928 the head of the
South African Air Force,
Sir Pierre van Ryneveld, personally led an airborne expedition by three Board of Trustees members to investigate the effect of low-flying airplanes on game. The Board members included Deneys Reitz, who used the data from this trip to frame regulations on flying over the Park. Warden James Stevenson-Hamilton retired on 30 April 1946, after 44 years of service. He was replaced by Colonel J. A. B. Sandenbergh of the South African Air Force. s on a tourist road In 1996 the Makuleke tribe submitted a
land claim for , namely the
Pafuri or
Makuleke region in the northernmost part of the park. The land was given back to the Makuleke people, however, they chose not to resettle on the land but to engage with the private sector to invest in tourism. This resulted in the building of several game lodges from which they earn royalties. In the late 1990s, the fences between the Kruger Park and
Klaserie Game Reserve, Olifants Game Reserve, and
Balule Nature Reserve were dropped and incorporated into the Greater Kruger Park with added to the Reserve. In 2002, Kruger National Park,
Gonarezhou National Park in Zimbabwe, and
Limpopo National Park in Mozambique were incorporated into a
peace park, the
Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park. In 2025 the government suggested that the name of the park should be changed to Skukuza National Park due to the negative legacy left by former president
Paul Kruger. The name is also representative of what locals called the park prior to it being made a national park. == Location and geography ==