In 1819, D'Urban was made Governor of
Antigua. In 1824 he became
Lieutenant Governor of Demerara Essequibo, where in 1831 he carried out the amalgamation with
Berbice to form
British Guiana, of which he was its first governor (1831–33). Three years later he was appointed to the post of Governor of the
Cape Colony. In 1829 he was made Colonel of the
51st (2nd Yorkshire West Riding) Regiment of Foot, a position he held for life. In January 1834 in
South Africa D'Urban took office as governor and commander in chief of the Cape Colony. His administration was complicated by the exodus of
Dutch farmers to the far north and east (known as the
Great Trek) and the outbreak of the
Cape Frontier Wars of (1834–1835) due to clashes between the colonists and the
Bantu-speaking
Xhosa peoples. He drove back the
Xhosa people and annexed the territory between the
Keiskamma and
Great Kei (Groot-Kei) rivers. He was in office when the British government
abolished slavery, established municipal and legislative councils, occupied Natal (now
KwaZulu-Natal) and named it as a new colony for the
British Empire. To commemorate this the name of the principal port was changed in 1835 from Port Natal to
Durban. ==Trouble==