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Southern Rhodesia 1943, remembering the Pioneers that conquered Matabeleland

As we have covered in many colonial stamps there was a rush inland from trading post to find and then get rich off of the minerals found. Sometimes the land rushes got ahead of the wishes of the home country. In this case a private company controlled by Cecil Rhodes hired an army dubbed the pioneer column to claim Matabeleland. So slip on your smoking jacket, fill your pipe, take your first sip of your adult beverage, and sit back in your most comfortable chair. Welcome to todays offering from The Philatelist.

By the time of this stamp in 1943, the exploits of the Pioneer Column had been fully embraced by the British Empire. A force outnumbered 10 to one had massacred the Matabele warriors. Matabele King Lobengula was on the run afterwards but a small force of 34 Pioneers looking for him then found instead several thousand more Matabele warriors and fought to the last man. Brave, exciting stuff and with white settlers following into the area of then Rhodesia honoured the memory. Zimbabwe as it is now known not so much, they even took away the holiday for the Pioneers, but we still have the stamp.

Todays stamp is issue A17, a 2 Pence stamp issued by the British Crown Colony of Southern Rhodesia on November 1st, 1943. It was a single stamp issue honouring the 50th anniversary of the British South Africa Company’s Pioneer column defeat of the Matabele Kingdom at the Battle of the Shangani. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth 35 cents. There is supposedly a renewed interest in Rhodesian memorabilia after the failure of Zimbabwe’s long term ruler Mugabe. If so, perhaps the stamp is undervalued.

The Matabele Kingdom under King Lobengula had made peace with the Boers and had further signed a mineral concession with Cecil Rhodes’s British South Africa Company. The company had a Royal Charter, but had no authorization from Britain to claim new lands. Rhodes however realized that there would be an inevitable war with the Matabele when they discovered that mines also meant white settlers. He recruited a private one thousand man army mostly from the white English of South Africa. He recruited sons of prominent families hoping that if they got into trouble, the British Army would rescue them.

The Pioneer column marched into Matabeleland and established themselves in a moveable fort called a laager that the Boers had also used. The Matabele force of 5000 had a few rifles but mainly spears. The Pioneers had searchlights and a machine gun and the night attack on the laager went very badly. Several thousand were killed at a loss of four men. Matabele King Lobengula abandoned his capital and was on the run. A 34 man patrol of Pioneers was looking for the King when they were found by the remainder of the Matabele warriors. This time they were outnumbered 100 to one and were without a machine gun. 3 Men broke off from the patrol to get help, but the rest fought to the last man and killed more than 10 for each of their losses. Rhodesia had its Alamo. King Lobengula soon died and the remaining Matabele accepted Cecil Rhodes’ offered peace terms.

King Lobengula

The mineral empire of Cecil Rhodes went into some flux after his death in 1902 without heirs. He was a homosexual. The British South Africa company never made money as the administration and security cost of protecting the many white settlers exceeded by far mineral royalties and income taxes they imposed on white and black. In 1923 the settlers petitioned to become a Crown Colony. There was no effort by post independence Zimbabwe to grant Matabeleland independence and Mugabe viewed the Matabele suspiciously.

Well my drink is empty and while I have some sympathy for the plight of the Matabele, first at the hands of the Rhodesians and later from Zimbabwe, I am impressed with the bravery and sense of adventure of the Pioneers as seen on todays stamp. Come again for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting. First published in 2019.