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Search Term: farmers

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    Image Number: BAH0050_001.tif
    Title: Backyard Of The North
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2008090801:EAED:SOCIAL:RELIGION:AUG 1962 - Backyard Of The North - A Haven of quiet hope - a mission with its quiet groves - in a land that so little. It's all right if you get a job with the government. Then a man and his family can live. But far too many children die with their bellies full. Research men are trying desperately to find a crop that will not only grow but also pay in the north. It's the north of Northern Rhodesia, the backward backyard of the federation. Here, some places, the infact mortality rate rises to as much as 30-50 per cent. Here families live and multiply on the equivalent of 5 a year. Statistics have a nice clean word to describe these people: "subsistence farmers." This means a man who prays for good rains, hopes this year's baby lives and last year doesn't weaken, and goes about surviving this month before thinking about next. (Photograph by Drum Photographer BAHA)
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Country: ZAMBIA
    Orientation: panoramic
    Pixel Size: 5917 x 3399
    Media Id: 144_26
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: BHA0004_1
    Title: g1952_104_3
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: SAED:POLITICS:SHEBEENS:DRUM JUNE 1952 - Mr Drum Looks At The Tot SystemShould he be paid in Liquor? New bill plans to pay Transvaal Africans in liquor. What is the 'system'? In the Cape Province, particularly in the wine-growing areas, a large number of Coloured farm workers have part of their wages paid in wine instead of money. The wine is given in 'tots' several times a day. Usually if a worker doesn't take his tot, he gets nothing instead. Farmers say that the tot makes workers work better, and that they can't do without it. (Photograph by Jurgen Schadeberg BAHA) NEG 104 FRAME 3
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Pixel Size: 4741 x 4733
    Media Id: 70_152
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: BHA0004_4
    Title: g1952_104_18
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: SAED:POLITICS:SHEBEENS:DRUM JUNE 1952 - Mr Drum Looks At The Tot System Ð GREED for tots is summed up in this farm workerÕs expression. The tot is swallowed at one gulp. Should he be paid in Liquor? New bill plans to pay Transvaal Africans in liquor. What is the 'system'? In the Cape Province, particularly in the wine-growing areas, a large number of Coloured farm workers have part of their wages paid in wine instead of money. The wine is given in 'tots' several times a day. Usually if a worker doesn't take his tot, he gets nothing instead. Farmers say that the tot makes workers work better, and that they can't do without it. (Photograph by Jurgen Schadeberg © BAHA) NEG 104 FRAME 18
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Country: South Africa
    Orientation: square
    Pixel Size: 4745 x 4744
    Media Id: 69_544
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Keywords: square, black and white image, South Africa, Africa, farm labourers, drinking, felt hats, The Tot System, 1950s, wages, payment methods, ,
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: BHA0016_8
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: NIGED:POLITICS:FARMING:PERSONALITIES:NOV 1962 – Agriculture – Foundation Of Our Wealth. This is Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa – the farmer. Pictured at his farm at Bauchi, N. Nigeria. Sir Abubakar drives a tractor. This is the era of the new farmer. Young, industrious men will be taught new methods so that the great and latent wealth of the land can be fully exploited. Nearly £1½ million has been put by for research. Farm settlements are being set up. And Nigeria’s agricultural revolution is getting under way. Eighty per cent, of Nigeria’s 40 million citizens depend on agriculture for their livelihood, while half the country’s gross national produce comes from the land. (Photograph by Drum Photographer ©BAHA)
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Country: Nigeria
    Orientation: panoramic
    Pixel Size: 6303 x 3366
    Media Id: 69_392
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Keywords: Drum Magazine, black and white image, Africa, tractors, historical, horizontal, November, 1962, 1960s, Nigeria, Abubakar Tafewa Balewa, farmers, agriculture, ,
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

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    Image Number: BHA0073_005.tif
    Title: Little Boy's Story Of Death On Farm
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2008102317:SAED:LABOUR:POLITICS:PERSONALITIES:APR 1962 - Little Boy's Story Of Death On Farm. The Father - Short, beared Lazarus Sibisi started blankly at the white walls of Dundee Magistrate's Court. Nearby a group of convicts worked in a little garden. The old man shook his head sadly and said: "Why did my son have to die?" A few minutes before, the old man had listened in court to farm labourers alleging that his son was chained, kicked and thrashed with sticks and hosepipes by three local farmers, two of whom employed him. For seven days, old Sibisi came to court to hear the allegation that his son was beaten for days before death. (Photograph by Peter Magubane BAHA)
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Country: South Africa
    Location: Dundee - Natal
    Orientation: portrait
    Pixel Size: 4296 x 5625
    Media Id: 134_30
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

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    Image Number: BHA0073_006.tif
    Title: Little Boy's Story Of Death On Farm - Mother Sits Alone
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2008102318:SAED:LABOUR:POLITICS:PERSONALITIES:APR 1962 - Little Boy's Story Of Death On Farm - Mother Sits Alone - her son Fios was chained, kicked and thrashed with sticks and hosepipes by three local farmers, two of whom employed him. (Photograph by Peter Magubane BAHA)
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Pixel Size: 4345 x 4521
    Media Id: 134_29
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Keywords: South Africa, Drum Magazine, apartheid, politics, labour, child labour, farm death, boy, little boy, mother, sits, alone, kicked, thrashed, chained, Peter Magubane, mourning, grieving, April 1962, 1962, ,
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: BHA0073_007.tif
    Title: Little Boy's Story Of Death On Farm
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2008102319:SAED:LABOUR:POLITICS:PERSONALITIES:APR 1962 - Little Boy's Story Of Death On Farm - Time for prayer at their son's grave in the veld. Fios was chained, kicked and thrashed with sticks and hosepipes by three local farmers, two of whom employed him. (Photograph by Peter Magubane BAHA)
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Country: South Africa
    Location: Dundee - Natal
    Orientation: landscape
    Pixel Size: 5645 x 3534
    Media Id: 134_27
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

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    Image Number: BHA0073_008.tif
    Title: Lazarus Sibisi
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2008102320:SAED:LABOUR:POLITICS:PERSONALITIES:APR 1962 - Little Boy's Story Of Death On Farm - This was home to the dead man (Fios)- son of Lazarus Sibisi - and these were his people. Fios was chained, kicked and thrashed with sticks and hosepipes by three local farmers, two of whom employed him. (Photograph by Peter Magubane BAHA)
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Orientation: landscape
    Pixel Size: 5670 x 4103
    Media Id: 134_36
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Keywords: death, Lazarus Sibisi, farm, labour, hut, Fios, Peter Magubane, women, child labour, 1962, April 1962, 1960s,
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: BHA0073_009.tif
    Title: Little Boy's Story Of Death On Farm
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2008102321:SAED:LABOUR:POLITICS:PERSONALITIES:APR 1962 - Little Boy's Story Of Death On Farm - His son died - Old Sibisi walks alone, grief written in the deep lines of his weather-beaten face. Fios was chained, kicked and thrashed with sticks and hosepipes by three local farmers, two of whom employed him. (Photograph by Peter Magubane BAHA)
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Country: South Africa
    Location: Dundee - Natal
    Orientation: portrait
    Pixel Size: 3941 x 5639
    Media Id: 134_28
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

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    Image Number: dm2000021017
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Stories
    Description: DM2000021017:POLITICS:PERSONALITY:AUG1954 - Rev. Z.R. Mahabane Pastor Politico - Z.R. was born in Thaba N'chu,in 1881, where as a boy he played with the children of white farmers. whom liked to call 'my friends'. Later at Mojira, he as fellow student of Prof D.D.T Jabavu, fonder of the All African Convention, In 1908 he began as teacher, then became acourt intepreter and a minister of relebion. (Photograph by Drum Photographer @ Baileys Archives) anc, Bloemfontein congress,
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Stories
    Orientation: landscape
    Pixel Size: 3543 x 2381
    Media Id: 23_579
    Credit: Drum Stories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: dm2000021017
    Title: -Rev. Z.R. Mahabane
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2000021017:POLITICS:PERSONALITY:AUG1954 - Rev. Z.R. Mahabane Pastor Politico - Z.R. was born in Thaba N'chu,in 1881, where as a boy he played with the children of white farmers. whom liked to call 'my friends'. Later at Mojira, he as fellow student of Prof D.D.T Jabavu, fonder of the All African Convention, In 1908 he began as teacher, then became acourt intepreter and a minister of relebion. (Photograph by Drum Photographer @ Baileys Archives) anc, Bloemfontein congress,
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Orientation: landscape
    Pixel Size: 3543 x 2381
    Media Id: 69_473
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Keywords: Drum Magazine, South Africa, Africa, South African history, black and white image, horizontal, black African man, 1954, August, 1950s, public speaking, Rev. Z.R. Mahabane, Drum Photographer, ,
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: dm2000021101
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2000021101:SAED:LABOUR:SOCIAL:JUN1952 - Mr Drum Looks At The Tot System - The farm worker - should he be paid in Liquor? New bill plans to pay transvaal Africans in liquor. What is the 'system'? In the Cape Province, particularly in the wine-growing areas, a large number of Coloured farm workers have part of their wages paid in wine instead of money. The wine is given in 'tots' several times a day. Usually if a worker doesn't take his tot, he gets nothing instead. Farmers say that the tot makes workers work better, and that they can't do without it. (Photograph by Jurgen Schadeberg
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Pixel Size: 2190 x 2010
    Media Id: 44_64
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Keywords: 1950s, June, 1952, square, black and white image, South African history, Africa, South Africa, Drum Magazine, The Tot System, payment methods, farm workers, black African men, ,
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: dm2000021111
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2000021111:SAED:LABOUR:SOCIAL:JUN1952 - Mr Drum Looks At The Tot System - The farm worker - should he be paid in Liquor? New bill plans to pay transvaal Africans in liquor. What is the 'system'? In the Cape Province, particularly in the wine-growing areas, a large number of Coloured farm workers have part of their wages paid in wine instead of money. The wine is given in 'tots' several times a day. Usually if a worker doesn't take his tot, he gets nothing instead. Farmers say that the tot makes workers work better, and that they can't do without it. (Photograph by Jurgen Schadeberg Baileys Archive) Neg 104
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Pixel Size: 2190 x 2010
    Media Id: 43_834
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Keywords: 1950s, June, square, black and white image, South African history, Africa, South Africa, Drum Magazine, 1952, The Tot System, payment methods, farm workers, smoking, Coloured man, ,
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: dm2000021112
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2000021112:SAED:LABOUR:SOCIAL:JUN1952 - Mr Drum Looks At The Tot System - The farm worker - should he be paid in Liquor? New bill plans to pay transvaal Africans in liquor. What is the 'system'? In the Cape Province, particularly in the wine-growing areas, a large number of Coloured farm workers have part of their wages paid in wine instead of money. The wine is given in 'tots' several times a day. Usually if a worker doesn't take his tot, he gets nothing instead. Farmers say that the tot makes workers work better, and that they can't do without it. (Photograph by Jurgen Schadeberg Baileys Archive) Neg 104
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Pixel Size: 2190 x 2010
    Media Id: 43_550
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Keywords: 1950s, square, black and white image, South African history, Africa, South Africa, Drum Magazine, June, 1952, The Tot System, payment methods, farm workers, drinking, black African men, ,
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: dm2000040524
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2000040524:EAED:POLITICS:SOCIAL:FEB1963 - The Great Divide, Hunger For Land - All Southern Rhodesia is divided into two parts, the black part and the white part, by the massive chunk of legislation called the Land Appointment Act. A white farmer's land in sight of the Chinamora African Reserve. (Photograph by Drum Photographer BAHA)
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Orientation: landscape
    Pixel Size: 3326 x 2082
    Media Id: 42_698
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Keywords: Drum Magazine, Africa, black and white image, horizontal, African history, Land Appointment Act, Zimbabwe, February, 1963, 1960s, crisis, segregation, farmers, farms, Chinamora African Reserve, farm workers, ,
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: dm2000040525
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2000040525:EAED:POLITICS:SOCIAL:FEB1963 - The Great Divide, Hunger For Land - All Southern Rhodesia is divided into two parts, the black part and the white part, by the massive chunk of legislation called the Land Appointment Act. The sandy farm of Mrs Mugocheki yields only 3 bags of corn to the acre. (Photograph by Drum Photographer BAHA) Zimbabwe
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Orientation: portrait
    Pixel Size: 2178 x 2841
    Media Id: 43_271
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Keywords: Land Appointment Act, farmers, Drum Magazine, Africa, black and white image, farms, vertical, African history, Zimbabwe, February, 1963, 1960s, Mrs Mugocheki, crisis, segregation, corn fields, ,
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: dm2000040726
    Title: Africa's White Gold - A jubilant poacher celebrates his kill
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2000040726:EAED:SOCIAL:DEC1980 - Africa's White Gold - A jubilant poacher celebrates his kill. Poaching is endemic in Kenya, with even government officials being involved. Western conservationists decry elephant slaughter, yet for many African farmers the elephant is a serious threat to their livelyhood. For the ivory trader the elephant is a lucrative source of income. (Photograph by Drum Photographer BAHA) nature conservation
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Orientation: landscape
    Pixel Size: 2672 x 2162
    Media Id: 44_118
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Keywords: Drum Magazine, Africa, black and white image, horizontal, jubilation, jubilant, African history, Kenya, December, 1980, 1980s, poachers, elephants, ivory, black African men, Drum Photographer, ,
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: dm2000041812
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2000041812:EAED:SOCIAL:WOMEN:AGRICULTURE:NODATE - One of Tanganyika's greatest problem was the vast physical dispersion of its rural population. Nyerere made this issue, and his plans to tackle it, the major topic of his first presidential speech. The response was immediate and dramatic. Scores of Idealistic Tanganyikans threw themselves on to the land, founding over 300 embryonic collective farms by early 1964. Within a year most had collapsed. Most of these ventures were totally unplanned. (Photograph by Drum Photographer BAHA) Tanzania
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Country: Tanzania
    Orientation: landscape
    Pixel Size: 2462 x 1923
    Media Id: 42_597
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Keywords: Drum Magazine, Africa, black and white image, horizontal, black African people, African history, Tanganyika, Tanzania, 1960s, farming, farmers, crowds, harvesting, ,
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: dm2000050417
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2000050417:EAED:AGRICULTURE:NODATE - Farmers with a bull - (Photograph by Unknown Photographer BAHA)
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Orientation: landscape
    Pixel Size: 2521 x 1842
    Media Id: 42_692
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Keywords: Drum Magazine, South Africa, Africa, South African history, black and white image, horizontal, White African men, farmers, black African men, bulls, stock handling, ,
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: dm2000081407
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2000081407:GCP:SOCIAL:25AUG1963 - They expected more crime, drunks. Instead it was...The Big Flop. Thursday August 15, 1962. Remember the day? Of course, the day prohibition ended. And after a year of free drinking and liquor-for-all, spirits are still high, everywhere. Wine farmers are happy, bar owners are happy, the breweries and distilleries are happy, and even the police are jubilant: what had been expected to be a national sozzle - an extended orgy of drunken debauchery, chapter one in the book of misery, the first step towards death by rotting - turned out to be so quiet, so sedate and so undramatic that even the harshest citics had to admit it: all the fuss and bother was nothing more than a big flop. (Photograph by Drum Photographer Baileys Archives)
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Orientation: landscape
    Pixel Size: 2756 x 1727
    Media Id: 43_1528
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Keywords: Drum Magazine, South Africa, Africa, South African history, black and white image, horizontal, shebeens, black African men, August, 1963, 1960s, drinking, bars, ,
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: dm2000121501
    Title: Farm Labour - We Call It Semi-Slavery
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2000121501:SAED:SOCIAL:APARTHEID:FEB1959 - We Call It Semi-Slavery - In seven years nothing has changed round Bethal way - A South African farm workerin 1959. Barefoot. Dressed in sacks. His average wage, if he's a man, is 2 12s a month. For a woman its 1 5s. How can his life be anything but wretched? How can his work be anything but inefficient? This is the system favoured by many farmers in South Africa. Because it works out so cheap. Yet proper pay and decent conditions for farm workers could in ten years build a home market that would give a new prosperity. (Photograph by Peter Magubane Baileys Archives) farm labour, assault
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Orientation: portrait
    Pixel Size: 2068 x 2612
    Media Id: 42_1064
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Keywords: South Africa, Drum Magazine, February, 1959, 1950s, black and white image, Bethal, vertical, Africa, Mpumalanga, barefoot, black African child, dirt road, farm labourers, poor, semi-slavery, Peter Magubane, ,
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: dm2000121512
    Title: Farm Labour - We Call It Semi-Slavery
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2000121512:SAED:SOCIAL:APARTHEID:FEB1959 - We Call It Semi-Slavery - In seven years nothing has changed round Bethal way - Convict prisoners at farm work. From a string of farm jails cheap convict labour is let out to farmers. The government makes about 400.000 a year in hiring fees. The convicts work frantically under armed guard. Recently, when a convict escaped and killed a warder, Bethal farmers said they "lived in fear of their lives constantly." Then why support the system, with its iniquities and with the discontent it breeds? (Photograph by Peter Magubane Baileys Archives) farm labour, assault
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Orientation: portrait
    Pixel Size: 1935 x 2421
    Media Id: 43_1239
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Keywords: farm workers, 1950s, black African man, black and white image, convict labourers, South African history, Africa, Drum Magazine, South Africa, Peter Magubane, vertical, 1959, February, Bethal, child labour, apartheid, ,
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

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    Image Number: dm2000121514
    Title: Weneen: The Place Of Weeping
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2000121514:SAED:SOCIAL:WOMEN:MAR1958 - Weneen: The Place Of Weeping - There is a feeling of uncertainty among Africans in the Weenen area, where some tenant farmers were given short notice to quit their homes. Last month Drum told shocking hospital conditions at Weenen. Now read the grim story of farm workers in the area. For years the little farming town in Natal was known by Africans as Kwa Nobamba, "Where we caught them." But today it is being called the place of weeping. (Photograph by Peter Magubane Baileys Archives) farm labour
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Orientation: landscape
    Pixel Size: 2438 x 1840
    Media Id: 44_75
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Keywords: March, 1958, Drum Magazine, South Africa, women, South African history, black and white image, horizontal, farm labourers, labour, apartheid, Group Areas Act, agriculture, farming, 1950s, Weneen, place of weeping, farm labour, Peter Magubane, working, ,
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: dm2000121516
    Title: Weneen: The Place Of Weeping
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2000121516:SAED:SOCIAL:APARTHEID:MAR1958 - Weneen: The Place Of Weeping - There is a feeling of uncertainty among Africans in the Weenen area, where some tenant farmers were given short notice to quit their homes. Last month Drum told shocking hospital conditions at Weenen. Now read the grim story of farm workers in the area. For years the little farming town in Natal was known by Africans as Kwa Nobamba, "Where we caught them." But today it is being called the place of weeping. (Photograph by Peter Magubane Baileys Archives)
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Orientation: landscape
    Pixel Size: 2455 x 1909
    Media Id: 43_306
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Keywords: March, Drum Magazine, South Africa, South African history, black and white image, horizontal, 1958, women, farm labourers, labour, apartheid, Group Areas Act, agriculture, farming, 1950s, Peter Magubane, ,
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: dm2000121801
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Stories
    Description: DM2000121801:SAED:SOCIAL:WOMEN:MAR1958 - Weneen: The Place Of Weeping - There is a feeling of uncertainty among Africans in the Weenen area, where some tenant farmers were given short notice to quit their homes. Last month Drum told shocking hospital conditions at Weenen. Now read the grim story of farm workers in the area. For years the little farming town in Natal was known by Africans as Kwa Nobamba, "Where we caught them." But today it is being called the place of weeping. (Photograph by Peter Magubane © Baileys Archives) farm labour, slate, cows
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Stories
    Pixel Size: 2245 x 1944
    Media Id: 19_730
    Credit: Drum Stories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: dm2000121801
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2000121801:SAED:SOCIAL:WOMEN:MAR1958 - Weneen: The Place Of Weeping - There is a feeling of uncertainty among Africans in the Weenen area, where some tenant farmers were given short notice to quit their homes. Last month Drum told shocking hospital conditions at Weenen. Now read the grim story of farm workers in the area. For years the little farming town in Natal was known by Africans as Kwa Nobamba, "Where we caught them." But today it is being called the place of weeping. (Photograph by Peter Magubane Baileys Archives) farm labour, slate, cows
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Pixel Size: 2245 x 1944
    Media Id: 70_34
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Keywords: March, 1958, Drum Magazine, South Africa, South African history, black and white image, square, women, farm labourers, labour, apartheid, Group Areas Act, agriculture, farming, 1950s, ,
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: dm2001052102
    Title: he Record Of A Grim Year - Potato Boycott
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2001052102:SAED:POLITICS:JAN1960 - The Record Of A Grim Year - Potatoe Boycott. Boycott ends people buy potatoes. By August, ANC, felt farmers had learnt their lesson, and ended boycott. Conditions improved a little. (Photograph by Drum Photographer BAHA)
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Orientation: landscape
    Pixel Size: 3540 x 2724
    Media Id: 43_300
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Keywords: South Africa, Drum Magazine, Africa, South African history, black and white image, horizontal, potatoes, boycotts, January, 1960, 1960s, ANC, farmers, industrial activities, protests, warehouses, Drum Photographer, January 1960, ,
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: dm2001071201
    Title: Mamathola Tribe
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2001071201DM2001071202:GCP:SOCIAL:3AUG1958 - Mamathola, This Once Rich Tribe - We Must Leave Metz. The Native reserve of Metz at the foothills of the Magaliesburg. For 200 years the 1,200 families of the Mamathola have been called one of the richest tribes in the country: but that is a thing of the past. Today after a long peaceful existence, they face the danger of becoming a wondering tribe. Knowledgable farmers who once owned acres upon acres of orchards, and old men who were expert farmers in their day, had all the same story to tell me. The tribe was moved from their ancestral land in the lush Letsitele valley in the Wolkberg Mountains. Story by Obed Musi. (Photograph by Alf Kumalo BAHA) see Post Aug 10 1958
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Orientation: panoramic
    Pixel Size: 4879 x 2383
    Media Id: 43_1649
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Keywords: Drum Magazine, South Africa, Africa, South African history, black and white image, horizontal, Gauteng, Magaliesburg, August, 1958, 1950s, Mamatholas, Metz Nature Reserve, rural, huts, foothills, Obed Musi, Alf Kumalo, GCP, August 1958, ,
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: dm2001071202
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2001071202:GCP:SOCIAL:3AUG1958 - Mamathola, This Once Rich Tribe - We Must Leave Metz. The Native reserve of Metz at the foothills of the Magaliesburg. For 200 years the 1,200 families of the Mamathola have been called one of the richest tribes in the country: but that is a thing of the past. Today after a long peaceful existence, they face the danger of becoming a wondering tribe. Knowledgable farmers who once owned acres upon acres of orchards, and old men who were expert farmers in their day, had all the same story to tell me. The tribe was moved from their ancestral land in the lush Letsitele valley in the Wolkberg Mountains. Story by Obed Musi. (Photograph by Alf Kumalo BAHA) see Post Aug 10, 1958
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Orientation: panoramic
    Pixel Size: 4020 x 2442
    Media Id: 42_646
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Keywords: Gauteng, Drum Magazine, South Africa, Africa, South African history, black and white image, horizontal, Magaliesburg, August, 1958, 1950s, Mamatholas, Metz Nature Reserve, rural, huts, foothills, ,
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: dm2001082001
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2001082001:GCP:SOCIAL:3AUG1958 - Mamathola, This Once Rich Tribe - We Must Leave Metz. The Native reserve of Metz at the foothills of the Magaliesburg. For 200 years the 1,200 families of the Mamathola have been called one of the richest tribes in the country: but that is a thing of the past. Today after a long peaceful existence, they face the danger of becoming a wondering tribe. Knowledgable farmers who once owned acres upon acres of orchards, and old men who were expert farmers in their day, had all the same story to tell me. The tribe was moved from their ancestral land in the lush Letsitele valley in the Wolkberg Mountains. Story by Obed Musi. (Photograph by Alf Kumalo BAHA) see Post Aug 10 1958
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Orientation: portrait
    Pixel Size: 1907 x 2956
    Media Id: 44_140
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Keywords: Drum Magazine, South Africa, South African history, black and white image, 1958, vertical, August, apartheid, forced removals, Group Areas Act, Magaliesberg, Mamathola , black African people, ,
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: dm2001082002
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2001082002:GCP:SOCIAL:3AUG1958 - Mamathola, This Once Rich Tribe - We Must Leave Metz. The Native reserve of Metz at the foothills of the Magaliesburg. For 200 years the 1,200 families of the Mamathola have been called one of the richest tribes in the country: but that is a thing of the past. Today after a long peaceful existence, they face the danger of becoming a wondering tribe. Knowledgable farmers who once owned acres upon acres of orchards, and old men who were expert farmers in their day, had all the same story to tell me. The tribe was moved from their ancestral land in the lush Letsitele valley in the Wolkberg Mountains. Story by Obed Musi. (Photograph by Alf Kumalo BAHA) see Post Aug 10 1958
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Orientation: portrait
    Pixel Size: 1908 x 2990
    Media Id: 42_782
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Keywords: 1958, August, Drum Magazine, South Africa, South African history, black and white image, apartheid, vertical, forced removals, Group Areas Act, Magaliesberg, Mamathola , black African people, ,
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: dm2001082003
    Title: Mamathola Tribe
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2001082003:GCP:SOCIAL:3AUG1958 - Mamathola, This Once Rich Tribe - We Must Leave Metz. The Native reserve of Metz at the foothills of the Magaliesburg. For 200 years the 1,200 families of the Mamathola have been called one of the richest tribes in the country: but that is a thing of the past. Today after a long peaceful existence, they face the danger of becoming a wondering tribe. Knowledgable farmers who once owned acres upon acres of orchards, and old men who were expert farmers in their day, had all the same story to tell me. The tribe was moved from their ancestral land in the lush Letsitele valley in the Wolkberg Mountains. Story by Obed Musi. (Photograph by Alf Kumalo BAHA) see Post Aug 10 1958
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Orientation: panoramic
    Pixel Size: 3030 x 1840
    Media Id: 43_204
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Keywords: Drum Magazine, South Africa, South African history, black and white image, 1958, August, politics, apartheid, forced removals, Group Areas Act, Mamathola , black African people, Magaliesberg, horizontal, 1950s, Alf Kumalo,
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: dm2001082004
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2001082004:GCP:SOCIAL:3AUG1958 - Mamathola, This Once Rich Tribe - We Must Leave Metz. The Native reserve of Metz at the foothills of the Magaliesburg. For 200 years the 1,200 families of the Mamathola have been called one of the richest tribes in the country: but that is a thing of the past. Today after a long peaceful existence, they face the danger of becoming a wondering tribe. Knowledgable farmers who once owned acres upon acres of orchards, and old men who were expert farmers in their day, had all the same story to tell me. The tribe was moved from their ancestral land in the lush Letsitele valley in the Wolkberg Mountains. Story by Obed Musi. (Photograph by Alf Kumalo BAHA) see Post Aug 10 1958
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Orientation: panoramic
    Pixel Size: 3030 x 1840
    Media Id: 43_229
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Keywords: Drum Magazine, South Africa, 1958, South African history, black and white image, August, politics, apartheid, forced removals, Group Areas Act, Mamathola , black African people, Magaliesberg, horizontal, 1950s, ,
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: dm2001082005
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2001082005:GCP:SOCIAL:3AUG1958 - Mamathola, This Once Rich Tribe - We Must Leave Metz. The Native reserve of Metz at the foothills of the Magaliesburg. For 200 years the 1,200 families of the Mamathola have been called one of the richest tribes in the country: but that is a thing of the past. Today after a long peaceful existence, they face the danger of becoming a wondering tribe. Knowledgable farmers who once owned acres upon acres of orchards, and old men who were expert farmers in their day, had all the same story to tell me. The tribe was moved from their ancestral land in the lush Letsitele valley in the Wolkberg Mountains. Story by Obed Musi. (Photograph by Alf Kumalo BAHA) see Post Aug 10 1958
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Orientation: panoramic
    Pixel Size: 3030 x 1840
    Media Id: 42_733
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Keywords: 1958, Drum Magazine, South Africa, South African history, black and white image, August, politics, apartheid, forced removals, Group Areas Act, Mamathola , black African people, Magaliesberg, horizontal, 1950s, ,
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: dm2001082006
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2001082006:GCP:SOCIAL:3AUG1958 - Mamathola, This Once Rich Tribe - We Must Leave Metz. The Native reserve of Metz at the foothills of the Magaliesburg. For 200 years the 1,200 families of the Mamathola have been called one of the richest tribes in the country: but that is a thing of the past. Today after a long peaceful existence, they face the danger of becoming a wondering tribe. Knowledgable farmers who once owned acres upon acres of orchards, and old men who were expert farmers in their day, had all the same story to tell me. The tribe was moved from their ancestral land in the lush Letsitele valley in the Wolkberg Mountains. Story by Obed Musi. (Photograph by Alf Kumalo BAHA) see Post Aug 10 1958
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Orientation: panoramic
    Pixel Size: 3050 x 1870
    Media Id: 44_162
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Keywords: horizontal, 1958, August, Drum Magazine, South Africa, South African history, black and white image, politics, apartheid, forced removals, Group Areas Act, Mamathola , black African people, Magaliesberg, 1950s, ,
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: dm2001082007
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2001082007:GCP:SOCIAL:3AUG1958 - Mamathola, This Once Rich Tribe - We Must Leave Metz. The Native reserve of Metz at the foothills of the Magaliesburg. For 200 years the 1,200 families of the Mamathola have been called one of the richest tribes in the country: but that is a thing of the past. Today after a long peaceful existence, they face the danger of becoming a wondering tribe. Knowledgable farmers who once owned acres upon acres of orchards, and old men who were expert farmers in their day, had all the same story to tell me. The tribe was moved from their ancestral land in the lush Letsitele valley in the Wolkberg Mountains. Story by Obed Musi. (Photograph by Alf Kumalo BAHA) see Post Aug 10 1958
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Orientation: landscape
    Pixel Size: 2970 x 1860
    Media Id: 43_1129
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Keywords: horizontal, 1958, August, politics, Drum Magazine, South Africa, South African history, black and white image, apartheid, forced removals, Group Areas Act, Mamathola , black African people, Magaliesberg, 1950s, ,
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: dm2001082008
    Title: Mamathola, This Once Rich Tribe
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2001082008:GCP:SOCIAL:3AUG1958 - Mamathola, This Once Rich Tribe - We Must Leave Metz. The Native reserve of Metz at the foothills of the Magaliesburg. For 200 years the 1,200 families of the Mamathola have been called one of the richest tribes in the country: but that is a thing of the past. Today after a long peaceful existence, they face the danger of becoming a wondering tribe. Knowledgable farmers who once owned acres upon acres of orchards, and old men who were expert farmers in their day, had all the same story to tell me. The tribe was moved from their ancestral land in the lush Letsitele valley in the Wolkberg Mountains. Story by Obed Musi. (Photograph by Alf Kumalo BAHA) see Post Aug 10 1958
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Pixel Size: 1950 x 1920
    Media Id: 44_195
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Keywords: Drum Magazine, South Africa, South African history, black and white image, square, 1958, August, apartheid, Magaliesberg, Mamathola , Group Areas Act, forced removals, black African people, Alf Kumalo, Mamathola tribe, ,
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: dm2001082009
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2001082009:GCP:SOCIAL:3AUG1958 - Mamathola, This Once Rich Tribe - We Must Leave Metz. The Native reserve of Metz at the foothills of the Magaliesburg. For 200 years the 1,200 families of the Mamathola have been called one of the richest tribes in the country: but that is a thing of the past. Today after a long peaceful existence, they face the danger of becoming a wondering tribe. Knowledgable farmers who once owned acres upon acres of orchards, and old men who were expert farmers in their day, had all the same story to tell me. The tribe was moved from their ancestral land in the lush Letsitele valley in the Wolkberg Mountains. Story by Obed Musi. (Photograph by Alf Kumalo BAHA) see Post Aug 10 1958
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Pixel Size: 1933 x 1915
    Media Id: 43_1082
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Keywords: Drum Magazine, South Africa, 1958, South African history, black and white image, square, August, apartheid, Magaliesberg, Mamathola , Group Areas Act, forced removals, black African people, ,
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: dm2001082010
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Stories
    Description: DM2001082010:GCP:SOCIAL:3AUG1958 - Mamathola, This Once Rich Tribe - We Must Leave Metz. The Native reserve of Metz at the foothills of the Magaliesburg. For 200 years the 1,200 families of the Mamathola have been called one of the richest tribes in the country: but that is a thing of the past. Today after a long peaceful existence, they face the danger of becoming a wondering tribe. Knowledgable farmers who once owned acres upon acres of orchards, and old men who were expert farmers in their day, had all the same story to tell me. The tribe was moved from their ancestral land in the lush Letsitele valley in the Wolkberg Mountains. Story by Obed Musi. (Photograph by Alf Kumalo © BAHA) see Post Aug 10 1958
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Stories
    Pixel Size: 1915 x 1938
    Media Id: 23_514
    Credit: Drum Stories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: dm2001082010
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2001082010:GCP:SOCIAL:3AUG1958 - Mamathola, This Once Rich Tribe - We Must Leave Metz. The Native reserve of Metz at the foothills of the Magaliesburg. For 200 years the 1,200 families of the Mamathola have been called one of the richest tribes in the country: but that is a thing of the past. Today after a long peaceful existence, they face the danger of becoming a wondering tribe. Knowledgable farmers who once owned acres upon acres of orchards, and old men who were expert farmers in their day, had all the same story to tell me. The tribe was moved from their ancestral land in the lush Letsitele valley in the Wolkberg Mountains. Story by Obed Musi. (Photograph by Alf Kumalo BAHA) see Post Aug 10 1958
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Country: South Africa
    Pixel Size: 1915 x 1938
    Media Id: 69_545
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Keywords: 1958, Drum Magazine, South Africa, South African history, black and white image, August, square, apartheid, Magaliesberg, Mamathola , Group Areas Act, forced removals, black African people, ,
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: dm2001082012
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2001082012:GCP:SOCIAL:3AUG1958 - Mamathola, This Once Rich Tribe - We Must Leave Metz. The Native reserve of Metz at the foothills of the Magaliesburg. For 200 years the 1,200 families of the Mamathola have been called one of the richest tribes in the country: but that is a thing of the past. Today after a long peaceful existence, they face the danger of becoming a wondering tribe. Knowledgable farmers who once owned acres upon acres of orchards, and old men who were expert farmers in their day, had all the same story to tell me. The tribe was moved from their ancestral land in the lush Letsitele valley in the Wolkberg Mountains. Story by Obed Musi. (Photograph by Alf Kumalo BAHA) see Post Aug 10 1958
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Pixel Size: 1950 x 1940
    Media Id: 43_635
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Keywords: 1958, August, Drum Magazine, South Africa, South African history, black and white image, square, apartheid, Magaliesberg, Mamathola , Group Areas Act, forced removals, black African people, ,
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: dm2001082013
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2001082013:GCP:SOCIAL:3AUG1958 - Mamathola, This Once Rich Tribe - We Must Leave Metz. The Native reserve of Metz at the foothills of the Magaliesburg. For 200 years the 1,200 families of the Mamathola have been called one of the richest tribes in the country: but that is a thing of the past. Today after a long peaceful existence, they face the danger of becoming a wondering tribe. Knowledgable farmers who once owned acres upon acres of orchards, and old men who were expert farmers in their day, had all the same story to tell me. The tribe was moved from their ancestral land in the lush Letsitele valley in the Wolkberg Mountains. Story by Obed Musi. (Photograph by Alf Kumalo BAHA) see Post Aug 10 1958
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Pixel Size: 1960 x 1920
    Media Id: 42_979
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Keywords: 1958, August, apartheid, Drum Magazine, South Africa, South African history, black and white image, square, Magaliesberg, Mamathola , Group Areas Act, forced removals, black African people, ,
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

    X
    Image Number: dm2006120401
    Path: african.pictures / Bailey's African History Archive / Drum Social Histories
    Description: DM2006120401:POLITICS:PERSONALITY:AUG1954 - Rev. Z.R. Mahabane Pastor Politico - Z.R. was born in Thaba N'chu,in 1881, where as a boy he played with the children of white farmers. whom liked to call 'my friends'. Later at Mojira, he as fellow student of Prof D.D.T Jabavu, fonder of the All African Convention, In 1908 he began as teacher, then became acourt intepreter and a minister of relebion. (Photograph by Drum Photographer © Baileys Archives) anc, Bloemfontein congress,
    Collections: Baileys African History Archive
    Subcollections: Drum Social Histories
    Country: South Africa
    Pixel Size: 4642 x 4649
    Media Id: 44_243
    Credit: Drum Social Histories / Baileys African History Archive / Africa Media Online
    Keywords: Drum Magazine, South Africa, Africa, South African history, black and white image, Rev. Z.R. Mahabane, square, black African man, August, 1954, 1950s, ,
    Model Release: No
    Property Release: No

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Baileys African History Archive

2007/002089/23

PRIVACY POLICY

THIS PRIVACY POLICY (“POLICY”) GOVERNS THE PROCESSING OF PERSONAL INFORMATION BY Baileys African History Archive IN CONNECTION WITH Baileys African History Archive’S ARCHIVE WEBSITE (“WEBSITE”) LOCATED AT http://baha.africamediaonline.com/. YOUR USE OF THE WEBSITE IS SUBJECT TO THIS POLICY. BY USING THIS WEBSITE, YOU SIGNIFY YOUR CONSENT TO PROCESSING OF YOUR PERSONAL INFORMATION IN ACCORDANCE WITH THIS PRIVACY POLICY.

Baileys African History Archive MAY AMEND THIS POLICY AT ANY TIME. AMENDED TERMS SHALL BE EFFECTIVE IMMEDIATELY UPON THE POSTING OF THE REVISED POLICY AND ANY SUBSEQUENT ACTIVITY IN RELATION TO THE WEBSITE SHALL BE GOVERNED BY SUCH AMENDED TERMS. IF YOU DO NOT AGREE WITH ANY TERM IN THIS POLICY, PLEASE DO NOT USE THIS WEBSITE.

This Agreement was last revised on [Revised date].
Enquiries: Bongi Maswanganyi

Revised date: 31-03-2020

  1. PERSONAL INFORMATION COLLECTION AND USE
    1. Subject to consent, Baileys African History Archive collects, stores and uses information from Archive Content Subjects (persons whose personal information is determined from the digitisation or digital processing of records belonging to Baileys African History Archive) for the following purposes:
      1. to compile and maintain an archive for Baileys African History Archive,
      2. to be published in marketing and communications materials, including but not limited to, school magazines, brochures, newsletters and published photographs on the Website or otherwise,
      3. to provide the Archive Content Subjects with direct marketing communications regarding Baileys African History Archive’s activities and news.
    2. We collect Personal Information from the following persons:
      1. natural persons over 18,
      2. natural persons under 18 with the consent of a competent person,
      3. juristic persons such as companies duly represented by a representative,
      4. people who send enquiries or requests to our contact email address.
    3. Categories of persons listed in clause 1.4 may include Website Users and Archive Content Subjects and in certain instances, persons may be categorised as both.
    4. Baileys African History Archive may also automatically collect and store non-personally identifiable information from Your use of the Website.
    5. Baileys African History Archive may collect the following personal information from Website Users:
      1. name,
      2. surname,
      3. username and password,
      4. job description,
      5. organisation name,
      6. organisation type,
      7. organisation URL,
      8. email address,
      9. telephone number,
      10. mobile telephone number,
      11. facsimile number,
      12. address,
      13. city and province,
      14. postal code,
      15. country,
      16. type of organisation,
      17. the market the organisation serves,
      18. non-personal browsing habits and click patterns,
      19. IP address,
      20. purchasing information and buying patterns,
      21. any additional information necessary to deliver our services,
      22. details of responses to Your enquiries and any online communications between us and You, and
      23. any information provided to us by You.
    6. Baileys African History Archive may collect the following personal information from Archive Content Subjects: 1.8.1 name,
      1. name,
      2. surname,
      3. date of birth,
      4. age,
      5. gender,
      6. race,
      7. language,
      8. culture,
      9. physical health,
      10. ethnic origin,
      11. education information,
      12. religion,
      13. disability,
      14. marital status,
      15. pregnancy,
      16. mental health,
      17. biometric information,
      18. location information,
      19. employment history,
      20. personal opinions, views or preferences,
      21. The views or opinions of another individual about the person;
      22. videos recordings,
      23. audio recordings,
      24. manuscripts,
      25. photographs, and
      26. any additional information that can form part of the archive of Baileys African History Archive.
    7. We may use cookies or other tracking technologies to collect information such as the pages You visit or the information You request. The Website hosting agents and/or service providers may automatically log Your “IP address” which is a unique identifier for Your computer and/or other access devices. Such information collected is for aggregate purposes only.
  2. CONSENT TO PROCESS YOUR PERSONAL INFORMATION
    1. If You are a Website User, You consent to the processing of Your Personal Information specifically including (i) to greet the User when he/she accesses the Website, (ii) to inform the Website User of facts relating to his/her access and use of the Website as well as to assist with problems, (iii) to provide the Website User with access to the Website and the associated Website services, (iv) to provide the Website User with direct marketing communications regarding Baileys African History Archive’s activities and news, and/or (v) to compile non-personal statistical information about browsing habits, click patterns and access to the Website.
    2. If You are an Archive Content Subject, You consent to the processing of Your Personal Information specifically including (i) to compile and maintain an archive for Baileys African History Archive, (ii) to be published in marketing and communications materials, including but not limited to, school magazines, brochures, newsletters and published photographs on the Website or otherwise, and/or (iii) to provide the You with direct marketing communications regarding Baileys African History Archive’s activities and news.
    3. The processing of Your Personal Information shall include the collection, receipt, recording, organisation, collation, storage, updating or modification, retrieval, alteration, consultation, use; dissemination by means of transmission, distribution or making available in any other form; or merging, linking, as well as blocking, degradation, erasure or destruction of information.
    4. By using our Website, You represent that You are of the age of 18 or older or that you have the necessary authorisation from a competent person and that you consent to Your Personal Information to be processed by Baileys African History Archive.
    5. You expressly consent to Baileys African History Archive retaining Your Personal Information once Your relationship with Baileys African History Archive has been terminated for: aggregate, statistical, reporting and historical purposes.
    6. In the event that You wish to revoke all consent pertaining to Your Personal Information and/or You would like Baileys African History Archive to remove and/or delete Your Personal Information entirely, You may contact Baileys African History Archive via email to bahapix@iafrica.com
  3. HANDLING OF PERSONAL INFORMATION
    1. Baileys African History Archive endeavours to comply with all laws and regulations applicable to Baileys African History Archive pertaining to information and communications privacy including, but not limited to, the 1996 South African Constitution and the Protection of Personal Information Act 4 of 2013 (“the Act”). Baileys African History Archive applies the principles of protection of Personal Information under such Act and further legislation referred to in the Act.
    2. Baileys African History Archive seeks to ensure the quality, accuracy and confidentiality of Personal Information in its possession. You warrant that all personal information supplied by You is both true and correct at the time of provision. In the event of any aspect of Your personal information changing post submission, it is Your responsibility to immediately notify Baileys African History Archive of the said changes by email to Bongi Maswanganyi. You agree to indemnify and hold Baileys African History Archive, its officers, directors, employees, agents, and suppliers harmless from and against any claims, damages, actions and liabilities including without limitation, indirect, incidental, special, consequential or punitive damages arising out of Baileys African History Archive’s reliance on Your personal information should Your personal information contain any errors or inaccuracies.
    3. You warrant that You have the authority, permissions and consents to provide Baileys African History Archive with any third party information submitted to Baileys African History Archive.
    4. Baileys African History Archive will take all reasonable measures in order to ensure Your Personal Information is appropriately safeguarded, these precautions include but are not limited to: access control mechanisms via username and password and software protection for information for security.
    5. Should an unauthorised person/s gain access to Your Personal Information Baileys African History Archive will contact You within a reasonable time to inform You of such access.
    6. Baileys African History Archive may share Your personal Information with authorised third parties such as service providers to Baileys African History Archive. These include, but are not limited to digital archiving service providers. Baileys African History Archive does not permit these parties to use such information for any other purpose than to perform the services that Baileys African History Archive has instructed them to provide. All processing is compatible with such purpose.
    7. Baileys African History Archive may appoint certain agents, third parties and/or service providers which operate outside the borders of the Republic of South Africa. In these circumstances Baileys African History Archive will be required to transmit Your Personal Information outside South Africa. The purpose of the trans-border transfer of Your Personal Information may include, but is not limited to: data hosting and storage. You expressly consent to the trans-border flow of Your Personal Information.
    8. The Website may contain links to other websites. Baileys African History Archive is not responsible for the privacy practices of such third party websites.
  4. RECORDS OF PERSONAL INFORMATION
    1. Records relating to the provision of Baileys African History Archive products and/or services by Baileys African History Archive to You and the Personal Information submitted by You is retained for publication on the Website and/or to provide you with the Website services.
    2. Such records may be required to be retained in terms of legislated records retention requirements, Baileys African History Archive’ operational purposes and/or for production as evidence by Baileys African History Archive in legal proceedings.
    3. In terms of Section 14(2) of the Act records of personal information may be retained for periods in excess of those contemplated in 4.1 for historical purposes. Baileys African History Archive warrants that appropriate safeguards are in place to prevent the records being used for any other purpose.
    4. Baileys African History Archive may disclose Your Personal Information under the following circumstances: 4.4.1 To comply with the law or with legal process;
      1. To protect and defend Baileys African History Archive’s rights, equipment, facilities and other property;
      2. To protect Baileys African History Archive against misuse or unauthorised use of the Website and/or products and/or services; and/or
      3. To protect other Website Users or third parties affected negatively by Your actions in use of the products/services and/or the Website.
  5. ACCEPTABLE USE
    In connection with the Digital Archive Material (as made available through the Website) You agree that:

    1. No Item containing the image of or reference to a person is to be used for a purpose other than for which rights are granted by Baileys African History Archive, without prior express written permission of Baileys African History Archive.
    2. Only a single digital copy of an Item may be stored on a single computer, hard drive, or any other storage device, and that that copy may not be duplicated in any way whatsoever, except for a single backup copy which may only be used in the event of the original being deleted, lost, or irreparably damaged.
    3. Once the Item has been used for the purpose for which use rights were granted, all copies of the Item must be deleted, apart from where it forms part of the archive of what was published.
  6. OBJECTIONS, COMPLAINTS AND QUERIES
    1. Should You have any questions about this Privacy Policy, require a correction to be made to Your Personal Information that Baileys African History Archive keeps on record, request a copy of the record itself, lodge an objection to the collection, Use or processing of Your Personal Information by Baileys African History Archive, or delete Your personally identifiable information, you may send an e-mail to bahapix@iafrica.com
    2. There may be instances where we cannot grant You access to the Personal Information we hold. We may need to refuse access if granting access would interfere with the privacy of others or if it would result in a breach of confidentiality. Should this be the case, we will give You written reasons for any refusal.

Confirm Order

Please confirm that you would like to order a high quality version of this item. Once your order is placed, a request for approval will be sent to the relevant archivist who may respond to you with questions. If your order is approved, you will be notified and the file will be made available for download.

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