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Presidential Awards · The First

The 1874 Burgers' Cross.

South Africa's first Presidential Award — a gold cross pattée instituted by President Thomas Burgers in 1874, at the request of the mining community of Pilgrim's Rest, to honour three women: two who nursed the gold-fields through a fever epidemic, and one who composed the Republic's national anthem. The ZAR had no official honours system. This was the moment, and these were the three, that established the precedent.

1874 · Three recipients · The first SA Presidential Award

Curated by Ben & Johan Ungerer · The Jardines Curatorial Desk

Instituted
1874
Recipients
Three women
Material
Gold cross pattée
Authority
President T. F. Burgers

The story

Act I
Act II
Act III

The three

I
— Pilgrim's Rest —

The first nurse

One of two civilian women who volunteered to nurse the gold-field community of Pilgrim's Rest through the early-1870s fever epidemic. The full biographical detail is preserved in the Western Cape Numismatic Society's 16-page monograph on the Cross.

Recognition for service rendered during epidemic.

II
— Pilgrim's Rest —

The second nurse

The second of the two volunteer nurses honoured. The diggers' petition that originated the entire instrument named both women; the WCNS booklet is the published reference for their identities and the circumstances of the epidemic.

Recognition for service rendered during epidemic.

III
— Utrecht, Netherlands —

Catharina van Rees

Dutch composer (1831–1915), recipient of the third Cross for composing the words and music of "Kent gij dat volk vol heldenmoed" — the Volkslied (national anthem) of the Zuid-Afrikaansche Republiek, commissioned by Burgers himself.

Recognition for the Republic's anthem. Van Rees never visited the Transvaal.

— The historical context —

"The Zuid-Afrikaansche Republiek had no official honours system, but in 1874, at the request of the predominantly British-born mining community of Pilgrim's Rest, a presidential decoration was established to reward two women who had nursed the community through a fever epidemic."

— Standard summary of ZAR pre-1902 honours

The insignia

The recorded form is consistent across the surviving accounts. The Cross itself is a cross pattée (arms widening from the centre to flat extremities) struck in gold. It hangs from a green ribbon, with the name of the decoration borne on a brooch bar at the suspension. Survival of original examples in collectable condition is, predictably, vanishingly rare — three were ever struck.

  • FormCross pattée
  • MaterialGold
  • RibbonGreen
  • SuspensionBrooch bar inscribed "Burgers Cross"
  • Total struckThree
  • Year1874
  • AuthorityPresidential — no Volksraad approval
  • Re-issuesNone — one-off institution

Coin, cross, mint

A unified reading

Three foundational acts in one year.

The Burgers' Cross is not an isolated curiosity. In the same calendar year — 1874 — President Burgers commissioned the Burgerspond, the Republic's first gold coin, also without Volksraad consultation; instituted the Cross on which this page is built; and (per Prof Arndt's 1922 New York archives note, preserved by WCNS) may have ordered actual mint machinery with the intention of establishing a Pretoria mint at home, eighteen years before one finally opened.

Read together, the three projects describe a deliberate programme: a sovereign currency, a sovereign honours system, and a sovereign minting capability. All three rested on presidential authority alone. All three were halted — the Burgerspond by Volksraad pandemonium, the Cross by lack of a successor instrument, the mint by the loss of Burgers' administration to British annexation in 1877.

The two surviving artefacts — the Cross and the Pond — are best read in pairs. The same President. The same year. The same instrument of authority. The same fate.

The references

  • Western Cape Numismatic SocietyThe Gold Burger's Cross of 1874 (SA's First Presidential Award). 16-page monograph — the primary published reference for the recipients, the epidemic, and the design of the Cross. Sold in benefit of WCNS.
  • Nortje, Pierre H.Burgers' Cross of 1874, Part 1 & Part 2. Western Cape Numismatic Society. Identifies the Cross as South Africa's first Presidential Award.
  • Wikipedia / Zuid-Afrikaansche Republiek honours"At the request of the predominantly British-born mining community of Pilgrim's Rest…" — standard summary used in citations across the field.
  • South African Military History Society"Positive and Negative: The Awards of the First South African War of Independence, 1880–1881." Context on pre-Union republican awards.
  • Catharina Felicia van Rees"Kent gij dat volk vol heldenmoed" — the Transvaalsche Volkslied, commissioned by Burgers, for which van Rees received the third Cross. Also widely catalogued under the broader ZAR national-symbol literature.

Revision history

15 May 2026 Initial build · v3 locked theme · sourced from WCNS monograph, Nortje's Burgers' Cross essays, and the ZAR honours standard summaries.

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