Magistrate, East London

Identity area

Type of entity

Governmental body

Authorized form of name

Magistrate, East London

Parallel form(s) of name

Standardized form(s) of name according to other rules

  • 1/ELN

Other form(s) of name

Identifiers for corporate bodies

Contact area

Description area

Dates of existence

1848 – 1981

History

The establishment of the office of Resident Magistrate at East London commenced when Colonel GH MacKinnon, Chief Commissioner of British Kaffraria, was appointed Justice of the Peace for the Port of East London and the district thereof on 3 March 1848.

In a letter dated 9 March 1848 the Colonial Secretary, John Montagu, informed MacKinnon as to the reasons for making the appointment: “His Excellency’s chief object in appointing you to this office, is to enable you to try and adjudicate cases of infringement of (the Spirit and Wine) Ordinance …” The Colonial Secretary informed MacKinnon that he would exercise the same powers as if he had been appointed Resident Magistrate without the inconvenience of being tied down to certain fixed court days.

However, Colonel MacKinnon’s presence was continually required at Kin William’s Town and he accordingly requested that a resident Justice of the Peace be appointed for East London. MacKinnon’s request was sympathetically received and Major Smith, the officer commanding Fort Glamorgan, was appointed to the office. Major Smith’s tenure in office was of short duration, and on 20 November 1848 the Colonial Secretary informed Captain Edward Rooper that he had been appointed resident Justice of the Peace in the place of Major Smith who had left East London. On 1 January 1849 Rooper was appointed Resident Magistrate.

In 1856 the magistracy was included as part of the separate dependency of British Kaffraria. British Kaffraria had been declared a separate Dependency of the Crown on 23 December 1847. The port of East London, however, was annexed as part of the Cape Colony by proclamation dated 14 January 1848. The Port was only restored to British Kaffraria on 9 July 1859. There appears to be some doubt therefore as to validity of the inclusion of the East London Magistracy as part of British Kaffraria in 1856.

The East London Magistracy remained part of the independent Colony of British Kaffraria until March 1865 when the British Kaffraria Act was passed. In terms of this Act British Kaffraria was annexed to the Cape Colony.

In December 1865 M Jennings was appointed Civil Commissioner and Resident Magistrate for East London.

Places

Eastern Cape.
Cape Province.
Cape Colony.
British Kaffraria.
East London.

Legal status

Functions, occupations and activities

Mandates/sources of authority

Internal structures/genealogy

General context

Relationships area

Access points area

Subject access points

Occupations

Control area

Authority record identifier

1/ELN

Institution identifier

KAB

Rules and/or conventions used

ISAAR

Status

Draft

Level of detail

Partial

Dates of creation, revision and deletion

21 April 2022 (creation Marise Bronkhorst)

Language(s)

  • English

Script(s)

  • Latin

Sources

Cape of Good Hope Government Gazette.
Cape of Good Hope Blue Book.
Laws and Regulations of British Kaffraria.

Maintenance notes