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University of Fort Hare

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Fort Hare University is located on the Tyhume river in a South African town known as Alice in English or as eDikeni in the local isiXhosa language. It is in the Eastern Cape Province about 50 km west of King Williams Town (or eQonce) in a region that for a while was known as the "independent" Bantustan of Ciskei.

Originally, Fort Hare was an English fort in the wars between British and the amaXhosa of the 19th century. Some of the ruins of the fort are still visible today. Missionary activity (James Stewart) led to the creation of a school for missionaries from which at the beginning of the 20th century the University resulted. It was the second university in South Africa (after Cape Town) and the first tertiary educational facility open to Africans in the whole of the continent. The University can count a number of famous people amongst its alumni - see below.

In the struggle years there was much anti-apartheid activity, including the Black Consciousness Movement of Steve Biko.

Unfortunately, the end of apartheid has not been kind to the University, as is indeed the case for other historically disadvantaged institutions in South Africa.

The student numbers dropped greatly, because black students could now go to other (historically white) institutions. In addition, the first black Vice Chancellor (Sibusiso Bengu) proclaimed that 'the halls of learning would now be opened to all'. The result was that the students stopped paying their tuition fees. Once Bhengu was promoted to minister of education, however, he insisted that the university was responsible for the resulting budget deficit. His successor, Mbulelo Mzamane was locally known as the Visiting Chancellor, because he was not present very often. Once impending bankruptcy resulted in the refusal of the banks to honor UFH paychecks, staff and students joined forces and expelled managers by force. The new management under Derrick Swartz imposed a restructuring program that has given the university a future rather than just a glorious past. The University has taken over the East London campus of Rhodes University, now University of Fort Hare East London, under the Governments higher education restructuring programme.

Notable alumni

Name DoB - DoD Notes
Z.K. Mathews 1901-1968) lectured at Fort Hare from 1936 to 1959
Archibald Campbell Jordan 30 October 1906 - 1968 novelist, pioneer of African studies
Govan Mbeki 1910 - 2001 South African politician
Yusuf Lule 1912 - 1985 Interim president of Uganda 1979
Cedric Phatudi 1912 - 1987 Chief Minister of Lebowa 1972 - 1987
Kaiser Matanzima 1915 - 2003 leader of bantustan Transkei
Oliver Tambo October 27, 1917 - April 24, 1993 member, African National Congress
Joshua Nkomo 1918 - July 1, 1999 founder of the ZAPU.
Nelson Mandela July 18, 1918 - Former President of South Africa
Lionel Ngakane July 17, 1920 - November 26, 2003 South African filmmaker
Seretse Khama July 1, 1921 - July 13, 1980 first President of Botswana.
Julius Nyerere July 19, 1922 - October 14, 1999 President of Tanzania
Herbert Chitepo June 15, 1923 - March 18, 1975 ZANU leader
Robert Sobukwe 1924 - 27 February, 1978 founder of the Pan Africanist Congress
Robert Mugabe February 21, 1924 - President of Zimbabwe, attended 1949-1951
Kenneth Kaunda April 28, 1924 - first President of Zambia
Allan Hendrickse October 22 1927 - March 16 2005 politician, preacher, and teacher
Mangosuthu Buthelezi August 27, 1928 - leader of the Inkatha Freedom Party
Desmond Tutu October 7, 1931 - Archbishop, South African peace activist
Frank Mdlalose 29 November 1931 - First premier of KwaZulu-Natal province
Ivy Matsepe-Casaburri 18 September 1937 - Communications Minister, South Africa
Manto Tshabalala-Msimang 9 October 1940 - Health Minister of South Africa
Chris Hani June 28, 1942 - April 10, 1993 leader of the South African Communist Party
Joseph Diescho born 1955 Namibian novelist
Bulelani Ngcuka May 2, 1954 - South Africa's director of Public Prosecutions

(Others, unknown DOB)

See also: List of universities in South Africa

External links

South African universities

Traditional universities
Cape Town | Fort Hare | Free State | KwaZulu-Natal | Limpopo | North-West
Pretoria | Rhodes | Stellenbosch | Western Cape | Witwatersrand

Comprehensive universities
Johannesburg | Nelson Mandela | Unisa | Venda | Walter Sisulu | Zululand

Universities of technology
Cape Peninsula | Central | Durban | Mangosuthu | Tshwane | Vaal

 


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