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Jan de Klerk

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(Redirected from Johannes de Klerk) South African politician For the rugby player, see Jan de Klerk (rugby union).

Jan de KlerkDMS
State President of South Africa (acting)
In office
9 April 1975 – 19 April 1975
Preceded byJacobus Fouché
Succeeded byNicolaas Diederichs
Minister of Home Affairs
In office
8 October 1961 – 30 March 1966
Preceded byTom Naudé
Succeeded byP. K. Le Roux
Chancellor of the Potchefstroom University for Christian Higher Education
In office
1961–1979
Preceded bydu Toit, F.J.
Succeeded byVorster, P.W.
Personal details
Born(1903-07-22)22 July 1903
Burgersdorp, Cape Colony
Died24 January 1979(1979-01-24) (aged 75)
Krugersdorp, Transvaal Province, South Africa
Political partyNational Party
SpouseHendrina Cornelia Coetzer
ChildrenWimpie de Klerk
F. W. de Klerk
Alma materPotchefstroom University
ReligionReformed

Johannes "Jan" de Klerk, DMS (22 July 1903 – 24 January 1979) was a South African politician. He was the father of F. W. de Klerk, the last apartheid State President of South Africa.

As a member of the National Party, de Klerk served as interim State President for nine days following the retirement of Jacobus Johannes Fouché in 1975. Prior to this, he served as a Senator (1955–1975), Minister of Work and Public Works (1954–1958), Work and Mines (1958–1961), Home Affairs, Work and Immigration (1961), Home Affairs, Education and Arts and Sciences (1961–1966), Education, Arts and Sciences and Information (1966–1967) and National Education (1968–1969), and President of the Senate from 1969 to 1976.

Biography

The eldest son of Reverend Willem de Klerk, a Dutch Reformed Church minister and his wife Aletta Johanna van Rooy, Jan de Klerk was born 22 July 1903 in Burgersdorp. He spent his childhood in Potchefstroom, in South-West Transvaal. He studied Christian Higher Education at the Potchefstroom University, where he obtained a BA degree and a higher education diploma in 1926 after three years. he was the President of the Student Union, he married Hendrina Cornelia Coetzer on 27 April 1927, and had two sons, Willem Johannes (Wimpie) and Frederik Willem (F.W.).

From 1927 to 1945, Jan de Klerk worked in Nylstroom and Witwatersrand. He was headteacher of a school, and secretary of a white workers' trade union. In January 1947, he became administrative secretary of the National Party for the Rand region and in 1948, chief secretary of the NP of Transvaal. From 1949 to 1955, he was a member of the provincial council of Transvaal.

In 1954, Jan de Klerk was named senator and Minister of Work and Public Works in the government of his brother-in-law, Prime Minister JG Strijdom. This nomination provoked controversy due to the relationship between the two men.

He was a minister in the governments of Hendrik Verwoerd and John Vorster. Until 1969, he successively dealt with mines, home affairs, immigration, and education. While Minister of Education, he helped found the Rand Afrikaans University (RAU) in Johannesburg and the University of Port Elizabeth (UPE), while also chancellor of the University of Potchefstroom (PU vir CHO). He was twice approached to be honorary president of the republic in 1967 and 1968.

In 1968, he was directly involved in the Mafeje affair as he opposed the hiring of Archie Mafeje as a senior lecturer to University of Cape Town (UCT) telling the UCT Council about the

government’s intense displeasure at the decision to appoint an African, which is tantamount to flouting the accepted traditional outlook of South Africa. Should your Council disregard my appeal and give effect to this decision, the government will not hesitate in taking such action as it may deem fit to ensure that the tradition referred to above is observed

By the time of his retirement from the cabinet, de Klerk had been a cabinet minister for more than fifteen years and was rewarded with the Decoration for Meritorious Services.

From 1969 to 1976, he presided over the Senate or upper house of the South African parliament, and this meant that he was briefly interim State President of South Africa in 1975, under a dormant commission that was invoked. He retired from political life, spent his last few years on a farm and died in Krugersdorp on 24 January 1979.

Legacy

A school in Krugersdorp is named in honour of Jan de Klerk.

Ancestry

Ancestors of Johannes de Klerk
16. Barend de Klerk
8. Johannes Cornelis de Klerk
17. Maria van der Heyden
4. Barend Jacobus de Klerk
18. Daniel Wilhelmus Schoeman
9. Martha Margaretha Schoeman
19. Anna Catharina Hattingh
2. Willem Johannes de Klerk
20. Douw Gerbrand Grobler
10. Jacobus Johannes Grobler
21. Johanna Cornelia Coetzer
5. Maria Jacoba Grobler
22. Josef Adriaan Coetzee
11. Johanna Susanna Lasya Coetzee
23. Francina Hendrina Barendina Kruger
1. Johannes de Klerk
24. Henricus van Rooij
12. Johannes Cornelis van Rooy
25. Clara Kuijpers
6. Johannes Cornelis van Rooy
26. Charles Holsters
13. Anne Françoise Holsters
27. Petronella de Gieter
3. Aletta Johanna van Rooy
28. Stephanus Albertus Smit
14. Jacobus Albertus Smit
29. Susanna Maria de Klerk
7. Aletta Johanna Smit
30. Jacobus Petrus Erasmus Smit
15. Aletta Johanna Smit
31. Martha Gerbrechta Sophia de Klerk

External links

References

  1. ^ "Johannes de Klerk". Archontology.com.
  2. /"Presidency in South Africa | SouthAfricaWeb.co.za". Archived from the original on 4 October 2013. Retrieved 12 October 2012.
  3. "Student sit-in of 1968 the 'final straw'". www.news.uct.ac.za. Retrieved 29 December 2022.
  4. Plaut, Martin (2010). "South African Student Protest, 1968: Remembering the Mafeje Sit-in". History Workshop Journal. 69 (69): 199–205. doi:10.1093/hwj/dbp035.
Political offices
Preceded byJohn Vorster Minister of Education, Arts and Sciences
Minister of National Education

1961–1969
Succeeded byJohannes Petrus van der Spuy
Preceded byTom Naudé Minister of Home Affairs
1961–1966
Succeeded byP. K. Le Roux
Preceded byBen Schoeman Minister of Work
1954–1961
Succeeded byAlfred Trollip
Preceded byBen Schoeman Minister of Public Works
1954–1958
Succeeded byPaul Sauer
Preceded byTom Naudé President of the Senate of South Africa
1969–1976
Succeeded byMarais Viljoen
Ministers of education in South Africa
pre-Apartheid
Apartheid-era
Post-apartheid
Home affairs ministers of South Africa
Pre-Apartheid (1910-1948)
Apartheid-era (1948-1994)
Post-Apartheid (1994-present)
Heads of state of South Africa
Monarch (1910–1961)
State President (1961–1994)
(under Apartheid)
President (from 1994)
(post-Apartheid)
†Died in office *Acting president
Presidents of the Senate and NCOP of South Africa
First Senate (1910–1981)
Second Senate (1994–1997)
National Council of Provinces (1997–present)
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