- ZA HPRA A3424-B-B2-B2.8-B2.8.4
- File
Part of Elaine Katz Papers
Mines department; Mine managers; Miners; Mining regulations, 1892 events.
285 results with digital objects Show results with digital objects
Part of Elaine Katz Papers
Mines department; Mine managers; Miners; Mining regulations, 1892 events.
Part of Elaine Katz Papers
Mining regulations: 1893; Mining regulations: 1894 events; Mining regulations: 1895 events; Mining regulations: 1896.
Part of Elaine Katz Papers
Mining regulations: 1896: Discussion of; Mining regulations: 1897; Mining regulations: 1898; Numbers; Minutes (Notulen-Afrikaans); Officials; Rock drillers; Social Darwinism; SME reports (State Mining Engineers).
Part of Elaine Katz Papers
Sources; Sundry / events / matter; South African Mining journal; Labour Union personnel.
Part of Elaine Katz Papers
Trade Unions; Trade Unions & Colour bar; Unskilled workers; Volksraad 1896; Volksraad: General; Volksraad: Second; Volksraad debates 1893; Volksraad 1896/7; Wages; Workshops; Jews.
The collection contains the research working papers of Elaine Katz, which mainly relate to gold mining on the Witwatersrand, Silicosis in miners, Labour and South African politics, particularly in the Transvaal at the turn of the 20th century.
Katz, Elaine
Part of Elaine Katz Papers
The index cards form an integral part of the research collection of Elaine Katz. They contain keywords, themes and names of people/authors, all of which are references to the large body of research material used by EK for her publications and academic work. Some of the index cards also contain excerpts of text passages from published works.
The Index cards were stored in certain groups in index card boxes, which were labelled. Within these groups the index cards were also labelled. The original order of this system has been retained and has been used for the archival description of the index cards. The content of each box has been divided in groups for the purpose of digitisation. The labels within each of these groups are listed accordingly, even when there are no index cards belonging to a certain label. Some of the terms used in the index are representative of the language and the discourse used at the time, e.g.. Natives, and have been retained for searching.