EMIGRATION
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Setting down roots : Indian migrants in South Africa, 1860-1911 |
From the early 1860s until 1911 thousands of Indians were recruited to work on the ... |
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Vaccination Certificate |
Vaccination was made ... hours every day except Sunday in examining and granting certificate to. |
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Sugar Cane Cutting |
he majority of Indian South Africans are the descendants of indentured workers brought to Natal between 1860 and 1911 to develop the sugar indus |
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Immigrants arriving at Port Natal in 1900 |
The Colony of Natal was a British colony in south-eastern Africa. It was proclaimed a British ... The next step was taken by the settlers at the port, |
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Places Indians came from |
Between 1842 and 1870 a total of 525,482 Indians emigrated to the British and French Colonies. |
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Areas Indenture Indians emigrated |
Between 1842 and 1870 a total of 525,482 Indians emigrated to the British and French Colonies. |
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Annexure containing summary of the conclusions reached by the Round Table Conference on the Indian question in South Africa. |
Scheme af assisted emigration (I) Any Indian of 16 years or over may avail himself of the scheme. In case of a family, the decision of the father will bind the wife and minor children under 16 years... |
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Statement by the Indian Delegation at the Indian Conference held in Cape Town |
Last Wednesday, you made an important statement in which you explained the impression and conclusions of the Union Delegation on the Cape Town Agreement.....
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The Sea Coast of Bolivia | |
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On Leaving South Africa | |
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Editorial: Those Who Go and Those Who Stay | |
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Indian Opinion Vol.58 No.43 Nov 1960 | |
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Brain drain may bar door to the Promised Land | |
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Letter from Zambian Acting Chief Immigration Officer to Jack Simons |
Letter from D J Cator, Zambian Acting Chief Immigration Officer, to Jack Simons granting an Entry Permit for Jack and Ray Simons and their son. |
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The new explorers: Sash emigrants and residents venture into the unknown |