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===Renewal of hostilities=== In January 1889 [[Francis William Reitz]] was elected president of the Orange Free State. Reitz had no sooner got into office than a meeting was arranged with [[Paul Kruger]], president of the [[South African Republic]], at which various terms were discussed and decided upon regarding an agreement dealing with the railways, terms of a treaty of amity and commerce, and what was called a political treaty. The political treaty referred in general terms to a federal union between the [[South African Republic]] and the Orange Free State, and bound each of them to help the other, whenever the independence of either should be assailed or threatened from without, unless the state so called upon for assistance should be able to show the injustice of the cause of quarrel in which the other state had engaged. While thus committed to an alliance with its northern neighbour no change was made in internal administration. The Free State, in fact, from its geographical position reaped the benefits without incurring the anxieties consequent on the settlement of a large [[Uitlander]] population on the [[Witwatersrand]]. The state, however, became increasingly identified with the reactionary party in the [[South African Republic]].{{citation needed|date=February 2022}} In 1895 the Volksraad passed a resolution, in which they declared their readiness to entertain a proposition from the [[South African Republic]] in favour of some form of federal union. In the same year Ritz retired from the presidency of the Orange Free State. The [[Orange Free State presidential election, 1896|1896 presidential election]] to succeed him was won by [[Martinus Theunis Steyn|M. T. Steyn]], a judge of the High Court, who took office in February 1896. In 1896 President Steyn visited [[Pretoria]], where he received an ovation as the probable future president of the two Republics. A further offensive and defensive alliance between the two Republics was then entered into, under which the Orange Free State took up arms on the outbreak of hostilities between the British and the [[South African Republic]] in October 1899.<ref name="eb1911-text"/> In 1897 President Kruger, bent on still further cementing the union with the Orange Free State, had visited [[Bloemfontein]]. It was on this occasion that Kruger, referring to the [[London Convention (1884)|London Convention]], spoke of [[Queen Victoria]] as a ''kwaaje Vrouw'' (angry woman), an expression which caused a good deal of offence in England at the time, but which, in the phraseology of the Boers, was not meant by [[Paul Kruger|President Kruger]] as insulting.<ref name="eb1911-text"/> [[File:Prigionieri boeri.png|thumb|Boer prisoners after the Battle of Paardeberg, 1900]] In December 1897 the Free State revised its constitution in reference to the franchise law, and the period of residence necessary to obtain naturalization was reduced from five to three years. The oath of allegiance to the state was alone required, and no renunciation of nationality was insisted upon. In 1898 the Free State also acquiesced in the new convention arranged with regard to the Customs Union between the [[Cape Colony]], [[Colony of Natal|Natal]], [[Basutoland]] and the [[Bechuanaland Protectorate]]. But events were moving rapidly in the Transvaal, and matters had proceeded too far for the Free State to turn back. In May 1899 President Steyn suggested the conference at Bloemfontein between President Kruger and [[Alfred Milner, 1st Viscount Milner|Sir Alfred Milner]], but this act was too late. The Free Staters were practically bound to the [[South African Republic]], under the offensive and defensive alliance, in case hostilities arose with Great Britain.<ref name="eb1911-text"/> The Orange Free State began to expel British subjects in 1899, and the first act of the [[Second Boer War]] was committed by Orange Free State Boers, who, on 11 October 1899, seized a train upon the border belonging to Natal. For President Steyn and the Free State of 1899, neutrality was impossible. A resolution was passed by the Volksraad on 27 September declaring that the state would observe its obligations to the Transvaal whatever might happen.<ref name="eb1911-text"/> After the surrender of [[Piet Cronjé]] in the [[Battle of Paardeberg]] on 27 February 1900, [[Bloemfontein]] was occupied by the British troops under [[Frederick Roberts, 1st Earl Roberts|Lord Roberts]] from 13 March onward, and on 28 May a proclamation was issued annexing the Free State to the British dominions under the title of [[Orange River Colony]]. For nearly two years longer the burghers kept the field under [[Christiaan de Wet]] and other leaders, but by the articles of peace signed on 31 May 1902 British sovereignty was acknowledged.<ref name="eb1911-text"/>
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