The following lists events that happened during 1949 in South Africa.
Incumbents
Events
January
- 13,14 â Durban riots against Indians
June
- 29 â South Africa introduces its apartheid policy.
July
October
- 30 â Ben Schoeman announces in Johannesburg that the NP would carry the apartheid policy through "notwithstanding what serious economic problems it might cause".
November
December
Unknown date
- The University of Pretoria establishes the Graduate School of Management (GSM), the first MBA programme to be launched outside of North America.
- The South African Post Office begins to force Europeans and non-Europeans to stand in separate queues in post offices and serve them at different counters.
Births
- 27 January â Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, politician.
- 29 January â Eugene de Kock, South African Police colonel and assassin.
- 26 March â Rudi Koertzen, cricket umpire (d. 2022)
- 8 April â Fanie de Jager, operatic tenor.
- 12 April â Pravin Gordhan, national minister (d. 2024)
- 23 May â Estian Calitz, academic.
- 2 June â Michael Lapsley, Anglican priest and activist.
- 14 June
- Niel Barnard, intelligence chief (d. 2025)
- Antony Sher, actor (d. 2021)
- 17 July â William C. Faure, film director. (d. 1994)
- 19 July â Kgalema Motlhanthe, politician, former President of South Africa.
- 23 July â Clive Rice, cricketer. (d. 2015)
- 21 October â Morne du Plessis, Springboks captain & rugby administrator.
- 24 November â Neall Ellis, helicopter pilot and mercenary.
- 28 November â Nosimo Balindlela, politician.
Deaths
- 4 May â Hendrik Adolph Mulder, poet and Afrikaans literary critic.
Railways
Locomotives
- The South African Railways places the first of one hundred Class 24 2-8-4 Berkshire type branchline steam locomotives in service, most of them on the South West Africa System.
Sport
7.1 Golf
- Bobby Locke tied with Harry Bradshaw (Ireland) both scored 283 (âÂÂ5).Bobby Locke then won the 36 holes play-off by 12 shots. British Open championship. Royal St. Georges Golf Club. Sandwich. 6âÂÂ9 July 1949.
7.2 Tennis
- Eric Sturgess & Sheila Summers became the South Africa's first Wimbledon champions when they beat John Bromwich (Australia) & Louis Brough (USA), 8âÂÂ7, 9âÂÂ11, 7âÂÂ5, to win the mixed doubles final.
- Eric Sturgess was awarded the Helms Trophy as the best athlete of the African continent.
References