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Herbert Melville Guest

Herbert Melville Guest
Mayor of Klerksdorp
In office
1910–1911
Monarch George V
Governor General Herbert Gladstone
Prime Minister Louis Botha
Personal details
Born (1853-01-29)29 January 1853
Kidderminster, England
Died 29 June 1938(1938-06-29) (aged 85)
Resting place Klerksdorp Old Cemetery
Nationality British
Spouse(s) Lucy Charlotte Lucas (married 1877)
Relations
Children Ernest Lucas Guest
Residence Klerksdorp
Military service
Allegiance  British Empire
Battles/wars Second Boer War

Herbert Melville Guest (29 January 1853 – 29 June 1938) was an author, newspaper owner and politician of the Transvaal. He acquired the Klerksdorp Mining Record in 1889. He wrote several books on the Second Boer War in the area of Klerksdorp. In 1903 he became one of the first city council members and was mayor from 1910 to 1911. One of his sons was Ernest Lucas Guest, the prominent government minister of Southern Rhodesia.

Herbert Melville Guest was born on 29 January 1853 in Kidderminster, England, the son of Herbert and Mary Guest. In 1861, Guest's father moved the family to Grahamstown, Cape Colony (in modern South Africa's Eastern Cape), where he was appointed manager of the Frontier Times. At the age of 13, the younger Herbert was apprenticed to the Grahamstown Journal.

In 1869, diamonds were discovered on a farm belonging to the De Beers brothers in Colesberg Kopje, which was to become Kimberley, sparking off a rush. The following year, Herbert Melville moved to Kimberley with the staff of the new Diamond News, published by the owners of the Grahamstown Journal.

After a few years he returned to Grahamstown and joined his father's printing, bookselling and stationer's business.

In 1889, three years after the discovery of the gold fields, Guest moved to Klerksdorp in the Transvaal, acquiring the The Representative and renamed it the Klerksdorp Mining Record in August of the same year. It exists today, after several name changes, as the Klerksdorp Rekord.

In Klerksdorp, Guest participated in the local institutions and formed the Chamber of Mines and the Chamber of Commerce. Shortly before the outbreak of the Anglo Boer War, Guest ceased publication of the newspaper and took his family away from Klerksdorp. He returned in February 1901. During the last two years of the war, he wrote several short volumes about it. He was a member of the Town Guard in charge of a post. His son Ernest spoke of a night spent on picket duty with his father, describing how some mounted Boers, appearing at dusk about 1,000 yards away, took off when his father shot at them.


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