- Source: 1925 in South Africa
- Alfred Milner, 1st Viscount Milner
- Nicolaas Johannes Diederichs
- Indonesia
- Perang Dunia II
- Perang Dunia I
- Perang Semak Rhodesia
- Mein Kampf
- Bahasa Afrikaans
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- 1925 in South Africa
- South Africa Standard Time
- Governor-General of South Africa
- List of South Africans
- Union of South Africa
- Indian South Africans
- Prime Minister of South Africa
- Second Boer War
- South Africa Act 1909
- South African Constitution of 1961
Madagascar (2005)
Confidential Assignment (2017)
Big Momma’s House (2000)
Triple Frontier (2019)
Big Momma’s House 2 (2006)
The Con Artists (2014)
Monsters of California (2023)
Artikel: 1925 in South Africa GudangMovies21 Rebahinxxi
The following lists events that happened during 1925 in South Africa.
Incumbents
Monarch: King George V.
Governor-General and High Commissioner for Southern Africa: The Earl of Athlone.
Prime Minister: J.B.M. Hertzog.
Chief Justice: James Rose Innes.
Events
May
1 – The Prince of Wales arrives in Cape Town on a visit to South Africa.
July
23 – D.F. Malan, Minister of the Interior, introduces the Areas Reservation and Immigration and Registration Bill, also known as the Asiatic Bill.
Augustus
1 – The New Cape Central Railway and its 204 miles 69 chains (329.7 kilometres) long line between Worcester and Voorbaai is incorporated into the South African Railways (SAR).
Unknown date
Afrikaans officially replaces Dutch as the second official language after English.
The manor house of Groot Constantia is gutted by a fire.
The University of Pretoria begins the tradition of Jool in South Africa.
South Africa returns to the gold standard.
Births
14 April – Colin Eglin, founding member and leader of the Progressive Federal Party. (d. 2013)
4 May – Ruth First, journalist, academic and activist. (d. 1982)
6 June – Andrew Mlangeni, anti-apartheid activist. (d. 2020)
19 June – Alfred Nzo, anti-apartheid activist. (d. 2000)
28 September – Cromwell Everson, composer. (d. 1991)
5 October – Herbert Kretzmer, journalist and lyricist (d. 2020)
14 October – Phillip Tobias, palaeoanthropologist. (d. 2012)
Deaths
30 August – Cathcart William Methven, civil engineer and painter. (b. 1849)
Railways
= Railway lines opened
=21 January – Transvaal – Rustenburg to Boshoek, 15 miles 17 chains (24.5 kilometres).
26 May – Transvaal – Magaliesburg to Schoemansville, 33 miles 20 chains (53.5 kilometres).
26 June – Natal – Eshowe to Extension, 74 chains (1.5 kilometres).
1 September – Transvaal – Ermelo to Lothair, 30 miles 51 chains (49.3 kilometres).
25 September – Transvaal – Elandshoek to Solarvale (Narrow gauge), 9 miles 40 chains (15.3 kilometres).
1 October – Transvaal – Nylstroom to Vaalwater, 45 miles 62 chains (73.7 kilometres).
14 October – Free State – Senekal to Marquard, 29 miles 78 chains (48.2 kilometres).
19 October – Cape – Kareevlakte to Ladismith, 46 miles 38 chains (74.8 kilometres).
26 November – Free State – Frankfort to Villiers, 19 miles 40 chains (31.4 kilometres).
1 December – Cape – Fort Beaufort to Katberg (Narrow gauge), 24 miles 36 chains (39.3 kilometres).
= Locomotives
=Seven new Cape gauge locomotive types, six steam and one electric, enter service on the SAR. The electric locomotive is the first non-steam mainline locomotive type to enter service in South Africa in quantity.
A single experimental Class FC Modified Fairlie articulated steam locomotive.
The first four Class GD branchline 2-6-2+2-6-2 Garratt articulated locomotives.
The first six of eighteen Class GE 2-8-2+2-8-2 Garratt locomotives.
A single Class GG 2-6-2+2-6-2 Double Prairie type Garratt on fast mainline passenger service.
Two American-built Class 15C 4-8-2 Mountain type steam locomotives.
The first two of seven Class 16D 4-6-2 Pacific type passenger locomotives.
The first of altogether 172 Class 1E electric locomotives, spread over seven orders, the first mainline electric locomotive to be introduced in South Africa.