The Night Trains, Charles van Onselen
The Night Trains, Charles van Onselen
List: $11.00 | Sale: $7.70
Club: $5.50

The Night Trains
Moving Mozambican miners to and from the Witwatersrand Mines, 1902–1955

Author: Charles van Onselen

Narrator: Sello Sebotsane

Unabridged: 7 hr 54 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 09/01/2023


Synopsis

 ON THE NIGHT TRAINS, THE LAST STOP WAS ALWAYS HELL.
The price exacted from across the African subcontinent for South Africa’s stalled 20th-century industrial revolution is, in human terms, still largely hidden from history. For half a century, up to the mid-1950s, privately operated trains travelled by night between Ressano Garcia, on the Mozambique border, and Booysens station, in Johannesburg. The night trains carried Mozambicans recruited to work in the mines of the booming Witwatersrand. The up-trains disgorged their human cargo into the maw of the great Rand mining machine, while the down-trains whisked away the time-expired miners – often ill, broken or insane, and preyed on by con men, petty criminals and corrupt officials. While mine labour was recruited from all over southern Africa, Mozambican migrants made up the largest component, and they paid the highest price. Charles van Onselen clinically reconstructs the world of the night trains, which were run as a partnership between the mining houses and the railways. By tracing the up and down rail journeys undertaken by black migrants over half a century it is possible to discern how racial thinking, expressed logistically, reflected South Africa’s evolving systems of segregation and apartheid. Mirroring the brutal logic of industrial capitalism, this was a system of transport designed to maximise profit at the expense of the health, well-being and even the lives of those it conveyed.
The story of the night trains echoes today through songs such as ‘Stimela’ and ‘Shosholoza’. But the experience of the poverty-stricken Mozambicans who travelled on the trains has never been told. THE NIGHT TRAINS lays bare this hellish world.

Reviews

Goodreads review by Johann on May 27, 2021

Van Onselen at his best! Very well researched.......more

Goodreads review by David on June 05, 2025

The Night Trains, by Charles van Onselen. I bought it when it came out in 2019 because i like trains, I like history, and I'm interested in the dynamics between South Africa and Mozambique. As is often the case, this book got buried under my rapidly growing pile. I finally managed to get to it this......more

Goodreads review by Jacobus Cilliers on November 22, 2020

This tells the important story of the (quasi-coercive) recruitment of labor from Mozambique to work in the mines in South Africa between 1850 to 1960, their mistreatment and exposure to disease in the mines, and their arduous train journey to get there and back. The sheer statistics are staggering:......more

Goodreads review by Georgie on December 27, 2023

3.5 but I rounded up because I think more people should read this book. Fascinating and depressing subject, I learned a lot. I disliked how the work was structured, I wanted more context on most things and it wasn't clear how the whole book was supposed to flow. I also found it to be repetitive at ti......more