Hendrik Frensch Verwoerd
Hendrik Frensch Verwoerd (1901-1966) was a South African professor of psychology, newspaper editor, and politician. He is best known for his role as the "architect of apartheid" when he was Minister of Native Affairs during the 1950s and his popular yet polarizing stint as prime minister from 1958 until his assassination in 1966.
Personal life
Verwoerd was born on September 8, 1901 in Amsterdam. Two years later, his father, Wilhelmus Johannes Verwoerd, decided to emigrate from the Netherlands to South Africa as an expression of solidarity with the Afrikaners who had been recently vanquished in the Anglo-Boer War. The Verwoerd family settled first in the Cape Colony, where they resided for ten years before moving to Bulwayo, Rhodesia and then to South Africa's Orange Free State province.
Education and academic career
Verwoerd took most of his primary education at Milton Academy in Bulwayo and completed his secondary education in Brandfort, a small town in the Orange Free State, after his family resettled there in 1917. He began his post-secondary education in 1919 at the University of Stellenbosch, where he earned a doctorate in psychology, cum laude, in 1924. His dissertation, Die afstomping van gemoedsaandoeninge (The Blunting of Emotions), was published in the Annale van die Universiteit van Stellenbosch (Annals of the University of Stellenbosch) in 1925.
He spent the next few years furthering his studies in various cities in Germany before returning to Stellenbosch, where he was appointed Professor of Applied Psychology and Psychotechnics in 1928. In this capacity, he taught a variety of courses, including introductory psychology, business psychology, and psychology and law.
In 1932, Verwoerd was appointed to head the University of Stellenbosch's new Department of Sociology and Social Work despite having no formal training in these disciplines.
Nationalist editor and politician
Verwoerd left academia in 1936 to assume the editorship of Die Transvaler, a new, Johannesburg-based Afrikaner nationalist newspaper. He completed a brief apprenticeship with Die Burger, another nationalist paper based in Cape Town before moving to the Transvaal province.
Architect of apartheid
Prime Minister, 1958-1966
Legacy
Verwoerd is among the most polarizing figures in South African political history.