Griqualand West was proclaimed as a separate Crown Colony . The discovery of diamonds in South Africa in 1866 resulted in a flood of treasure hunters, especially from England, streaming to the interior of the Country. Ownership of the diamond fields was contested by the Boer republics of the; Orange Free State and the Transvaal,. As well as various other groups like the KhoiKhoi, Koranas under Andries Waterboer, and the Batlhaping under Chief Mankuroane.
In 1870, Transvaal President Andries Pretorius declared the diamond fields as Boer property. Immigrant miners were enraged and a former British sailor called Stafford Parker organised his fellow countrymen and drove all the Transvaal officials out of the Area. On 30 July 1870 he declared the Klipdrift Republic and by December of the same year about 10 000 British Settlers made their home in the new Republic. Parker was also chosen as President. It was either called: 'the Digger's Republic or the Republic of Griqualand West.'
On the 5th of August 1879 it became a separate British Crown Colony. However, this did not settle the conflict of ownership. The Batlhaping under Mankuroane and the Qriquas rebelled against British in an attempt to regain their independence. British forces crushed the rebellion. Chief Mankuroane fled to neighbouring Tswana chiefdoms but Chief Montshioa of the Barolong Boo Ratshidi urged other Tswana chiefs not to give rebellious chiefs refuge in their chiefdoms. The Batlhaping tribe originates from a breakaway of the Barolong, a Tswana tribe which dates back to 1270. Barolong derives their name from their first ruler Morolong, a name which means to forge in Tswana, suggesting one who was a practitioner in the craft of a blacksmith. Finally, British forces captured Chief Mankuroane and Qriqua leaders.
The Republic sat next to the Vaal River, but existed for an extremely short time. During the following year Boer forces attempted to regain the territory through negotiation, but were unsuccessful, and on 27 October 1871 British forces marched in and occupied the small country. It became the Griqualand West colony and eventually was incorporated into the Orange Free State.
Potgieter, D.J. (ed) 1973. Standard Encyclopaedia of Southern Africa POP-SLA. Cape Town: Nasionale Opvoedkundige Uitgewery.|https://www.buckyogi.com/footnotes/natkl.htm|https://flagspot.net/flags/za_kd.html