The 'University of the Witwatersrand' (pronounced ''vit-vaters-rant'', with flat vowels; see
South African English) is a leading
South African university situated in
Johannesburg. It is often referred to as "Wits" (pronounced ''vits'').
Due to the 1959 Extension of University Education Act the school was only allowed to register a small number of black students for most of the
apartheid era, even though several notable black anti-apartheid leaders graduated from the university. It became desegregated again in the last few years of apartheid.
It is the home of the
Witwatersrand University Press, one of
Africa's leading academic publishers, and also the oldest and largest
university press in Africa.
History
The school was founded in
Kimberley in
1896 as the "South African School of Mines". Eight years later, in
1904 the school moved to
Johannesburg and changed its name to the "Transvaal Technical Institute". The school changed its name in
1906 to the "Transvaal University College" and in
1910, the school again changed its name to the "South African School of Mines and Technology". Finally, in
1922, the school was granted full university status after incorporating the College as the "University of the Witwatersrand". The area of Milner Park was identified as the location for the new university
campus, and construction began in the same year. There were to be six faculties that offered degrees at the University: Arts, Science, Medicine, Engineering, Law, and Commerce.
The school experienced significant growth after its incorporation as a university, growing from a mere 6,275 students in
1963 to over 16,400 in
1985. In
1964, the Medical Library of the Faculty of Medicine moved to Esselen Street, in the
Hillbrow section of Johannesburg. During the course of the
1960s, the university opened many new schools and buildings, and acquired a limestone cave renowned for its archaeological material located at
Sterkfontein. The Graduate School of Business was established later in
1968 in
Parktown. A farm next to Sterkfontein named
Swartkrans rich in archaeological material was purchased in 1968, and excavation rights were obtained for archaeological and palaeontological purposes at Makapansgat, located in
Limpopo province. The next year, the Ernest Oppenheimer Residence opened next to the Business school in Parktown, and later in the same year, clinical departments at the new Medical School opened. In
1976, Lawson's Corner was renamed University Corner. Senate House, the university's main administrative building, was occupied in
1977. The university underwent a significant expansion programme in
1984, acquiring the
Milner Park Showgrounds and renaming it the West Campus. In
1984, the Chamber of Mines building opened. A walkway "The Amic Deck" was constructed across the motorway bisecting the campus, linking the East and West Campuses.
Faculties and Schools
The University consists of five faculties:
Commerce, Law, and Management
The school currently offers degrees in accountancy, economics and business sciences, and law. It has a graduate school of business administration and public and development management. it is a part of the WitsPlus programme, which offers a part-time
BComm.
★
Commerce, Law, and Management
Engineering and the Built Environment
★
Engineering and the Built Environment
Health Sciences
★
Health Sciences
Humanities
★
Humanities
Science
★
Science
Notable Campus Buildings
★ Art Galleries: There are two
art galleries that are open to the public, the Gertrude Posel Gallery and the Studio Gallery. Both of these are located in Senate House. The Studio Gallery is renowned for having one the best collections of African
beadwork in the world.
★ Rock Art: The JD Roberts-Pager Collection of
Bushmen rock art copies is located in the Van Riet Lowe building on the East Campus.
★ Museums: The University hosts 14 museums. These include the Adler Museum of the History of Medicine, the Palaeontology Museum and the only Geology Museum in
Gauteng Province. The displays cover a vast spectra including the
Taung skull,
dinosaur fossils and
butterflies.
★ Sterkfontein Caves: Near
Krugersdorp. World renowned as one of the largest sources of
hominid fossils in the world. The area has been awarded
World Heritage status. The
Robert Broom Museum is next to the caves.
Alumni and Former Faculty
★
Lionel Abrahams, novelist, poet, editor, critic, essayist and publisher.
★
Amancio D'Alpoim (Pancho) Guedes, Portuguese architect, participant of
Team X
★
Selig Percy Amoils, ophthalmologist and biomedical engineering inventor.
★
Ian Bader, architect.
★
Lee Berger, paleoanthropologist and winner of the 1st National Geographic Prize for Research and Exploration.
★
George Bizos, human rights advocate.
★
Herman Charles Bosman, writer and journalist.
★
Dennis Brutus, former political activist and poet.
★
Colin Bundy (Warden,
Green College, Oxford; formerly Director and Principal,
School of Oriental and African Studies and Deputy Vice Chancellor,
University of London; and previously Vice Chancellor and Principal, University of the Witwatersrand)
★
Rory Byrne, chief designer for the
Ferrari Formula One team.
★
Arthur Chaskalson, former President of the
Constitutional Court of South Africa and Chief Justice of South Africa.
★
Ron Clarke Paleoanthropologist.
★
Johnny Clegg, musician.
★
Raymond Dart, anatomist and anthropologist, discoverer of the
Taung Child.
★
Clement M. Doke, linguist.
★
Jonathan Drummond-Webb
★
Shannon Esra, actress.
★
Elisabeth Eybers, poet.
★
Clinton Fein, artist, activist
★
Ruth First, anti-apartheid activist and scholar.
★
Bruce Fordyce, marathon and ultramarathon athlete who won the
Comrades Marathon a record nine times (eight times consecutively).
★
David A. Forsyth, machine vision researcher.
★
Natan Gamedze, Swazi Prince, Supreme Court Translator and
Orthodox Rabbi.
★
Imran Garda, News Anchor for
Al Jazeera English.
★
Max Gluckman, anthropologist.
★
Richard Goldstone, judge and international war crimes prosecutor.
★
Giles Henderson,
CBE, Master of
Pembroke College, Oxford
★
Aura Herzog, Israeli writer.
★
Jan Hofmeyr, politician.
★
Gavin Hood, writer, producer and director, best known for directing ''
Tsotsi''.
★
Joel Joffe, human rights lawyer who represented Nelson Mandela in the
Rivonia Trial.
★
Norm Judah, Microsoft Services chief technology officer of Worldwide Services and IT
★
Claire Johnston, singer best known as the face and voice of
Mango Groove.
★
Paul Kantor, cardiologist (Sick Children's Hospital- Toronto), Former Chief Cardiologist (Hamilton Children's Hospital).
★
Ahmed Kathrada, politician, anti-apartheid activist and political prisoner.
★
Teresa Heinz Kerry, philanthropist and the wife of U.S. Senator
John Kerry.
★
David King, scientist.
★
James Kitching, Karroo paleontologist.
★
Aggrey Klaaste, journalist and editor, best known as the editor of the Sowetan from 1988 to 2002.
★
Danie G. Krige,
Mining Engineer who pioneered the field of
geostatistics.
★
Ludwig Lachmann, economist and important contributor to the
Austrian School.
★
Tony Leon, politician and former leader of the
Democratic Alliance.
★
Doron Lubinsky, mathematician and author.
★
Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, ex-wife of Nelson Mandela.
★
Ismail Mahomed, first post-apartheid Chief Justice.
★
Nevelle Charles Starke, former
veternarian.
★
Nelson Mandela, the first President of South Africa to be elected in fully-representative democratic elections.
★
Manfred Mann, Keyboard player for the bands
Manfred Mann and
Manfred Mann's Earth Band, among others.
★
Judith Mason, renowned South African painter
★
Eduardo Mondlane, the father of
Mozambican independence.
★
Patrice Motsepe, leading South African mining entrepreneur. Mamelodi Sundowns boss
★
Phaswane Mpe, poet and novelist.
★
Ezekiel Mphahlele, writer and academic.
★
Connie Mulder, former politician.
★
Frank Nabarro, solid state physicist, DVC.
★
Lionel Ngakane, filmmaker.
★
Wanda Orlikowski, Information Systems scholar
★
Seymour Papert,
artificial intelligence pioneer and inventor of the
Logo programming language.
★
Cedric Phatudi
★
Mamphela Ramphele, academic, businesswoman, medical doctor and anti-apartheid activist.
★
Audrey Richards, social anthropologist.
★
Harry Schwarz, lawyer and politician.
★
Mark Sebba, linguist
[1]
★
Friedel Sellschop, physicist
[2]
★
Herbert Sichel, statistician.
★
Joe Slovo, Communist politician, long time leader of the
South African Communist Party (SACP), and leading member of the
African National Congress.
★ Himla Soodyall, geneticist.
★
Helen Suzman, anti-apartheid activist and politician.
★
Phillip Tobias, paleoanthropologist and anatomist.
★
Benedict Wallet Vilakazi, Zulu poet, novelist, and educator. The first black South African to receive a Ph. D.
★
Ivan Vladislavic, South African novelist
★
David Webster, social anthropologist and anti-apartheid activist.
★
Ernst Oswald Johannes Westphal,
linguist and an expert in
Bantu and
Khoisan languages.
★
Helen Zille, Leader of the
Democratic Alliance (South Africa)
Nobel Prize Laureates
★
Aaron Klug, 1982
Nobel Prize in Chemistry
★
Nadine Gordimer, 1991
Nobel Prize in literature
★
Nelson Mandela, 1993
Nobel Peace Prize
★
Sydney Brenner, 2002
Nobel Prize in Medicine
Books about the University
★ ''The Golden Jubilee of the University of the Witwatersrand''
1972 ISBN 0-85494-188-6 (Jubilee Committee, University of the Witwatersrand Press)
★ ''Wits: The Early Years : a History of the University of the Witwatersrand Johannesburg and its Precursors 1896 - 1936''
1982 Bruce Murray ISBN 0-85494-709-4 (University of the Witwatersrand Press)
★ ''Wits Sport: An Illustrated History of Sport at the University of the Witwatersrand''
1989 Jonty Winch ISBN 0-620-13806-8 (Windsor)
★ Wits: A University in the Apartheid Era
1996 Mervyn Shear ISBN 1-86814-302-3 (University of the Witwatersrand Press)
★ ''Wits: The "Open Years"''
1997 Bruce Murray ISBN 1-86814-314-7 (University of the Witwatersrand Press)
★ ''A Vice-Chancellor Remembers: the Memoirs of Professor G.R. Bozzoli''
1995 Guerino Bozzoli ISBN 0-620-19369-7 (Alphaprint)
★ ''Wits Library: a Centenary History''
1998 Reuben Musiker & Naomi Musiker ISBN 0-620-22754-0 (Scarecrow Books)
See also
★
Wits University Football Club
External links
★
University Website
★
History of Transvaal University College