Erica schumannii Photo by Ted Oliver Click for full photo | Dolf Schumann1918-2001
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Adolf Wilhelm Stander 'Dolf' Schumann was born on 8 July in Cape Town in 1918.
His father, (P.W.S.) of former German missionary stock, was a school teacher
and principal and one of the early Afrikaans playwrights. Dolf graduated with
degrees in Mathematics and Physics from Stellenbosch University and in
Mining and Metallurgy from the University of Witwatersrand. He then proceeded
into the mining industry spending 17 years in the Copperbelt of the then
Northern
Rhodesia (Zambia).
There he gained much experience in the practical aspects of mining since he
started underground as a shift boss determined to have hands-on experience of
all procedures and ended up as mine superintendent. While there he
was involved with the establishment of the University of Rhodesia. In 1960 he
returned to South Africa and joined Federale Mynbou, a large mining house in
Johannesburg as their operational manager. With the amalgamation of Federale
Mynbou and General Mining he became general manager of the coal and bas metals
division and then technical director of the whole group where he earned the
reputation for being a top business manager and diplomat and a well-liked
person.
His time in the mining and business world culminated in his being elected to the post of President of the Chamber of Mines where he was highly respected by all in his field including the government. At the time he was also a director in some 42 companies associated with the mining industry. He also served on the Atomic Energy Board. He headed the Schumann Commission appointed by government to review the training of engineers at all South African universities. As a result of all this work and his contributions in his field he was appointed an honorary Professor of Engineering at Stellenbosch University, one of the few such honours bestowed by the university.
In July 1978 Dolf retired from the hectic life of the business world in Johannesburg to a wonderful eighth-floor apartment overlooking the Atlantic Ocean in Cape Town. He had planned for a quiet restful time with his wife Annie and their two married children and the grandchildren in Cape Town.
In 1980 while on a visit to a relative, Prof Jimmy Orchard, who had retired in the seaside resort of Hermanus, he was taken on a hike in the mountains and introduced to the local Cape Flora which Jimmy was collecting for the Fernkloof Herbarium. Dolf was struck by all the wonderful ericas that were in bloom at the time. Afterwards over a beer he was shown the Erica book by Col. Baker and myself and was "totally bowled over" by ericas. He decided there and then to make a photographic record of every species he could find.
...I suggested he meet up with Gerhard Kirsten, sport editor of the local Afrikaans daily, Die Burger. Gerhard had been collecting and studying ericas for some 15 years and had built up a very good knowledge of many species and where to find them. Thus began a very fruitful partnership between the two of them.
Not long after the book, Ericas of South Africa, was published Dolf realized
that he had done all that he could do in this field. The effects of advancing
age were starting to become a worry to him. As expected Dolf tackled the
problem in his methodical way. All his colour slides were carefully sorted
through and checked before being donated to the Compton Herbarium at
Kirstenbosch. His apparatus was given to friends who would value their origin
and make full use of them. His wonderful collection of minerals was donated to
the Tulbagh Museum. All this was completed before he moved to a small flat
overlooking the golf course in Helderberg Village, Somerset West, where he died
peacefully on 9 August 2001.
Dolf Schumann became Honorary Professor of Stellenbosch University in 1979.
This text by Ted Oliver is part of the obituary he published in Flora&Fauna, June 2002. Read the full text
www.StellenboschWriters.com © Rosemarie Breuer