Trials and prisons chronology – Nelson Mandela Foundation (2024)

Nelson Mandela was arrested on several occasions and stood trial four times. He spent over 27 years in prison. Our archivists and researchers have assembled dates and locations of transfers and time spent in confinement.

Prison numbers

  • 19476/62 – Pretoria Local Prison 7 November 1962
  • 11657/63 – Pretoria Local Prison1963, when he returned to Pretoria after a short spell on Robben Island
  • 466/64 – Robben Island June 1964
  • 220/82 – Pollsmoor Prison March 1982
  • 1335/88 – Victor Verster Prison7 December 1988

Trials and prisons chronology

2 December 1952

Nelson Mandela is charged, with 19 others, including Walter Sisulu, for violating the Suppression of Communism Act. They are convicted and sentenced to nine months' hard labour, suspended for two years.

21 March 1960

Sixty-nine peaceful protesters are killed by police at Sharpeville. On 30 March Mandela is one of thousands detained under a state of emergency.

8 April 1960

The apartheid regime bans the African National Congress (ANC) and the Pan Africanist Congress (PAC).

29 March 1961

After a four-and-a-half-year trial, where he and scores of other people were charged with high treason, Mandela and the last 27 remaining accused are acquitted. He goes underground.

11 January 1962

Mandela leaves the country for military training, and to gather support for the newly formed armed wing of the ANC, Umkhonto we Sizwe (Spear of the Nation).

23 July 1962

Mandela returns to South Africa via Botswana.

5 August 1962

He is arrested at a roadblock near Howick, KwaZulu-Natal.

7 November 1962

He is sentenced to five years in prison, for incitement and leaving the country illegally. He begins serving his sentence at Pretoria Local Prison and is assigned the prisoner number 19476/62.

27 May 1963

Transferred to Robben Island Prison.

12 June 1963

Transferred to Pretoria Local Prison.

9 October 1963

Appears, for the first time, with 10 others in the Palace of Justice in Pretoria. They become the accused in the Rivonia Trial. The case is remanded to 29 October.

29 October 1963

The defence applies for the quashing of the indictment, which alleges 199 acts of sabotage.

30 October 1963

Prosecutor Percy Yutar announces that Bob Hepple is to become a state witness. He is released and skips the country. The indictment against the 10 others is quashed. They are immediately rearrested.

1 November 1963

Justice Quartus de Wet refuses bail to Kantor and Bernstein. The case is remanded to 12 November.

12 November 1963

Yutar presents a new indictment splitting the sabotage charges into two parts. The case is remanded to 25 November.

25 November 1963

The 199 alleged acts of sabotage are reduced to 193. The defence applies to have the new indictment quashed.

26 November 1963

Justice De Wet dismisses the application to have the indictment quashed.

27 November 1963

The trial is remanded to 3 December, after Kantor’s new defence requests time to prepare.

3 December 1963

The 10 accused plead not guilty to sabotage in the Rivonia Trial.

4 March 1964

Kantor is discharged and released.

20 April 1964

Mandela makes his famous "Speech from the Dock", in which he says he is "prepared to die" for a democratic South Africa.

11 June 1964

All, except Bernstein, are convicted of sabotage.

12 June 1964

Mandela and seven others are sentenced to life imprisonment.

12 June 1964

All except Goldberg are sent to Robben Island to serve their sentences. Goldberg, as the only white person convicted in the trial, is held in Pretoria Central Prison. Mandela is assigned the prisoner number 466/64.

24 September 1968

Mandela’s mother, Nosekeni dies. He is forbidden from attending her funeral.

13 July 1969

Mandela’s eldest son, Thembekile, is killed in a car accident. Mandela is forbidden from attending his son's funeral.

31 March 1982

Mandela, Sisulu, Mhlaba and Mlangeni, and later Kathrada, are transferred to Pollsmoor Prison. Mandela is assigned the prisoner number 220/82.

10 February 1985

Rejects President PW Botha's offers to release him and other political prisoners if they renounce violence.

28 February 1985

Goldberg, who has been held apart from his comrades for more than 20 years, accepts the offer and is released.

3 November 1985

Mandela admitted to the Volks Hospital in Cape Town for prostate surgery.

23 November 1985

Is discharged from the Volks Hospital and held in a cell alone at Pollsmoor Prison, from where he begins communicating with the government about eventual talks with the ANC.

16 May 1986

Meets with an Eminent Persons Group from the Commonwealth Group of Nations.

20 July 1986

Holds his first meeting with Justice Minister Kobie Coetsee about talks between the government and the ANC.

5 November 1987

Govan Mbeki is released from Robben Island.

12 August 1988

Mandela admitted to Tygerberg Hospital, where he is diagnosed with tuberculosis.

31 August 1988

Transferred to Constantiaberg Mediclinic to continue his treatment.

7 December 1988

Is transferred to Victor Verster Prison near Paarl, where he is held in the house formerly occupied by a warder. Mandela is assigned the prisoner number 1335/88.

5 July 1989

Meets PW Botha in his office in Cape Town.

15 October 1989

Sisulu, Kathrada, Motsoaledi, Mlangeni and Mhlaba are released, along with Oscar Mpetha and PAC prisoner Jeff Masemola.

13 December 1989

Meets President FW de Klerk at his office in Cape Town.

2 February 1990

At the opening of Parliament, De Klerk announces the unbanning of all political organisations, including the ANC.

10 February 1990

Meets De Klerk, who says he will be released the next day in Johannesburg. Mandela objects, saying he wants to walk through the gates of Victor Verster Prison, and asks for two weeks for the ANC to prepare. De Klerk refuses the extension but agrees to release him from Victor Verster.

10 February 1990

De Klerk announces at a press conference that Mandela will be released the next day.

11 February 1990

Mandela is released from Victor Verster Prison.

11 February 1990

He addresses thousands of well-wishers gathered on the Grand Parade, from the balcony of the City Hall, in Cape Town. Spends the night at Bishopscourt, the official residence of the Anglican Archbishop of Cape Town.

12 February 1990

Holds a press conference in the garden of Bishopscourt. Flies to Johannesburg.

12 February 1990

Spends the night in North Riding, at the home of a supporter, Sally Rowney.

13 February 1990

Flies to FNB Stadium in Soweto for a welcome home rally.

13 February 1990

Spends his first night in decades at his family home, 8115 Orlando West, Soweto.

Trials and prisons chronology – Nelson Mandela Foundation (2024)
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