Cradock, South Africa Explained

Cradock
Pushpin Map:South Africa Eastern Cape#South Africa#Africa
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:South Africa
Subdivision Type1:Province
Subdivision Name1:Eastern Cape
Subdivision Type2:District
Subdivision Name2:Chris Hani
Subdivision Type3:Municipality
Subdivision Name3:Inxuba Yethemba
Subdivision Type4:Main Place
Established Title:Established
Established Date:1816
Leader Title:Councillor
Area Footnotes:[1]
Area Total Km2:118.57
Population Total:8626
Population As Of:2011
Population Density Km2:auto
Demographics Type1:Racial makeup (2011)
Demographics1 Title1:White
Demographics1 Info1:50.0%
Demographics1 Title2:Black African
Demographics1 Info2:30.5%
Demographics1 Title3:Coloured
Demographics1 Info3:17.9%
Demographics1 Title4:Indian/Asian
Demographics1 Info4:0.9%
Demographics1 Title5:Other
Demographics1 Info5:0.7%
Demographics Type2:First languages (2011)
Demographics2 Title1:Afrikaans
Demographics2 Info1:68.8%
Demographics2 Title2:Xhosa
Demographics2 Info2:20.0%
Demographics2 Title3:English
Demographics2 Info3:7.9%
Demographics2 Title5:Other
Demographics2 Info5:2.3%
Timezone1:SAST
Utc Offset1:+2
Postal Code Type:Postal code (street)
Postal Code:5880
Postal2 Code Type:PO box
Postal2 Code:5880
Area Code Type:Area code
Area Code:048

Cradock, officially Nxuba, is a town in the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa, in the upper valley of the Great Fish River, 250km (160miles) by road northeast of Port Elizabeth. The town is the administrative seat of the Inxuba Yethemba Local Municipality in the Chris Hani District of the Eastern Cape.

The town is named after John Cradock, governor of the Cape Colony in early 19th century and commander of the forces.

Pre-colonial history

For thousands of years San hunter-gatherers were the sole human inhabitants of southern Africa. About 2000 years BP the semi-nomadic Khoikhoi (or Khoekhoen or Khoikhoin) arrived with cattle, sheep and goats. These pastoralists migrated south towards the coast. Rock paintings and petroglyphs (engravings) remain as evidence of the first people who lived here.

By the 4th century AD Bantu-speaking people had begun to migrate from central Africa down the east coast into southern Africa. The amaXhosa pressed further south to the banks of the Great Fish River where they met San hunter-gatherers and Khoikhoi pastoralists, and later still Dutch and then British settlers.

Colonial history

The district of which Cradock is now the centre was first settled by Dutch farmers in the late 18th century, but was known long before to the hunters who illicitly crossed the frontier in search of game and ivory.

The first official Dutch expedition to the upper Great Fish River was in mid-1752 when a party led by Ensign August Frederik Beutler visited the area. Beutler, following the instructions of Governor Ryk Tulbagh to investigate the possibilities of developing the Cape's eastern regions, was accompanied by a number of other officials including a diarist, Carl Haupt, and a surveyor, Carl Wentzel, who drew a map of the route taken. Almost the only mention made about the area in the diary was that it was very dry and forage was unobtainable.

Forty five years later traveller Sir John Barrow crossed the Great Fish River. At his crossing point he noted on his map the existence beside the river of "Hepatic wells" – sulphur springs. In later years the springs were to be used for wool washing and the town's laundry.

After the 1811–12 Xhosa War, it became apparent that to maintain order along the frontier more administrative and military posts would have to be established along the Great Fish River. The district of Graaff-Reinet was too large to administer properly and the town itself too far from the river, so it was decided to set up a new sub-drostdy, and in June 1812 Ensign Andries Stockenstrom was appointed deputy landdrost. Piet van Heerden's farm Buffels Kloof beside the Great Fish River was bought for 3 500 rix dollars. One of the advantages of the purchase was that Van Heerden's stone-walled house farmhouse could serve as a prison, the first and apparently most important requirement of any town. The house also provided accommodation for a constable and two policemen.

The official proclamation appeared in the Cape Town Gazette on 21 January 1814. Sir John Cradock sanctioned an expenditure of 12 000 rixdollars on public buildings and work began at once on a house for the deputy landdrost. In addition he was allowed a farm to "render his positionas comfortable and respectable as possible". The farm chosen was Driefontein, that of Piet van Heerden's brother, W J van Heerden.

In July 1817 the Reverend John Evans was appointed as first minister and he set about raising funds for a church. With minister, deputy landdrost, constable and policemen, the inhabitants could consider their tiny village well on the way to being a "town".

In the 1830s the Great Trek began, as Afrikaners who were discontent with British rule left en masse for the interior. Most of the migration departed from (and via) the area around Cradock.

The Cape Colony received a degree of independence in 1872 when "Responsible Government" was declared and, in 1877, the government of Prime Minister John Molteno sanctioned construction of a railway line connecting Port Elizabeth on the coast with the hinterland. Passing as it did through Cradock it led to significant growth and economic development in and around the town.[2] [3]

In the early 1900s, a boom in demand for ostrich feathers led to a massive rise in prosperity for the local ostrich farmers.

The Cradock Four

See main article: The Cradock Four. Matthew Goniwe, Sparrow Mkhonto, Fort Calata and Sicelo Mhlauli, known as The Cradock Four – were abducted while travelling from Port Elizabeth to Cradock in 1985.[4] They were then taken to an unknown destination, where they were assaulted, killed and their bodies and the vehicle in which they were travelling burnt. Some of these incidents occurred on the night of 27 June 1985 (the night of their abduction) and some of them occurred at a later, unknown time.

Three Security Branch policemen, a Sergeant Faku, Sergeant Mgoduka, and one Sakati who participated in the killing of the activists were later killed in a car bomb blast at Motherwell in 1989.

The Cradock Four Memorial is a monument located in Lingelihle, a township near Cradock. The monument was erected on 22 July 2000 in commemoration of the Cradock Four.[5]

Economy and tourism

Cradock is one of the Cape's chief centres of the wool industry, and also produces beef, dairy, fruit, lucerne, and mohair.

Of enormous importance to the economic development of Cradock was the construction of the Orange-Fish River Tunnel. Completed in 1975 and in length it diverts water from the Gariep Dam on the Orange River to the Great Fish River and then on as far as the Addo Valley, Grahamstown and Port Elizabeth for irrigation, household and industrial use.

The construction of the tunnel also made possible the annual Fish River Canoe Marathon. From humble beginnings in 1982 the two-day, event now attracts in excess of 1 500 paddlers from around the world.

A notable attraction is the Mountain Zebra National Park just from the town, where the once-endangered zebra species together with lion, cheetah, buffalo and a range of antelope species are to be seen in magnificent surroundings.

Notable attractions in the town are the "tuishuise" (at-home houses), superbly restored Victorian era craftsmen's houses in Market Street which form part of the Victoria Manor Hotel; the Dutch Reformed Moederkerk which dates back to 1868 and was designed after the style of St Martin-in-the-Fields in Trafalgar Square, London; and Schreiner House where the renowned author of The Story of an African Farm lived as a young girl. The house, which is located at 9 Cross Street and is a satellite of the National English Literary Museum, contains a modern set of exhibitions portraying the life of Olive Schreiner.

People

Politicians

Coat of arms

Cradock was established as a municipality in 1840. By 1902, the town council had assumed a coat of arms.[10] [11] The arms were formally granted by the provincial administrator in May 1966[12] and registered at the Bureau of Heraldry in September 1969.

The arms were: Quarterly: I, Argent, a tree Vert; II, Gules, a beehive, Or; III, Gules, a fleece Or; IV, Azure, a garb Or. In layman's terms, this means that the shield was divided into four quarters displaying (1) a green tree on a silver background, (2) a golden beehive on a red background, (3) a golden fleece on a red background, and (4) a golden wheatsheaf on a blue background.[13]

Until 1966, the shield was flanked by two ostrich feathers. They were replaced with two mountain zebras, as supporters. The crest was a cornucopia and the motto was Perseverantia vincit.

Renaming

Cradock was officially renamed Nxuba on 26 August 2022.[14] [15]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Sub Place Cradock . Census 2011 . 30 June 2021 . 11 July 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210711055647/https://census2011.adrianfrith.com/place/278003001 . live .
  2. Book: Burman, Jose . Early railways at the Cape . 1984 . Human & Rousseau . 73 . 9780798117609.
  3. Book: Schoeman, Chris . The Historical Karoo: Traces of the Past in South Africa's Arid Interior . 2014 . Zebra . 978-1-77022-568-8 . 117.
  4. http://www.info.gov.za/speeches/1998/98217_0x6849810596.htm STATEMENT BY THE TRC: AMNESTY APPLICATIONS FOR CRADOCK FOUR KILLINGS, 16 February 1998
  5. Web site: Cradock Four memorial neglected, forgotten . Spies . Derrick . News24 . 7 April 2015 . 2017-10-11 . 6 September 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170906180503/http://www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/News/Cradock-Four-memorial-neglected-forgotten-20150407 . live .
  6. Web site: Samantha Stander . 17 June 2020 . 17 June 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200617214851/https://www0.sun.ac.za/100/en/matie-voice/samantha-stander/ . live .
  7. Web site: Student determined not to let hip disorder grind her down . 17 June 2020 . 19 June 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200619030448/https://www.iol.co.za/weekend-argus/student-determined-not-to-let-hip-disorder-grind-her-down-2007280 . live .
  8. Web site: Interview with Samantha Stander . 22 April 2016 . 17 June 2020 . 17 June 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200617232102/https://saocr.co.za/2016/04/22/samantha-stander-the-grind/ . live .
  9. Mabin . Alan . 2021 . History and hope in Cradock, Eastern Cape . Transformation: Critical Perspectives on Southern Africa . 106 . 1 . 35–67 . 10.1353/trn.2021.0015 . 239828874 . 1726-1368. subscription .
  10. The arms were depicted on a medallion issued in 1902.
  11. The arms were depicted on a cigarette card issued in 1931.
  12. Cape of Good Hope Official Gazette 3348 (27 May 1966).
  13. Web site: Cradock . Heraldry of the World . 2016-01-04 . 10 September 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180910164514/http://www.ngw.nl/heraldrywiki/index.php?title=Cradock . live .
  14. Web site: Cradock- Nxba . 2024-05-06 . www.sahistory.org.za.
  15. https://businesstech.co.za/news/government/737785/all-the-new-name-changes-for-south-african-cities-towns-and-villages-in-2023/