SettlerLands

Traces of presence: settler culture in the small towns of South Africa's Eastern Cape



This site contains galleries of photographs from a research project to explore the visible influence of colonial presence and, more particularly, “Britishness” on the built environment (both specific buildings and general townscapes) of small towns in the Eastern Cape of South Africa.

The area (of about sixty thousand square miles) was the site of the single biggest migration of British people to South Africa, when some 5000 settlers arrived under a government-sponsored scheme in 1820. Comprising a broad range of classes and occupations the settlers gradually overcame the problems of local politics and the inhospitable natural environment, to establish a number of small towns in the hinterland. In these rural areas their fate and circumstances were intimately interwoven with those of the earlier Dutch-descended settlers who came to call themselves Afrikaners, and their culture therefore demonstrates dual layers of the hybridity so characteristic of the colonial.

Much 19th century “settler” architecture still remains in the smaller towns, alongside more recent evidence of the Apartheid and, now, post-Apartheid, eras. The settler buildings and built environment of this region therefore provide a precise trace of the shifts, both material and cultural, in the ambitions, co-ordinates and fortunes of a particular sector of white South African culture.