Today’s posts from our featured Port Elizabeth Blogger:
So many activities to do around Addo:
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ytr7JafvP7o]
When you mention Addo, most people think elephants. They wouldn’t be wrong though BUT, these days Addo is so much more than just elephants. Crisscross Adventures is a tour and adventure activity company based in the Sundays River Valley and they offer a wide range of activities from tours to the Addo Elephant National Park to quad biking, canoe safaris on the Sundays River and sand boarding. Check out their new promotional video and tell me you don’t want to go and explore and experience the valley after seeing it.
Source: Port Elizabeth Daily Photo.
Port Elizabeth Concentration Camp Memorial:
Today’s post basically is a report of a post I did in 2014. It’s one of those little pieces of Port Elizabeth information that very few know about and is worth reposting.
When you mention the word concentration camp most people would probably associate it with the Germans during the second World War. Few know that concentration camps were first implemented in South Africa by the British to hold Boer women and children during the Anglo Boer War (1899 and 1902).
There were two concentrations camps in what is today known as Nelson Mandela Bay. One in Uitenhage and one at Kemsley Park in Port Elizabeth. The concentration camp in Port Elizabeth operated from December 1900 until approximately November 1902. It held an average of 230 children and 86 women housed in corrugated iron huts encircled by a high barbed wire fence. There was also a separately fenced camp for 32 men in tents. There were very few deaths in this so-called “model camp” compared to the thousands that died in the other camps. Only 12 deaths were recorded over the period it was in existence. This camp housed mainly Boers from the Free State from Jagersfontein and Fauresmith, among them General, and later Prime Minister, JBM Hertzog ‘s mother, wife, three sisters in-law and their children. The camp was closed in November 1902, and subsequently, a monument was erected at the Kemsley Park site. A monument and plaque at North End Cemetery have the names of the 14 people who died in the camp on it.
Source: Port Elizabeth Daily Photo.
Click HERE to submit your blog to be part of this daily feature.
CLICK HERE to get a daily digest of PE Goodness straight into your inbox with the MyPE Monday to Friday Newsletter.
The following two tabs change content below.
Port Elizabethan
This author is a 'catch-all' for occasional articles and letters written to MyPE. The Author of each article can be found in the signature at the bottom of each individual article.
Latest posts by Port Elizabethan (see all)
- Sabric warns on festive season fraud after suspects steal R430K stokvel money – Port Elizabeth in the News - 10 December 2019
- Proposed EMS strike could cause untold harm to EC residents - 10 December 2019
- Why So Stern? - 10 December 2019
- This map shows where you can find electric car charging stations across South Africa – Port Elizabeth Business News - 10 December 2019
- Sabric warns on festive season fraud after suspects steal R430K stokvel money – Port Elizabeth in the News - 10 December 2019