Port Elizabeth of Yore:  1835 – Under a Dark Cloud with several bright rays

Port Elizabeth commenced the year on a bright optimistic note with the appointment of Henry Green Dunsterville as Harbour Master and Port Captain with effect from the 1st January 1835. This appointment was only confirmed on the 7th June. Immediately after this announcement, the imminent threat of a Xhosa invasion of the town set the town on edge. This was followed in late September by a disastrous storm which resulted in the loss of several vessels in the Bay.

Among the bright rays which barely penetrated the dark, dank clouds was the appointment of the town’s first civilian doctor. Another spark was an extended stay of the Cape Governor during which the residents were able to address their frustrations about the lack of a lighthouse at Cape Receife.  

Main picture: A blustery day in the Bay

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Port Elizabeth of Yore: The Port Elizabeth Yeomanry during the 1835 Frontier War

The Port Elizabeth Yeomanry was formed under Captain William Matthew Harries for service during the Sixth Frontier War.  

This blog covers the events when they engaged in some of the fiercest fight­ing of that year, at Trompetter’s Drift and elsewhere in the Fish River bush. The source of a major portion of the detail is from the memoir of James Edward Alexander.

Main picture: Xhosa warrior

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