The
development of Pinelands has a unique role in the history of South Africa as it
was the first town-planned area to be established in the country.
The
idea of a new form of city based on economic and scientific principles was postulated
by Ebenezer Howard in his book Garden Cities of Tomorrow, published in 1898. The
concept, outlined in this book was that an estate could be bought and held in
trust, first as security for debenture holders and second, in trust for people
of the garden city. He conceived the idea of a planned town with public buildings
and a park being built in the centre. Around the park would be situated a great
arcade containing shops and other commercial activities. Houses and work areas
would be surrounded by
gardens and standards of architecture were to be established
in order to maintain the beauty of the original site. The shops and factories
whilst accessible to workers would be built where they would not spoil the landscape.
This concept was a far cry from the sub-human level of housing which had resulted
from the Industrial Revolution. Ebenezer Howard's intention was that the community
would retain for its own benefit portion of
the income derived from commercial
sites and by this means be able to establish sites for recreation and leisure
pursuits. His ideas led to the formation of the Garden Cities Association and
the subsequent establishment of Letchworth and Welwyn, England, the world's first
Garden Cities.
Immediately after the First World War, conditions in the
urban areas of South Africa were deteriorating rapidly. The diamond and gold rush
had brought many people to towns, the Great War had caused sharp rent increases
and the influenza epidemic carried off thousands of people in the Cape Peninsula
alone. Richard Stuttaford, a well-known merchant and city councilor of Cape Town,
was convinced that better housing and living conditions were necessary to meet
these problems and, on meeting Ebenezer Howard, was greatly impressed with the
latter's ideas and schemes. As a result, in 1919, he persuaded the South African
Government to grant the Trustees of the newly formed Garden Cities Trust 365 morgen
of the Uitvlugt Forest Reserve for the purpose of establishing a garden city.
He donated the then considerable sum of £10,000 to the Trust in order that
it could pursue its objective "of providing better housing and social conditions
for the people, the latter purpose to be construed in its widest sense".
In
the 1880s, what is now Pinelands was all sandy waste, sporadically covered
with wattle. Chief Langalibalele, a tribal Chief of the Hlubi of the Utrecht district
and leaders of the Langalibalele Rebellion, was sent to the Cape where he was
imprisoned on 4 August 1874. From the 27 August 1875, he was held on the farm
Uitvlugt (transl. The Escape) on the Cape Flats. The land adjoining
Uitvlugt was Oude Molen (transl. Old Mill) and was originally granted
to one of the Free Burghers during the time of Jan van Riebeeck. When the Zulu
War came to an end Cetewayo, King Panda's son, was captured and brought to Oude
Molen as a prisoner of the Colonial Government. The farm Uitvlugt was later earmarked
as a Forest Reserve by the Cape Colonial Government and tens of thousands of pine
trees were planted to control the drifting sands from the Cape Flats, the isthmus
between the main body of land and the peninsula proper. Langalibalele was sent
back to Natal in 1887 and the original farmstead, situated in the area of the
present Homestead Way, was occupied by the Forestry Officer.
The homestead
was a spacious Dutch-styled house with walls of mud and stone which, during the
early 1920's, had to be reinforced with concrete supports. Sadly, it was demolished
in 1947.
In the early 1890's a rich clay pit was discovered in Uitvlugt
and a brick-making business was set up on the site which is today the corner of
Forest Drive and Alice's Ride (the latter so named because Princess Alice, wife
of the Earl of Athlone who was
Governor General of South Africa, often rode
on horseback in the area). A shack was erected to provide living quarters and
an office for the brick-makers. Excluding the farm homestead, this shack, subsequently
occupied by the Estate Manager, Mr. Logan, was Pinelands' oldest building. It
was demolished in 1955.
During the Anglo-Boer War (1898-1902), Uitvlugt
was used as a remount camp by the British Army who used not only horses and mules,
but also camels for certain purposes. The camels were later trained for postal
duties in the Kalahari Desert by the South African Postal Service. During later
property developments in Pinelands bones 2 identified as those of camels as well
as hundreds of horseshoes and tent pegs were to be unearthed. At some stage, a
Police Training Depot was established on the site of the present Oval
cricket field.
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| Foundation
Stone of Pinelands |
In 1900, on the northern border of
Pinelands and adjacent to the industrial area, N'dabeni, there were built a number
of wood and iron hostel huts first used by the Cape Government to accommodate
bubonic plague patients and later occupied by elderly people. The deaths of British
Army nursing sisters here were recorded in a poem of Rudyard Kipling's "They
Who Died at Uitvlugt". The elderly were subsequently housed at the Conradie
Hospital, the which was founded in 1938.
Once the site for Pinelands had
been determined and the Trust Deed drawn up it was necessary to commence the design
and layout of the Garden City and a competition, open to local architects, was
held. Although the first prize was awarded to John Perry the designs for the layout
and various types of houses were rejected after being referred to Sir Raymond
Unwin, the planner of the first Garden City of Letchworth. The architectural firm
who had planned the development of Welwyn were then appointed to develop the Uitvlugt
housing project and Mr. A. J. Thompson, the first Supervising
Architect of
Pinelands, was sent out from England for this purpose under a two year contract.
The layout plan for Pinelands followed Howard's broad principles and allowed for
plenty of open space. Strict building lines were adhered to and as Thompson foresaw
that Pinelands would need more than one railway station, attention was paid to
the siteing of these with major roads being planned to lead to them. A small civic
centre was located in the heart of the township. At the beginning of 1921, the
layout of the first section of Pinelands was completed and in August 1921 the
Trustees applied for a Government Housing Loan of £200,000 to cover the
costs of the first group of houses. However, the Administrator of the Cape, Sir
Frederick de Waal, had little faith in Pinelands and would not sponsor the loans
for properties to be built in the area. Once again Richard Stuttaford, in addition
to his initial £10,000 grant, had to deposit with the Administrator his
own personal security for each loan granted.
J.W.P. (William) Logan was
appointed the first Estate Manager of Pinelands on 23 July 1922 with a salary
of £35 per month and free use of the house he occupied on the estate. The
name "Pinelands" was suggested by the first Secretary of Garden Cities
Trust, Percy Stuart Horne, in preference to the name "Midwood". As the
township plan aimed to preserve the pines wherever possible the name appeared
apt and was adopted on 11 August 1921.
"A Piano Comes to Pinelands"
was a picturesque headline to a story published by the Cape Argus on 11 February
1922. The sub-headlines read "First house now occupied - others rapidly nearing
completion". The pianist was Gurth Cox, an architect, who moved into the
first house, No. 3 Meadway.
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| No.3
Meadway to-day |
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| "Runnymede"
to-day |
The house had been completed in mid January 1922
and was roofed with thatch which was then the only roofing material permitted
in Pinelands. At the end of February 1922, Dr/Mrs Edith Gertrude Pycroft (later
John Perrys mother-in-law and herself a figure of stature in South Africas
medical history) occupied "Runnymede" at the north corner of The Mead
and then A. J. Thompson took his family to live in what is now "Hampstead"
on the corner of Meadway and Forest Drive. In Forest Drive between Meadway and
the Raapenberg Bridge more cottages were built and by February 1922 there were
three roads, a main avenue for heavy traffic (Forest Drive), a second for cyclists
and lighter vehicles (Central Avenue) and a third for pedestrians. Care was taken
to preserve the trees and each road was a long, natural avenue. Each of the newly
built houses was different with no uniformity of type or price and they were designed
to combine an attractive appearance with comfort and low cost.
By the end
of 1922 there were 24 houses occupied and the population of Pinelands totaled
60. By this time the sum of only £15,000 from the Government Housing Fund
had been invested. Electricity was installed in late 1922 to early 1923 and by
1924 there were 10 street lights in operation.
On May 25, 1923, four years
after the project had been started, General J. C. Smuts laid the foundation stone
in Central Square "to commemorate the founding of Pinelands", the first
Garden City to be established under the Trust formed by the Union Government and
Richard Stuttaford of Cape Town. Richard Stuttaford presided over the ceremony
and mentioned that 34 houses had been completed, 49 were in the course of construction,
and the total value of properties erected by June 1923 would exceed £100,000.
In 1927, the Garden Cities Trust was incorporated as a not-for-profit section
21 company Garden Cities. The Pinelands Development Company was established
in 1930 to oversea the development of the area.
In April 1932, erf. No.509
at 15 Uitvlugt, Pinelands, was surveyed and, in July 1936 for a deposit of £175
against a purchase price of £875, Emily Mary Scotton (later Pelteret) purchased the property. She was to remain owner of the property until her death
in January 1994; whereafter it passed via her daughter-in-law into the Pelteret
Trust.
By that time, Pinelands had grown into a town of over 20,000 inhabitants.
The area of the Garden City was 567 hectares with additional land having been
acquired by the trustees, Garden Cities, in 1942. There were over 3,000 houses
and 750 flat units and Howard Centre, together with Central Square one of the
two shopping complexes, had developed into a thriving commercial area of shops
and offices.
Until recently, perhaps the most significant feature of the
development of Pinelands has been the establishment of a wide range of community
facilities and activities. The Garden City built a number churches of different
denominations, nursery, primary and secondary schools, homes for the aged, various
sports clubs and a large number of social and cultural societies. Community spirit
was always a hall-mark of its society; a society that looked out for
each other and was charity orientated. Everyone knew everyone else; and many families
either returned to Pinelands having temporarily 4 drifted away or
have lived for several generations within its amiable environment.
There
remains a strong bias against liquor in the community and as such
Pinelands is one of two dry suburbs in Cape Town (probably South Africa).
It was these aspects of the development of Pinelands which, together with the
attractive physical layout, played a major role in making the Garden City a tranquil,
sought after place in which to live; bring up children or grow old.
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| Views
of The Mead : The Edwardian Pillar Post-box moved in the 1980s from
outside the original Post-office (to-day a chapel) to its present site, seen together
with the National Monument Stone laid in 1983 |
To many inhabitants,
its wealth of history and the beauty of the early areas established in Pinelands
made it important for Pinelands to preserve its heritage not only as the first
Garden City laid out in South Africa and as such the forerunner of town planning
in the country, as a tribute to a wonderful environment with a unique "old-world
charm". To this end, The Mead and Meadway, with their little thatched Cotswold
houses, were proclaimed National Monuments on 22 April 1983, with the intention
of their standing for all time a tribute to those who visualised a garden city
in South Africa and had the financial clout and political courage to carry their
conviction through to fruition.
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| Views
of Meadway : Original thatched-roofed cottages with Table Mountain as a back-drop
to the west |
In order to avoid incorporation into the City
of Cape Town, the community of Pinelands voted to create an independent municipality
of the then Pinelands Local Board. The municipality was promulgated on 5 March
1948 with Mr. William Gardener, the first mayor. In June 1997, Alderman Ron Strybis
presided as last mayor over the last council meeting. Sadly, with the promulgation
of legislation reorganizing local authorities, the independent Municipality of
Pinelands was disbanded at that meeting, management control being vested in the
Cape Town City Council and later the management of Cape Town Unicity. This change
has been accompanied by a distinct change in character and a widely held perception
that the (now) suburb of Cape Town and its people has lost considerably more than
Cape Town ideologically would ever have gained.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
1.
Rosenthal, Eric : Pinelands - South Africas First Garden City. 1949
2. Cuthbertson,
G.C.:"A New Town at Uitvlugt The formation and development of Pinelands".
Unpublished thesis.
3. Fifty Years of Housing : The story of Garden Cities.
Private Publication. Garden Cities Corp. 1972
4. The Pinelands Garden City
Monthly : 1983:June;5-9
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