Voortreker museum

Msunduzi Museum / Voortreker Museum

The nucleus of the Voortrekker Museum was established in 1912 in the Church of the Vow which had been built in 1840 to fulfill the vow the Voortrekkers had made to God before the Battle of Blood River, or Ncome, that, if he would grant them victory, they would build a Church in his honour. The museum houses many Voortrekker relics including a water bottle and Bible, which belonged to Piet Retief and were found at KwaMatiwane, where he and his party had been killed on the orders of King Dingane.

Since the early 1990s, the museum has evolved into a multi-cultural institution showcasing the history of all of the people of the province. The museum now also consists of the former Longmarket Girls’s School, which houses the administration and a number of displays, the Shiva Indian Temple, which is an exact replica of the Groutville Shiva Perumal temple, built by Perumal Naicker in 1937, a Zulu hut in the museum yard, Andries Pretorius’ House built in 1842, and, at 333 Boom Street, the oldest double-storey house in Pietermaritzburg.

Among the unique treasures on display in the Voortrekker Museum are King Dingane’s chair, carved from a single piece of wood, his headrest and some beads found in the remains of his palace at Mgungundlovu. There is also what is reputed to be the second-oldest wagon in South Africa, built in 1824 and used by Voortrekker Albert Smit during the Great Trek, and a number of sculptures by Mary Stainbank.

voortrekker-museum

voortrekker-museum

http://www.heritagekzn.co.za/sites/visit/pietermaritzburg/item/70-voortrekker-museum

Church of the Vow

The Church of the Vow is the original part of the museum, and houses exhibitions dealing with the history of the Church, the Vow the Voortrekker made before the Battle of Bloodriver/ Ncome, and the lifestyle of the Voortrekkers. The original pulpit, made by 2 German Craftsmen in 1840, is still on display.

Andries Pretorius House

The Pretorius House was awarded the Master Builders of SA Award for Historical Buildings in 2008, and is supposedly the first double-storied farmhouse that was built in Natal. It is furnished with items and furniture from the 1850’s, most of which belonged to Voortrekkers who settled in Natal.

The Voortrekkerhuisie (Boom Street)

This is one of the oldest original Voortrekker houses built in Pietermaritzburg, and dates from the early 1840’s. At the moment it houses a small display of items from the Anglo Boer War, specifically focussing on the concentration camps in Natal.

E.G. Jansen Extension

The Extension, added to the museum in 1955, is home to one of the original oxwagons used on the Great Trek, as well as a large number of Voortrekker memoribilia. The story of the origin of the Great Trek, its leaders and some of its most touching incidents is depicted.

 

Accused seen throwing #Coligny teen out of moving van: cop

Coligny – A slain Coligny teenager was thrown out of a moving bakkie, the Coligny Magistrate’s Court heard on Tuesday.

Brigadier Cliffard Kgorane told the court a witness saw two white farmers – Pieter Doorewaard and Phillip Schutte – throwing Matlhamola Jonas Mosweu, 17, out of a moving vehicle on April 20.

“When they realised someone saw them, they made a u-turn, pick-up the deceased, loaded him at the back of the bakkie and also confronted the witness asking if he had seen what happened,” Kgorane said.

“The witness told them he did not see anything. They took him [the witness] put him at the back of the bakkie and drove for a radius of about 48km, in the meantime they threatened the witness. They eventually drove to a dam where they pointed the witness with a firearm, made him drink alcohol and ordered him to run in front of a moving bakkie at the same time firing shots around him. He vomited and collapsed. The two left him there, all this time the boy [Mosweu] was lying at the back of the bakkie.”

The two took the witness’s cellphone and on April 21, they went to his place of residence and told him not to tell the police or anyone else about what happened. Kgorane said Mosweu was found in a pool of blood after the accused dumped him on the side of the road.

The two allegedly went to the Coligny police, to report that a boy fell off a bakkie and that the police must call an ambulance and go to the scene.

They refused to take the police to the crime scene stating that they have other business to attend to.

Kgorane said the lives of the accused were in danger. “They are more safer in custody that outside,” he said. He told the court there was a possibility that charges of kidnapping and defeating the ends of justice could be added to their charge sheet.

The bail application was rolled over to Wednesday.

http://www.iol.co.za/news/crime-courts/accused-seen-throwing-coligny-teen-out-of-moving-van-cop-8923852

Coligny residents call for withdrawal of murder charges against two farmers

A local businessman approached the residents to sign the petition asking for the charges to be withdrawn.

Residents of Coligny have called for the withdrawal of murder charges against two farmers accused of killing a teenage boy, the Coligny Magistrates’ Court heard on Tuesday.

“The petition is to show the court that residents of Coligny are behind the accused and want charges against them to be withdrawn,” said local businessman Pieter Karsten.

He was testifying in the urgent bail application of Pieter Doorewaard and Phillip Schutte, who have been accused of killing 17-year-old Matlhomola Jonas Mosweu on April 20.

Karsten, 48, who employed the two, and is Doorewaard’s uncle said he personally approached people to sign the petition. There were more than 150 signatures on the petition.

He told the court the mass protest that left a trail of destruction in Coligny was not linked to the murder of Matlhomola, but was in fact a spillover from a Lichtenburg protest related to service delivery.

He told the court that his businesses were looted and damaged during the protest, including two of his bottle stores.

The two accused claim they were driving the teenager to the police station when he jumped off their moving bakkie, breaking his neck.

While the bail application continued in court, fuming residents of Tlhabologang township chanted outside. They want the court to deny bail.

Monument hill

Monument Hill