
Grahamstown from Fort Selwyn
'Grahamstown' is a city in the
Eastern Cape Province of the
Republic of South Africa and is the seat of the Makana municipality. The population of greater Grahamstown, as of 2003, was 124,758 (Rhodes University Journalism Department). The population of the city proper was 41,799 (Coega development corporation) of which 77.4% were African, 11.8% Coloured, 10% white, and 0.7% Asian. Since 1994, there has been a considerable influx of Africans from the former, and nearby, Ciskei homeland.
Located some 130 km from
Port Elizabeth and 180 km from
East London, Grahamstown is also the seat of
Rhodes University, a diocese of the
Church of the Province of South Africa (C.P.S.A. - Anglican) and a High Court. However it does not form part of the South African Cities Network (see
List of cities in South Africa).
History

Fort Selwyn
Grahamstown was founded in
1812 as a military outpost by Lieutenant-Colonel
John Graham as part of the effort to secure the eastern frontier of
British influence in the then
Cape Colony against the
Xhosa. Grahamstown grew during the 1820s as many
1820 Settlers and their families left farming to establish themselves in more secure trades. In a few decades it became the
Cape Colony's largest city after
Cape Town. It became a
bishopric in
1852.
In 1904 Rhodes University College was established in Grahamstown through a grant from the Rhodes Trust. In 1951 it became a fully-fledged University,
Rhodes University. Today it provides world-class tertiary education in a wide range of disciplines to over 6,000 undergraduate and postgraduate students.
With the establishment of the
Union of South Africa the Grahamstown High Court became a Local Division of the newly formed Supreme Court of South Africa (under Cape Town). However
after several years the court was elevated to a Provincial Division and a Local Division was established in Port Elizabeth. In certain other areas of provincial government Grahamstown similarly served as a centre for the Eastern Cape.
In 1994 Grahamstown became part of the newly established
Eastern Cape Province, while
Bhisho was chosen as the provincial capital.
The provincial government has recently announced that it plans to rename Grahamstown along with several other towns and monuments, with African names.
Religion - 'The City of Saints'

Cathedral of St. Michael and St. George in Church Square
The Anglican Cathedral of St Michael and St George is a diocesan seat of the
Anglican Church of Southern Africa. Grahamstown also has Roman Catholic, Presbyterian, Ethiopian Episcopal, Methodist, Baptist, Pinkster Protestante, Dutch Reformed (Nederduits Gereformeerde Kerk), Charismatic, Apostolic and Pentecostal churches. There are also meeting places for Hindus, Scientologists, Quakers, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints and Muslims.
For historic reasons, particularly the vibrancy of evangelism during Grahamstown's heyday, the City is home to more than forty religious buildings, and the nickname the "City of Saints" has become attached to Grahamstown. However, there is another story which may be the source of this nickname.
It is said that, in about 1846, there were Royal Engineers stationed in Grahamstown who were in need of building tools. They sent a message to Cape Town requesting a vice to be forwarded to them from the Ordnance Stores. A reply came back, 'Buy vice locally'. The response was, 'No vice in Grahamstown'. (Morton, 1948:161)
Education, Arts and Culture
Grahamstown is home to many schools as well as
Rhodes University. It is also home to several institutes, most importantly the South African
National Library for the Blind, the
National English Literary Museum, the
South African Institute for Aquatic Biodiversity (formerly the JLB Smith Institute), the International Library of African Music (ILAM), and the
Institute for the Study of English in Africa.
The effects of
Apartheid still affect the provision of secondary education in this former frontier town, where significant discrepencies in matric pass rates and general quality of education exist. Addressing this problem is one of the cities greatest challenges.
'The Observatory Museum'
In 1859, Henry Carter Galpin bought a simple double-storey establishment in Bathurst Street for £300. During the next 23 years he made extensive changes. The front was elegantly decorated, and a basement and three floors added to the back. Rooftop developments included an
observatory, from which the building took its name, and the only
Camera Obscura in the
Southern Hemisphere.
Born in 1820 in
Dorset,
England, Galpin trained as an architect, surveyor and civil engineer, as well as a chronometer, clock and watchmaker. These skills, together with his keen interest in
optics and
astronomy, are reflected throughout The Observatory- the most unusual
Victorian home and business premises in
South Africa.
Galpin's thriving watchmaker and jeweller's shop was run by three of his seven sons after his death in 1886. They sold to Messrs Leader and Krummeck in 1939. Several businesses occupied the ground floor while the basement and upper floors were divided into flats and lodgings.
By the end of the 1970's the structure was dilapidated and unsound. The historic link with the identification of the
Eureka diamond led to the purchase and restoration of the Observatory by
De Beers Consolidated Mines Limited.
The building was subsequently proclaimed a
National Monument and presented to the Albany Museum to form part of its History Division. Exhibits were arranged, and The Observatory Museum was opened by Mr.
Harry F. Oppenheimer, the then Chairman of
De Beers, on February 2, 1983.
'Festivals'
Two large festivals take place annually in Grahamstown: the
National Arts Festival in June/July and the Sasol SciFest in March. The National Arts Festival is the largest Arts festival in Africa and sees some of the leading talent on the South African and international art scene arriving in Grahamstown for a celebration of culture and artistic expression.
[1]
List of Schools
Press
Grahamstown is home to the oldest surviving independent newspaper in South Africa. Named the
Grocott's Mail, it was founded in 1870 by the Grocott family, and bought out a pre-existing newspaper called the Grahamstown Journal, dating from 1831. It is presently a local newspaper operated by the School of Journalism and Media Studies at Rhodes University, and still retains its name.
Grocott's Mail's main competitor is a weekly free-sheet called Grahamstown This Week, owned by Johnnic Communications.
As a major centre for journalism training, Grahamstown also hosts two student newspapers,
Activate, established in 1947, and
The Oppidan Press, a student initiative launched in 2007 that caters to the student population alienated by the existing student newspaper.
Government
Grahamstown forms part of the
Makana Local Municipality in the
Cacadu District.
Grahamstown is a seat of the High Court of South Africa (for the Eastern Cape), as well as the
Magistrates Office for the Albany District. As a result of the presence of a High Court, several other related organs of state such as a Masters Office and a Director of Public Prosecutions are present in the city.
A few other Government (mostly provincial) departments maintain branches or other offices in Grahamstown.
Trivia
★ Grahamstown was the only settlement outside Cape Town to host a sitting of the Cape Colony legislature (a move to defuse a call for the creation of a separate colony).
★ Grahamstown was the location of the testing of the first diamond find by
Henry Galpin.
★ Grahamstown has the "tallest toilet in the world" (housed in an abandoned chimney).
★ Grahamstown has 52 churches of numerous denominations, gaining it the name the City of Saints.
See also
★
1820 Settlers
★
Rhodes University
External links
★
Official Grahamstown website
★
National Arts Festival website
★
National English Literary Museum
★
South African Institute for Aquatic Biodiversity
★
Makana Municipality
★
Grocott's Mail
★
[1]
References
★
National Arts Festival: About
★
South African Government Information: Arts and Culture
★
Daily News: Tonight
★
South Africa.info
★
Rhodes University Outline
★
Grocott's Mail Online
★ Morton, H.V., 1948.
In Search of South Africa. London: Methuen & Co. Ltd.
★
Rhodes University Journalism