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BLOEMFONTEIN , capital of the OrangeSee also: Free See also: State, in 29° 8' S., 26° 18' E
.
It is situated on the open veld, surrounded by a few low kopjes, 4518 ft. above the See also: sea, 105 M. by See also: rail E. by S. of Kimberley, 750 N.E. by E. of Cape See also: Town, 45o N. by E. of See also: Port See also: Elizabeth, and 257 S.W. of
See also: Johannesburg
.
Bloemfontein is a very pleasant town, regularly laid out with streets See also: running at right angles and a large central market square
.
Many of the houses are surrounded by large wooded gardens
.
Through the town runs the Bloemspruit
.
After a disastrous See also: flood in 1904 the course of this spring was straightened and six See also: stone
See also: bridges placed across it
.
There are several See also: fine public buildings, mostly built of red brick and a fine-grained See also: white stone quarried in the neighbourhood
.
The Raadzaal, a
See also: building in the See also: Renaissance See also: style, faces Market Square
.
Formerly the meeting-place of the Orange Free State Raad, it is now the seatof the provincial council
.
In front of the old Raadzaal (used as See also: law courts) is a statue of President Brand
.
In See also: Douglas Street is an unpretentious building used in turn as a See also: church, a raadzaal, a
See also: court-See also: house and a museum
.
In it was signed (1854) the See also: convention which recognized the independence of the Free State Boers (see ORANGE FREE STATE: See also: History)
.
Among the churches the most important, architecturally, are the Dutch Reformed, a building with two See also: spires, and the See also: Anglican See also: cathedral, which has a fine interior
.
The chief educational establishment is See also: Grey University See also: College, built 1906—1908 at a cost of £12 5,000
.
It stands in grounds of 300 acres, a mile and a See also: half from the town
.
In the town is the See also: original Grey College, founded in 1856 by See also: Sir See also: George Grey, when governor of Cape Colony
.
The See also: post and telegraph office in Market Square is one of the finest buildings in the town
.
The public library i's housed in a handsome building in See also: Warden Street
.
Opposite it is the new See also: national museum
.
Bloemfontein possesses few manufactures, but is the trading centre of the province
.
Having a dry healthy See also: climate, it is a favourite residential town and a resort for invalids, being recommended especially for pulmonary disease
.
The mean maximum temperature is 76.7° Fahr., the mean minimum 45.8°; the mean See also: annual rainfall about 24 in
.
There is an excellent See also: water-supply, obtained partly from Bloemspruit, but principally from the Modder See also: river at Sanna's Post, 22M. to the See also: east, and from reservoirs at Moches See also: Dam and Magdepoort
.
The population in 1904 was 33,883, of whom, including the garrison of 3487, 15,501 were white, compared with a white population of 2077 in 1890
.
The coloured inhabitants are mostly See also: Bechuana and Basuto
.
Most of the whites are of See also: British origin, and See also: English is the See also: common language of all, including the Dutch
.
The spruit or spring which gives its name to the town was called after one of the emigrant farmers, See also: Jan Bloem
.
The town See also: dates from 1846, in which See also: year Major H
.
D
.
Warden, then British See also: resident See also: north of the Orange, selected the site as the seat of his administration
.
When in 1854 independence was conferred on the country the town was chosen by the Boers as the seat of See also: government
.
It became noted for the intelligence of its citizens, and for the educational advantages it offered at the See also: time when See also: education among the Boers was thought of very lightly
.
In 1892 the railway connecting it with Cape Town and Johannesburg was completed
.
During the Anglo-See also: Boer War of 1899—1902 it was occupied by the British under See also: Lord Roberts without resistance (13th of See also: March 1900), fourteen days after the surrender of General
See also: Cronje at Paardeberg
.
In Market Square on the 28th of the following May the annexation of the Orange Free State to the British dominions was proclaimed
..
In 1907 the first session of the first parliament elected under the constitution granting the colony self-government was held in Bloemfontein
.
In . 1910 when the colony became a province of the Union ofSee also: South See also: Africa under its old designation of Orange Free State, Bloemfontein was chosen as the seat of the Supreme Court of South Africa
.
Its growth as a business centre after the close of the war in 1902 was very marked
.
The rateable value increased from £709,000 in 19o1 to £2,400,000 in 1905
.
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