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PORT ELIZABETH

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V22, Page 113 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PORT ELIZABETH  , a seaport of the Cape province, South Africa, in Algoa
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Bay, by which name the
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port is often designated . It lies in 35° 57' S., 25° 37' E. on the east side of Cape Recife, being by sea 436 M. from Cape
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Town and 384 M. from
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Durban . In
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size and importance it is second only to Cape Town among the towns of the province . It is built partly along the seashore and partly on the slopes and top of the hills that rise some 200 ft. above the bay . The Baaken's
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River, usually a small stream, but subject (as in 1908) to disastrous floods, runs through the town, which consists of four divisions; the harbour and business quarter at the
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foot of the cliffs, the upper
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part, a flat table-
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land known as " The Hill "; " The Valley " formed by the Baaken's River; and " South Hill," east of the river . The Town.—Jetty Street leads from the north
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jetty to the market square, in or around which are grouped the chief public buildings —the town-hall, court-house,
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post office, market buildings, public library, St Mary's church (
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Anglican) and St Augustine's (
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Roman Catholic) . Several of these buildings are of considerable architec• tural merit and
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fine
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elevation . The library, of Elizabethan design, contains some 45,000 volumes . The market buildings, at the south-east corner of the square, and partly excavated from the sides of the cliff, contain large halls for the fruit, wool and feather markets and the museum . Feather-Market Hall, where are held the sales of
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ostrich feathers, seats 5000 persons . The museum has valuable ethnographical and zoological collections . Other public buildings include a synagogue and a
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Hindu temple .

Leading

west from Market Square is Main Street, in which are the
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principal business houses . Between Main Street and the sea is Strand Street, also a busy commercial thoroughfare . Behind the
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lower town streets rise in terraces to " The Hill," a residential
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district . Here is an open plot of ground, Donkin Reserve, containing the lighthouse and a stone
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pyramid with an inscription in memory of Elizabeth, wife of
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Sir Rufane Donkin, described as " one of the most perfect of human beings, who has given her name to the town below." A fountain, surmounted by the statue of a war-horse, erected by public subscription in 1905 commemorates " the services of the gallant animals which perished in the Anglo-
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Boer war, 1899-1902." Farther west is a large hospital, one of the finest institutions of its kind in South Africa . At the
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southern end of The Hill is St George's Park, which has some fine trees, in marked contrast to the general treeless, barren aspect of the town . Port Elizabeth indeed possesses few natural amenities, but its golf links are reputed the finest in South Africa . The town, apart from its transit trade and the
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industries connected therewith, has some manufactures—jam and confectionery
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works; oil, candle and explosive works; saw and
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flour mills; tanneries, &c . It has an excellent
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water supply . The Harbour.—There is no enclosed basin, but the roadstead has excellent holding ground, protected from all winds except the south-east, the prevailing wind being
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westerly . No harbour or
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light dues are charged to vessels of any flag . The port has three jetties of wrought iron, respectively 1162, 1152 and 1462 ft. in length, extending to the four fathoms
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line . These jetties are provided with
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hydraulic cranes, &c., and
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railways connect them with the main line, so that goods can be sent
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direct from the jetties to every part of South Africa .

In favourable

weather vessels
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drawing up to 21 ft. can discharge cargo alongside the jetties . In unfavourable conditions and for larger steamers tugs and lighters are employed . Rough weather prevents discharge of cargo by lighters, on an
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average, seven days in the
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year . The customs-house and principal railway station are close to the north jetty . The port is state owned, and is under the administration of the harbour and railway board of the Union . Trade.—Port Elizabeth has a large import trade, chiefly in textiles, machinery, hardware, apparel and provisions, supplying to a considerable extent the markets of Kimberley, Rhodesia, the Orange
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Free State and the
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Transvaal . The exports are mainly the
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pro-ducts of the eastern part of the Cape province, the most important being ostrich feathers, wool and
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mohair . Skins, hides and maize are also exported . In 1855 the value of the imports was £376,000; in 1883 £2,364,000; in 1898 f6,248,000; in 1903 . £10,137,000 . Depression in trade brought down the imports in 1904 to £6,855,000 . In 1906 they were £6,564,000 and in 1907 £6,004.000 .

The export trade has been of slower but more steady growth . It was valued at £584,000 in 1855, at £2,341,000 in 1883, £2,103,000 in 1898, £2,010,000 in 1903 . Indicative of the fact that the agricultural community was little affected by the trade depression are the export figures for 1904 and 1906, which were £2,044,000 and £2,627,000 respectively . In 1907 goods valued at £3,150,000 were exported .

Population.—The population within the municipal
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area was at the 1904 census 32,959; that within the district of Port Elizabeth 46,626 of whom 23,782 were whites . Many of the inhabitants are of German origin and the Deutsche Liedertafel is one of the most popular clubs in the town .
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History.—Algoa Bay was discovered by Bartholomew Diaz in 1488, and was by him named
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Bahia da Roca, probably with reference to the rocky islet in the bay, on which he is stated to have erected a
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cross (St Croix Island) . After the
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middle of the 16th century the bay was called by the Portuguese Bahia da Lagoa, whence its
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modern designation . In 1754 the Dutch settlements at the Cape were extended eastwards as far as Algoa Bay . The convenience of reaching the eastern district by boat was then recognized and
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advantage taken of the road-stead sheltered by Cape Recife . In 1799, during the first occupation of Cape Colony by the
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British, Colonel (afterwards General Sir John) Vandeleur, to guard the roadstead, built a small fort on the hill west of the Baaken's River . It was named Fort Frederick in honour of the then duke of York, and is still preserved .

A few houses

grew up round the fort, and in 1820 besides the military there was a civilian population at Fort Frederick of about 35 persons . In
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April of that year arrived in the bay the first of some 4000 British immigrants, who settled in the eastern district of the colony (See CAPE COLONY: History) . Under the supervision of Sir Rufane Donkin, acting governor of the Cape, a town was laid out at the
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base of the hills . In 1836 it was made a free warehousing port, and in 1837 the capital of a small adjacent district . To overcome the difficulty of landing from the road-stead a
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breakwater was built at the mouth of the Baakens River in 1856, but it had to be removed in 1869, as it caused a serious accumulation of sand . The prosperity which followed the construction of railways to the interior earned for the port the designation of " the Liverpool of South Africa." Railway
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work was begun in 1873 and Port Elizabeth is now in direct communication with all other parts of South Africa . At the same period (1873) the
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building of the existing jetties was undertaken . Port Elizabeth has possessed municipal government since 1836 . Its predominant British character is shown by the fact that not until 1909 was the foundation stone laid of the first Dutch Reformed Church in the town .

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