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Writer's pictureEvert Bez

Royal Wine Store

This store was located in the Cape Province of South Africa and in the suburb of Wynburg . To be confirmed, but some years ago the Royal Hotel still existed in Station road.





The Hotel was first listed in 1887 in the Cape Colony Directory The area today is plaque by petty crime and drug pushers with city council trying very hard to clean up the area ( Installation of surveillance cameras etc.). Wynberg in need of intervention.



About Token :

It is mentioned that there exist a full set from 10/~ to a 3d but at the time of writing it's only the 3d that is seen.


It is assumed that this was a bottle token and was made out of Aluminum 19,4 mm by 1.2mm thick


Wynberg

In 1683 land along the Liesbeek River was granted to Herman Weeckens by Simon van der Stel. The farm was named De Oude Wijnbergh (Old Wine Mountain).


The Cape's rough seas in the winter months led to a formal winter anchorage in 1743 where ships would dock at Simons' Baai (present day Simon's Town). A wagon route linking Cape Town to Simon's Town went over the hill adjacent to De Oude Wjinbergh estate.


When the British took control of the Cape settlement on 16 Sept 1795 the small farming area of Wynberg developed rapidly into a garrison town, as the British settled a large number of troops in the area.


A notable settler was Alexander Tennant who built a house still standing, named Sonnebloem.

At Wynberg the Dutch had earlier made a show of resistance, but they were soon driven from their post by the British.


Wynberg was a convenient halfway point between Table Bay and False Bay and this led to a hub of commercial activity. The authorities had allotted places where large teams of oxen could be unyoked and graze which made this possible.


The village provided farmers with an alternative to the market in Cape Town. As more farms were subdivided commercial and residential properties began to increase.


Diplomat Edmund Roberts passed through Wynberg in 1833. He described it as being "beautiful," and being "adorned with a great number of gentlemen's seats, and neat cottages, the avenues leading to them having well-trimmed hedges of myrtle and oak..."


The famous astronomer John Herschel lived at Wynberg between 1834 and 1838, where he set up a telescope to study the southern hemisphere skies, and also did some botanical work on South African flowers together with his wife Margaret. In addition, it was in Wynberg that the young Charles Darwin met Herschel in 1836, a meeting which considerably influenced Darwin's later work.


Battswood School was established in 1891 by Martha Grey. Martha was a local coloured woman, born at the time of the emancipation of slavery in 1838.


The school was closed and the property sold by the Dutch Mission Church in 1997, it was officially re-opened in Ottery, Cape Town, a few kilometres from Wynberg by ex-President Mandela in 2001.


One of South Africa's first electric power plants was built in Wynberg on Electric Road in 1893. Opened by the mayor of Wynberg, James Bisset, to provide power to a local tram system and public streetlights.


Sources:



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