General Chat
Welcome to the Genes Reunited community boards!
- The Genes Reunited community is made up of millions of people with similar interests. Discover your family history and make life long friends along the way.
- You will find a close knit but welcoming group of keen genealogists all prepared to offer advice and help to new members.
- And it's not all serious business. The boards are often a place to relax and be entertained by all kinds of subjects.
- The Genes community will go out of their way to help you, so don’t be shy about asking for help.
Quick Search
Single word search
Icons
- New posts
- No new posts
- Thread closed
- Stickied, new posts
- Stickied, no new posts
MEMORIES OF THE BORDER by Mrs Mary Higgo
Profile | Posted by | Options | Post Date |
---|---|---|---|
|
Lindy | Report | 28 Mar 2009 11:40 |
When as a child I first went with my family to live in the little Bordertown of Stutterheim not much more than fifty years had passed since thatpart of the country lay in the Crown Colony of British Kaffraria.This land of rolling green hills beneath the end peak of the Amatola Mountains is the home of the Xhosa, the trader, the missionary and the descendants of the soldier-settler. When we first went to live there the Border was not unlike what it must havebeen a century before when it was still part of Kaffirland. The smoothgrassy hills of the countryside, dotted with huts and red-blanketed Xhosa women tilling the mealie lands, had not changed since those days. From thelittle mission station nestling under the oaks at the edge of the town thevoices of the mission Xhosas echoed over the hills when they sang onSundays, just as the voices of their ancestors had done before there wereany white settlers there.Life in the Border was simple and carefree. Children amused themselves bathing in the willow-festooned mountain streams and boys went eeling in the lower reaches of the Kubusie River after heavy rains. Sometimes we gathered mushrooms on the surrounding hills. There were picnics by oxwagon to the Amatola forests.Here the 'Christmas bees' sang with ear-splitting insistence and the soundof water perpetually flowing was like background music to the sounds of theforest - the call of a loerie or a piet-my-vrou, the chattering of theforest monkeys in the tops of the tall knob-wood trees, or the distantbarking of a baboon from above the waterfalls. In his diary the German founder of Bethel Mission Station, Pastor DOHNEdescribed Kaffirland as he knew it between the Sixth and Seventh FrontierWars. "Many flowers which in Germany are cultivated grow wild here", he wrote. |