Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- CHAPTER XLIV HENDRIK SWELLENGREBEL, GOVERNOR, (continued)
- CHAPTER XLV RYK TULBAGH, GOVERNOR, ASSUMED OFFICE 27TH FEBRUARY 1751, DIED 11TH AUGUST 1771
- CHAPTER XLVI RYK TULBAGH, GOVERNOR, (continued)
- CHAPTER XLVII HISTORY OF THE XOSA TRIBE
- CHAPTER XLVIII JOACHIM VAN PLETTENBERG, FISCAL AND SECUNDE, ACTING GOVERNOR, 12TH AUGUST 1771 TO 18TH MAY 1774; GOVERNOR, INSTALLED 18TH MAY 1774, RETIRED 14TH FEBRUARY 1785
- CHAPTER XLIX JOACHIM VAN PLETTENBERG, GOVERNOR, (continued)
- CHAPTER L JOACHIM VAN PLETTENBERG, GOVERNOR, (continued)
- CHAPTER LI CORNELIS JACOB VAN DE GRAAFF, GOVERNOR, INSTALLED 14TH FEBRUARY 1785, LEFT SOUTH AFRICA 24TH JUNE 1791
- CHAPTER LII JOHAN ISAAC RHENIUS, SECUNDE, ACTING GOVERNOR, 24TH JUNE 1791 TO 3RD JULY 1792
- CHAPTER LIII SEBASTIAAN CORNELIS NEDERBURGH AND SIMON HENDRIK FRYKENIUS, COMMISSIONERS-GENERAL,—(continued)
- CHAPTER LIV ABRAHAM JOSIAS SLUYSKEN, COMMISSIONER-GENERAL, FROM 2ND SEPTEMBER 1793 to 16TH SEPTEMBER 1795
- CHAPTER LV ABRAHAM JOSIAS SLUYSKEN, COMMISSIONER-GENERAL,—(continued)
- CHAPTER LVI CONDITION OF THE EUROPEANS IN THE CAPE COLONY AT THE TIME OF THE ENGLISH CONQUEST
- CHAPTER LVII CONDITION OF THE EUROPEANS IN THE CAPE COLONY AT THE TIME OF THE ENGLISH CONQUEST—(continued)
- CHAPTER LVIII EVENTS IN PORTUGUESE SOUTH AFRICA DURING THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
- CHAPTER LIX HISTORY OF THE KORANA CLANS AND THE BETSHUANA TRIBES DURING THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
- NOTES ON BOOKS
- INDEX
- Plate section
CHAPTER LVII - CONDITION OF THE EUROPEANS IN THE CAPE COLONY AT THE TIME OF THE ENGLISH CONQUEST—(continued)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- CHAPTER XLIV HENDRIK SWELLENGREBEL, GOVERNOR, (continued)
- CHAPTER XLV RYK TULBAGH, GOVERNOR, ASSUMED OFFICE 27TH FEBRUARY 1751, DIED 11TH AUGUST 1771
- CHAPTER XLVI RYK TULBAGH, GOVERNOR, (continued)
- CHAPTER XLVII HISTORY OF THE XOSA TRIBE
- CHAPTER XLVIII JOACHIM VAN PLETTENBERG, FISCAL AND SECUNDE, ACTING GOVERNOR, 12TH AUGUST 1771 TO 18TH MAY 1774; GOVERNOR, INSTALLED 18TH MAY 1774, RETIRED 14TH FEBRUARY 1785
- CHAPTER XLIX JOACHIM VAN PLETTENBERG, GOVERNOR, (continued)
- CHAPTER L JOACHIM VAN PLETTENBERG, GOVERNOR, (continued)
- CHAPTER LI CORNELIS JACOB VAN DE GRAAFF, GOVERNOR, INSTALLED 14TH FEBRUARY 1785, LEFT SOUTH AFRICA 24TH JUNE 1791
- CHAPTER LII JOHAN ISAAC RHENIUS, SECUNDE, ACTING GOVERNOR, 24TH JUNE 1791 TO 3RD JULY 1792
- CHAPTER LIII SEBASTIAAN CORNELIS NEDERBURGH AND SIMON HENDRIK FRYKENIUS, COMMISSIONERS-GENERAL,—(continued)
- CHAPTER LIV ABRAHAM JOSIAS SLUYSKEN, COMMISSIONER-GENERAL, FROM 2ND SEPTEMBER 1793 to 16TH SEPTEMBER 1795
- CHAPTER LV ABRAHAM JOSIAS SLUYSKEN, COMMISSIONER-GENERAL,—(continued)
- CHAPTER LVI CONDITION OF THE EUROPEANS IN THE CAPE COLONY AT THE TIME OF THE ENGLISH CONQUEST
- CHAPTER LVII CONDITION OF THE EUROPEANS IN THE CAPE COLONY AT THE TIME OF THE ENGLISH CONQUEST—(continued)
- CHAPTER LVIII EVENTS IN PORTUGUESE SOUTH AFRICA DURING THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
- CHAPTER LIX HISTORY OF THE KORANA CLANS AND THE BETSHUANA TRIBES DURING THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
- NOTES ON BOOKS
- INDEX
- Plate section
Summary
In Capetown the white people, who consisted chiefly of government officials, professional men, traders, mechanics, and lodging- house keepers, lived just as in a European city of the same size, with the exception that their only domestics were slaves. Those who could afford to do so kept many slaves to perform the housework that in Europe would have been better done by one or two paid servants, others hired their slaves to farmers, others again allowed them to work for themselves upon payment of a fixed sum monthly or weekly. In this way temporary residents could always obtain servants, and contractors to carry out work of any kind were able to procure the labourers they needed. Nearly every stranger who visited Capetown and left his impressions on record was pleased with the place and its people, and thought life could be passed very happily there, though the government found no admirers.
The streets in the town were laid out at right angles with each other, and were perfectly straight from end to end. Those running upward from the shore were very wide, and were provided with deep open drains like miniature canals. The houses bordering on them were usually whitewashed, single or at most double storied, flat roofed, and provided in front with high and broad stoeps extending to the carriage way. They were all built of brick, and covered with plaster.
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- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1910