![]() |
|||||||
![]() |
|||||||
West Coast National Park |
|||||||
| | |||||||
A few kilometres from Geelbek was the Saldanha Bay post house (Oudepos) and according to documents dating back to 1708, an elephant on the farm Geelbeksfontein killed one of the post staff. This was a loan farm, which was used for several years as a cattle station by Stephen Verwey. He was one of the Cape Brandy lessees. After his death “Geelbekkenfontein” was transferred to his widow Aletta van Es, who sold it in the same year. Records show that from 1912 onwards the farm has been known simply as Geelbek. After a third attempt Pieter van Breda sold the farm in 1918 to James Benjamin Taylor who sold the farm two years later to the company “ Roseneath Estate”. The Stables Van Breda Cottage at the stables
Geelbek Main Building In 1785 Governor van der Graaf staked out the most Northerly corner of the district with a slate beacon on the farm Geelbeksfontein. This VOC beacon can be seen on route to the bird hide on the way to Geelbek.
The restoration of the homestead was made possible by a donation from Goldfields of South Africa. The following design guidelines applied to the buildings at Geelbek, namely: Accordingly the preservation action for these buildings was largely based on verbal information, surveyor’s documents and historic data from similar buildings in the region. A solution had to be found to combine the historical, visual and the practical without resulting in unmotivated contradictions. Within the concept of information and education facilities, it was justified to retain the Cape vernacular architecture that originates from various periods. Examples are the back stoep and the flat roofed additions in the main building which houses the Geelbek restaurant and tea garden. Sleeping quarters of the slaves can still be seen in the main homestead, as well as the slave bell outside the tea garden. The restoration of these buildings conforms to the simplicity of building structures for which this area is renowned. Consequently the gables were kept plain and pointed. Where it was not possible to determine what the other buildings on the farmstead looked like in their original form, restorations were undertaken within the historical framework of the time. Together with the preserved environment, this building complex reflects an image of a cultural heritage, which spans a period of over 300 years.
Between 1601 and the establishment of the colony at the Cape of Good Hope in 1652 the French had already made use of Saldanha Bay. On 17 October 1652, the “Goede Hoop” visited Saldanha. The skipper T Turver and bookkeeper F Verburg were dispatched to investigate the possibilities of trade with the Khoina (Chochoqua)- a Khoi tribe, who lived in this area. On Schaapen island the two men found 2 733 dried sealskins, ostrich feathers and hippopotamus teeth left by the French during the previous year. Apart from the safety of Saldanha Bay, it was also valuable in providing basic necessities for the colony. In March 1657, sailors plucked down from 700 Cape gannets to fill cushions and feather beds at the newly established colony. Guano was found in abundance and collected from the islands for use in the new Company gardens in the Cape. The Bay was also seen as an excellent place to repair ships. For 143 years the VOC used Saldanha Bay for this purpose and a list of such ships are compiled in groups of 50 year periods and are as follows: - 1652-1699: 25 ships repaired The ships that were in danger and entered the Bay were compiled in the same way. - 1652-1699: 51 ships repaired In 1666 a post was established at Oudepost 1. Dr. Dave Rogers found Eve’s footprint in 1997 on a site near Oudepost 1.
The official outpost at Oudepost was called the Saldanha Baaij outpost and was situated south of where Langebaan town is today.
|
|||||||