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Durban, KwaZulu Natal, South Africa



 


Notes:
Durban - a short history



In 1822 Lieutenant James King, captain of the ship Salisbury, together with Lt. Francis George Farewell, both ex-Royal Navy officers from the Napoleonic Wars, were engaged in trade between the Cape and Delagoa Bay. On a return trip to the Cape in 1823 they were caught in a very bad storm and decided to risk the Bar and anchor in the Bay of Natal. The crossing went off well and they found safe anchor from the storm. Lt. King decided to map the Bay and named the "Salisbury and Farewell Islands". In 1824 Lt. Farewell together with a trading company called J.R.Thompson & Co. decided to open trade relations with Shaka the Zulu King and establish a trading station at the Bay. Henry Francis Fynn, another trader at Delagoa Bay was also involved in this venture. Fynn left Delagoa Bay and sailed for The Bay of Natal on the brig Julia while Farewell followed six weeks later on the Antelope. Between them they had 26 possible settlers, but only 18 stayed. On a visit to King Shaka, Henry Francis Fynn was able to befriend the King by helping him recover from a stab wound suffered as a result of an assassination attempt by one of his half-brothers. As a token of Shaka’s gratitude, he granted Fynn a “25-mile strip of coast a hundred miles in depth.” On 7 August 1824 they concluded negotiations with King Shaka for a cession of land, including the Bay of Natal and land extending ten miles south of the Bay, twenty-five miles north of the Bay and one hundred miles inland. Farewell took possession of this grant and raised the Union Jack with a Royal Salute, which consisted of 4 cannon shots and twenty musket shots. Of the original 18 would be settlers, only 6 remained, and they can be regarded as the founding members of Port Natal as a British colony. These 6 were joined by Lt. James Saunders King and Nathaniel Isaacs in 1825.



The modern city of Durban thus dates from 1824 when the settlement was established on the northern shores of the bay near today's Farewell Square.



During a meeting of 35 European residents in Fynn's territory on 23 June 1835, it was decided to build a capital town and name it "d'Urban" after Sir Benjamin d'Urban, then governor of the Cape Colony.

Latitude: -29.8586227, Longitude: 31.0259636


Media

Miscellaneous
Durban Bay 1840s
Durban Bay 1840s
Keywords: Miscellaneous

Birth

Matches 1151 to 1168 of 1168

«Prev «1 ... 20 21 22 23 24

   Last Name, Given Name(s)    Birth    Person ID 
1151 Andersen, Jens Erik   I45968
1152 Andersen, Gloria Patricia  22 Mar 1935Durban, KwaZulu Natal, South Africa I157636
1153 Alves, Marco   I85404
1154 Alves, Joao   I85403
1155 Allen, Vivian Lester   I134211
1156 Allen, John Peter   I134219
1157 Allen, Frederick Charles  8 Sep 1893Durban, KwaZulu Natal, South Africa I70661
1158 Allen, Audrey Mary   I70662
1159 Allen, Audrey Mary   I134217
1160 Allen, Anthony Hugh Ami   I70674
1161 Allen, Anthony Hugh Ami   I134218
1162 Alexander, William Garth  9 Dec 1913Durban, KwaZulu Natal, South Africa I26496
1163 Alberts, Jacobus   I141125
1164 Aitchison, Viola Catherine   I109525
1165 Airth, George Rennie  1867Durban, KwaZulu Natal, South Africa I130395
1166 Addison, Anthony Overend  12 Nov 1957Durban, KwaZulu Natal, South Africa I5268
1167 Adams, William Anthony Douglas   I36220
1168 Barbara Ruth   I178939

«Prev «1 ... 20 21 22 23 24



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