Showing posts with label Accommodation Harrismith. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Accommodation Harrismith. Show all posts

Sunday 19 April 2015

A small church with a big heart





A small church with a big heart 


We are paying a tribute to the smallest church in the southern hemisphere. It's design is based on a wing of Cardiff Cathedral in Wales. This unimposing little building sits on the pass between Harrismith and Ladysmith. 
Blink and you’ll miss the sign and the small road leading to the church


Tiny it certainly is, about 20 bricks in length, with a small curved apse, and the front façade just 15 bricks wide. It is charming, resting under old trees on its sandstone base, with its quaint bell-tower surmounted by a stone Celtic cross. 
Below is a marble circle with the inscription ‘Landaff Oratory 1925’.



Only one person at a time can fit through the entrance. Inside, there is a narrow aisle leading to a small altar and, beneath the beautiful stained glass windows with their iris motif are just four pews, each able to seat two. 



There is no doubt that the tiny church was built by eccentric local Van Reenen Magistrate Maynard Mathew in 1925. Mathew was a peculiar man who was the grandson of Viscount Llandaff 2 of Ireland and he was a friend of General Jan Smuts.
 The death of his favourite son, Llandaff, affected him deeply.



And therein lies a story that is huge, the story of a retired magistrate Maynard Mathew, whose son Llandaff died while saving miners from a coalmine accident at the Burnside Colliery in KwaZulu-Natal on 19 March 1925. Llandaff’s bereft father, Maynard, was determined to erect a plaque to comemmorate his son’s bravery and that his son should not be forgotten. He decided to build his own church and sidestepped the restrictions by building a church himself. He had plans drawn up on a similar design to a wing of the famous cathedral in Cardiff Wales. So he purchased a quarter acre of land from Bob Bloy of the farm Scottstan and commissioned Mr John Smith, a contractor from Pietermaritzburg, to build his little church.

Mathew was also clearly a devout Christian, for the stone plaque on the left wall proclaims ‘To the Glory of God’ first, and then follows ‘And in loving memory of Llandaff Mathew, who gave his life to save those of others at Burnside Colliery on March 19th 1925 Aged 28 RIP.



The oratory seats just eight people, apparently the same number of people Llandaff saved in the mine accident 

The quirky little church has passed through many hands since it was built in 1925.
When Mathew died, the chapel was sold to a George Tierny, and later to a Mr Osborne.
In 1960 Mr Charles West-Thomas bought it and put up a tribute on one wall dedicated to his first wife, Terry. After her death, he remarried, and gave the chapel to his second wife, Mims, as a wedding present in 1974. On October 28, 1983, the Little Church was declared a National Heritage Site by the South African Heritage Resources Agency (SAHRA).

Mr Maynard is remembered as a very colourful, family figure. His wife, Sadie, apparently had to endure bigoted good humour.


Till next time 
Love from South Africa 
Sandra 

Wednesday 11 March 2015

Bathroom regeneration


DeOudeHuize
Take the tour with the hosts of De Oude Huize Yard
The last couple of weeks we were busy with the regeneration of a bathroom.  
We live in a house that was built in 1860 and it is 155 years old.  
Our main aim is to keep some of it as close as possible to the original era
but also add some little modern twist to it.  

You can read about the sourcing for the necessary on this blog post 
We re-enameled the bath and you can read about this process on this blog post 

It is now time to show you what has happened!
The bathroom change was major and we started with the plumbing
A door was removed and bricked up.  


Everything was placed where suitable.  
The floor was fitted with a water resistant floor and the shower fitted with a big swivel door 
The free standing bath all fitted with modern hardware.  
The eagle claw feet of the bath go well with the old carpet 
A chair was added to hold the towels on a silver tray 
Close-up of the hardware 
Hardware on the vanity were old pieces that we painted 
An old silver teapot holds the flowers 
The mirror was fitted in an old oak frame.
The taps are also a new sleek design  
Taps with a little bit of attitude 

Lots of blessing from South Africa 
Sandra 

Thank you for all the wonderful friends whom are sharing this story!!!



Saturday 28 February 2015

The ox-wagons of South Africa


DeOudeHuize

This history as told by the hosts of De Oude Huize Yard 
In South Africa, the ox-wagon was adopted as an Afrikaner cultural icon. 
 Ox-wagons are typically drawn by teams of oxen, harnessed in pairs. 
The oxen were given names that would give and indication of their character.  

These wagons had a very wide turning circle, the legacy, of which are the broad, 
pleasant streets of Harrismith "wide enough to turn an ox-wagon".



Hard sprung wood for spokes, iron wood for axles, nailable timber for the superstructure. 

The South African oxwagon is a piece of industrial design.  Built with interchanging parts to quickly replace damage parts. It was made for easy disassembly in order to be transported by the oxen when crossing rivers.  

It's separated front and rear axle and wheel components allowed it to take the sharp bends of the mountain passes. 
The ox-wagon's size determined the size of components imported for building infrastructure such as the railways, its bridges and determined the widths and sizes of public roads and squares. 

The wagon builders were very proud and the wagons were decorated with pride 




The oxen that pulled the wagons had names like Ribbok en Somer 
(Ribbok is the name of a buck and Somer means Summer)
Friesland, Rooiland en Wiegeland 
(Rooiland means red soil) (Wiegeland means to be sleepy)
Robbert en Duiker 
Joeman en Vryman
(Vryman means a free man)
Liefhebber, Witbol and Fluit
(Liefhebber means to love, Witbol means there is a white spot on the ox and Fluit means to whistle)
Witsenberg, Tiegerberg and Blouberg
(names of mountains)
Regter en Roman
(Regter means Judge)


Lots of blessing from South Africa 
Sandra 

Thank you for all the wonderful friends whom are sharing this story!!!

Wednesday 18 February 2015

A sandstone church in Harrismith


This history as told by the hosts of De Oude Huize Yard 

The foundation stone of the St Peters Anglican Church was laid on 19 February 1906 by HRH Arthur William Patrick Albert, the Duke of Connaught, & son of Queen Victoria, whom was in Harrismith at the time to inspect the garrison. 

The porch & belfry was added in 1923.
The original cornerstone was laid in 1874.
It is a beautiful building.

Please join me for a walk in the gardens and church.

A beautiful sandstone building.  




The Memorial Garden 
The benches in the memorial garden

Every plaque tells a story