Prior to the coming of the white man, the area
in general was inhabited by the nomadic Khoi (the "Hottentots") and
the pastoral Xhosa.
Late in the 18th century, the area became
known to the Dutch who named the river the Zondagh, after a settler.
After the occupation of the Cape by the British the name transmuted
to the Sundays.
The actual site of the town was first surveyed
in 1814 and named Vergenoegd. This property was acquired
in 1820 by Christiaan Ernst Schutte. He and his successor
moved north and in 1838 Vergenoegd became the property of Petrus
Jacobus Fourie from Swellendam who began to cultivate the land along
the river. This was the beginning of Jansenville history
as a matter of record.
The wagon trail from Port Elizabeth to
Graaff-Reinet passed through Vergenoegd which increased the number
of people in the area.
In 1853, Fourie arranged for the surveying and
laying out of 80 plots on his property in order to establish a town.
He had intended the town to be named Alexandria after Dutch Reformed
minister Alexander Smith of Uitenhage who visited the congregation
once a quarter.
In the event, by the time the application had
reached Cape Town, the name Alexandria has already been granted to
another settlement so the place was then named Jansenville,
after General Janssens, the last Dutch Governor at the Cape.
In 1874 work began on the first bridge over
the Sundays River at Jansenville which was completed the following year (below the
estimated cost!). To-day the piers of this bridge stand next
to the present bridge.
1876 saw the establishment of a police station
at Jansenville with a force of two constables as well as the appointment of a
magistrate.
The outbreak of the
Anglo-Boer War caused
something of a rift in the community, with some supporting the
British while many sympathised with the Boers. A Town Guard
was formed in Jansenville and three blockhouses erected; one on a knoll by the
bridge, one at the main crossroads in town and the third (The
"Fort") on the hill just north of the town where it can be seen to
this day.
Jan Smuts and his commando entered the Cape in
1901 with a view to raising the "Cape Dutch" in rebellion although
only small numbers joined him. In the event, Jansenville was
never attacked although a small engagement took place at
Blaauwkrantz, some 20 km north of town.
A somewhat larger engagement also took place
in 1901 near Klipplaat between some 300 men of Kritzinger's Commando
and a patrol of West Australians and 7th Dragoon Guards who were
covering the right flank of a column advancing from Uniondale
towards Klipplaat.
1907 saw a remarkable storm which de-roofed or
destroyed 22 houses in the little town.
During the First World War a number of
Jansenville's sons volunteered to serve against the rebels within
the country, against the Germans in East Africa as well as on the
western front. Of the fourteen who went to France only three
returned.
During the Second World War little Jansenville
distinguished itself in a small way at the disastrous fall of Tobruk
in 1942 when the 2nd South African Division and other allied units
had to surrender to the Germans. Lieutenant Cecil
Featherstone, born and bred in Jansenville, declined to surrender
and, leading a small convoy, succeeded in evading the enemy forces
and bringing 46 men back to the allied lines to fight again.
Jansenville also provided the highest per
capita number of volunteers for the forces of any place in South
Africa during the war.
On 30th October 1941, with the Sundays River
almost dry, there fell upstream 275mm of rain in one day. A
few hours later water was flowing over the 13m high bridge.
The lower part of the town was destroyed as were the farmlands along
the river.
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Jansenville's large Dutch
Reformed Church is a gem, both inside and out |

The old organ in
Jansenville church. This has long been replaced in
use by
a pipe organ |

A fine piece of
decorative needlework made by the ladies of Jansenville
to adorn the church |
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The charm of yesteryear.
One of many Victorian houses that still grace Jansenville |

The quaint little police
station at Klipplaat, itself a fine period piece |

The memorial in Klipplaat
cemetery commemorating those who fell in the engagement
with Kritzinger's commando, mentioned above |
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On Hardwood Farm near
Klipplaat stands
this miniature magistrate's office where stock thieves
were once tried. The small pillbox behind is the gaol |

The Methodist chapel at
Klipplaat which stands companionably beside the Anglican
one
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The old magistracy at
Klipplaat which still operates once a week in the
present day
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This Blue Gum in
Jansenville is the second largest tree in the Eastern
Cape. It was planted in 1874 on the anniversary of Queen Victoria's
birthday |

The Anglo-Boer War fort
at the top of the hill overlooking Jansenville |
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