A South
African country birding and hiking experience
History of Glen Avon
The history of Glen Avon is that
of Robert Hart who was regarded as being the "Father of the 1820
Settlers".
Who was Robert Hart? In 1795 he
was an 18 year old private in the Argyllshire Highlanders when the
regiment disembarked at Cape Town. The regiment served for a while
on the Cape frontier until Britain returned the Cape to Holland
whereafter it returned to Britain.
In 1807, however, Robert Hart,
now a married man, returned to the Cape as an officer in Colonel
Graham's newly formed Cape Regiment and was stationed at Grahamstown.
Later, he was put in charge of the experimental farm founded by Lord
Charles Somerset, the governor of the Cape, and which provided
supplies to the army.
In 1825 the farm was closed down
and the little town of Somerset East laid out on its grounds. Many
of the original houses still stand in this charming little place.

Hart Cottage, circa 1817
Hart and his family then settled
on farmland adjacent to the town which he was granted in recognition
of his services to the government. Here he built a homestead - Glen
Avon. Hart, who was a pioneer of Merino sheep farming, farmed sheep,
grew fruit, especially citrus, and grain. So successful was grain
production in the region that it justified him building a commercial
mill for neighboring farmers.
|

The Glen Avon
Watermill, circa 1827 |

The second mill
wheel to be installed, dated 1861 |
The machinery and equipment was
made at Leeds in England, shipped to Algoa Bay, transported by
bullock wagon to Glen Avon via the old Zuurberg Pass and assembled
on the spot.
Robert Hart died in 1867 at the
ripe old age of 90. The farm is still farmed by the descendents of
Robert Hart. Due to the care the family has taken over the
intervening years, the farm's original buildings are in a fine state
of preservation and are a wonderful example of the Colonial
architecture of the period.
|

The Retreat,
Glen Avon, circa 1824 |

The Old
Homestead, Glen Avon, circa 1822 |
Spend some time discovering the
history and heritage behind the pioneering spirit that still lingers
on this well preserved 1820s family farm.

A quaint outbuilding on
Glen Avon
|