Historical and Cultural AttractionsHowickIn 1850 the settlement of Howick, named after Howick Hall the
Northumberland Estate of Earl Grey, the British Colonial Secretary,
grew around the fording place where the wagon route from the coast to
the interior crossed the uMgeni River. As with all major fording
places, blacksmiths, traders and innkeepers established businesses to
supply travelers.
The old drift was beautiful but treacherous,
situated just above the
spectacular Howick Falls, Nogqaza 'the tall one'. The first
hotelkeeper provided a ferry after his young son was swept over the
falls whilst attempting to cross on horseback. A vehicle bridge has
since replaced the original ford and ferry! The Howick Falls
Hotel, built in 1850 (destroyed by fire and rebuilt in 1872),
included Paul Kruger, Cecil Rhodes and Mark Twain as guests!
The settlement expanded with the needs of soldiers, transport
riders,
travelers, and war correspondents who headed north to the
battlefields of the Anglo-Zulu War of 1879 and the Anglo-Boer Wars of
1880 - 1881 and 1899 - 1902.
The town's motto is indicative,
however, of a community with an eye
to progress and the future, as well as the past: Tempora mutantur et
nos 'timess change and (so do) we'! today, Howick is the centre of a
busy trading, agricultural and timber community and the heart of the
Midlands Meander. On the edge of Midlands Plateau, above the hot
coastal plains, the climate is temperate, and Howick has burgeoned as
an ideal place to retire. A walk up Beacon Hill rewards one with a
view of the town and Midmar Dam.
Fairfell Farmstead
Shafton Road, Howick
Fairfell was built in 1872 for Sir George Morris Sutton who became
the fifth Prime
Minister of Natal in 1903. Sutton was a leading farmer who
cultivated wattles. The
farmstead was declared a National monument in June 1994.
Howick Clinic
24 Morling Street, Howick
Built as a dwelling house during the late nineteenth century, this is
one of the oldest
buildings in the Natal Colonial style still in existence in this
area. It was converted into
a clinic in 1992.
Howick Local History
Museum
Falls View Road, Howick
This museum has a wide range of items and exhibits, including
displays on various aspects of medicine, local history, furniture,
the sarmcol strike, informal settlements, Boer
war and concentration camps.
Telephone: 033 330 6124
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 The Howick Museum
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Howick
Waterfall
Howick, on the Umgeni River
95 metres high, the falls are a national monument. A number of deaths
by accident, suicide and murder have been recorded here, and
a 'monster' is reputed to live in the base pool.
Military Cemetery
Howick
This is opposite the Umgeni Institute on the Main Road. The
institute served as a military
hospital and as a concentration camp during The Anglo Boer War of
1899 to 1902. The
cemetery holds 64 British graves and 84 Boer graves.
Methodist Church (1879)
The Methodist Church, on the edge of the town, was built in
1879.
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 Site of Mandela's arrest in 1962 Photo:uMgungundlovu District Municipality
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Nelson
Mandela's Arrest Site
The site of Nelson Mandela's arrest by the South African Police on 5
August 1962.Towards Dargle Road, from Howick.
Old Agricultural Hall (Craft Southern Africa)
The Old Agricultural Hall, built in 1899 with broad-wood floors and
magnificent vaulted ceilings, once the focus of the towns public
occasions, including livestock fairs, now houses one of the most
comprehensive hand-made curio and craft shops in South Africa. A
restaurant nestles amidst a local art gallery, extending out onto the
verandah and beneath grand plane trees Tel: 033-330 5859, Directors:
off Main Road into Falls Drive.
Owsthorne
House, Lions River District
Farm Bosch Hoek 973
The farmhouse was built in 1882 by William Charles Shaw, the eldest
son of William
Robinson Shaw, one of the famous Shaw brothers who came to Natal in
the 1880's. The
farmhouse was declared a National monument in 1989.
St Luke's Church
St Luke's Church, in the centre of town, was the first Howick church
dating back to 1864.
Swissland Cheese
Swissland Cheese, where 'High on a hill lives a lonely goatherd',
provides a pleasant rustic diversion on the Midlands Meander. Fran
and Richard Vermaak live and work in a quaint A-frame Alpine chalet
on a hilltop overlooking to Balgowan Valley. Children love to gambol
with the ever-playful Saanen kids in the pasture, and watch the goats
being milked and the cheese being made. You can sample the variety of
cheeses before choosing a fresh cheese and wine basket and along the
forest paths to picnic in the shade of the pines overlooking the
valley below Tel: 033-234 4062, Directions: R103 between Balgowan
(3km) & Lidgetton (7km), 2,2km dirt road.
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