Eastern Cape, ALBANY district, Rural (farm cemeteries) / Eastern Cape, ALBANY district, Fort Brown, Military cemetery / (9 of 10 images)
Lt. Col. G. Lewis, the Commanding Officer of the Royal Engineers at the Cape, drew plans for fortified barracks at Hermanus Kraal. A young officer, William Jervois, was appointed to in 1841 to carry out the work. Hermanus Kraal was later renamed to Fort Brown after Lt Brown of the 75th Regiment who was in command during the war of 1835.
Fort Brown consisted of a group of buildings surrounded by a high stone wall. At the corner was a tower of about 3.5 meters for mounting a gun. Under the floor there was a power magazine and on the roof a cannon that could be swiveled round. After years of neglect this gun tower and a few walls are all that remained. It was declared a National Heritage Site in 1938.
(Lu-Gerda de Klerk)
Cemetery information:-
Album complete.
eGGSA captions done by: Brian Britz, James Anderson & Annel Meyer
Information also available on the GGSA Cemetery DVD:-
Cemetery ID: 420
Names in cemetery: 74
Google Earth Project Information:-
GPSID: 420
GPS: -33 07.890, 26 36.935
WILSON John
contributed by: Stuart Lavender
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