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RANDLORDS, unionists and strike leaders lie shoulder to shoulder -
well, almost - in Brixton Cemetery, the final resting place of
engineers, editors, soldiers, professors, mayors, geologists,
architects, prospectors, miners ...
Brixton Cemetery is the final resting place of engineers, editors, soldiers, professors, mayors, geologists, architects, prospectors, miners ...
The cemetery has an old world feel to it with its elegant
headstones, numerous carved angels and even a stone church organ above
a grave, complemented by gracious old trees like oaks, cork oaks, pines
and blue gums.
Brixton Cemetery was laid out in 1912 and has an historic Hindu
crematorium on land organised by Mahatma Gandhi shortly before he left
South Africa in 1914. The wood-burning crematorium was built in 1918,
and it still stands in the north-west corner of the cemetery. A brick,
gas-fired crematorium was built in 1956, and is still used.
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Visiting Brixton Cemetery
TODAY Brixton Cemetery reflects a different kind of history -
defacement and toppled headstones, mostly the work of vandals. Some
graves have also experienced subsidence, causing headstones to fall
over.
City Parks is undertaking a process of restoration of intact
headstones that can be lifted and cemented down in their original
positions, leaving greater headstone damage to the families of these
first Johannesburgers. The graffiti on headstones is to be removed.The
Brixton Cemetery is divided into two major sections: on the left of the
entrance are Church of England burials; behind is the Dutch Reform
section. On the right is the Presbyterian section. Further back in the
Cemetery are sections for blacks, Hindus, Chinese and Coloureds.
You are advised to go to Brixton Cemetery in a group. The entrance is in Krause Street, Vrededorp.
Braamfontein Cemetery
WHILE you're visiting
Brixton, it might be worth also paying a call at nearby Braamfontein
Cemetery, which contains graves of the great dynamite explosion
victims, passive resisters, Anglo Boer War memorials, the cholera and
flu epidemics, and more recently, an impressive black granite memorial
to Enoch Sontonga, the creator of South Africa's national anthem, Nkosi Sikelel' iAfrika. The entrance to Braamfontein Cemetery is in Graf Street, Braamfontein.
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In 1922 the cemetery hosted 10 000 people at the funeral of miner Samuel "Taffy" Long, widely believed to have been wrongly executed in the aftermath of the
1922 Miners' Strike. Taffy's grave is now clearly demarcated with a
granite stone stating that he was executed "for a crime he did not
commit".
That year was important for another Johannesburger, Mary "Pickhandle" Fitzgerald, who stepped down as a city councillor in 1922, after having been an
active trade unionist for a decade before she represented the city. She
died in 1960 and is buried in the cemetery alongside her second
husband, Archie Crawford. She is honoured in the city with the naming
of Mary Fitzgerald Square in Newtown.
Two wealthy Randlords are buried, with their wives, in Brixton
Cemetery. Sir George Albu established the mining house that eventually
became Billiton, one of the biggest mining houses in the world. He
bought Northwards in Parktown from José Dale Lace and restored it after
the west wing was destroyed by a fire. Unlike other Randlords, Albu
stayed out of politics. His grave is clearly visible in the cemetery -
it is marked by two large palms on either side.
Brixton Cemetery has an old world feel with elegant headstones and gracious trees
Randlord Lionel Phillips was the leader of the Reform Committee, a
56-member committee representing the grievances of Johannesburgers to
the Paul Kruger government, which led to the revolutionary but abortive
Jameson Raid. Many other Reform Committee members are buried at
Brixton, including John Mortimer Buckland, William Shiry Marshall,
Aubrey Woolls Sampson and John Carrey-Davis.
Phillips was one of the most prominent Randlords, a colonial
and very pro-British. He built his house, Hohenheim, where the
Johannesburg General Hospital now stands. His wife, Florence, suggested
the laying out of the township Parktown, to get away from the dust
created by the rapidly growing mine dumps south of the city.
A persistent character of early Johannesburg, also buried in the cemetery, was George Sheffield. He started The Star
newspaper, which is still sold on the streets of Johannesburg. In the
early years he was forced to change its name several times because
President Paul Kruger banned it for being too pro-British. Other names
it took on were The Evening Star and The Comet.
Brixton Cemetery can boast one of Johannesburg's early entrepreneurs -
Herbert Evans, who opened the Herbert Evans Art Shop which still exists
in the city. He bought up all the glass in the town after the dynamite
explosion of 1896. A train of trucks with 55 tons of dynamite exploded,
flattening four suburbs in its immediate vicinity and many windows in
the town. Everyone bought new glass from Evans.
Rose McEwan, another Brixton Cemetery inmate, together with a
group of concerned women, marked graves in the veld after the Anglo
Boer War, when many fallen British soldiers were buried. The group went
back to the graves, photographed them and sent the pictures to the
appreciative wives and mothers of the fallen soldiers.
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