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Rupert Marais

Rupert Ford Marais

The Marais family in South Africa dates back to the arrival of Charles Marais, a French Huguenot immigrant, in 1688. Rupert was born on a farm known as Nektar, near Stellenbosch. He was a 6th-generation descendant of Charles Marais. Authors Eugene Marais (cousin) and Joy Packer, (niece - her mother was Rupert's sister Ellen) were members of this branch of the extended Marais family. Melt Marais, former commander of the Pretoria garrison during the Boer war was also a cousin.

His father - Petrus Jacobus Marais, was a colourful character known as Lang Piet, on account of his being known as the tallest man in Pretoria. He was worth nine million pounds,  from gold prospecting in the Transvaal. Rupert was born in Pretoria, where his father owned the first double-story building in town, known as Nigel House. His gold fortune was due to finding gold on his farm, which later became the town of Nigel.  Lang Piet later returned to the Cape, where he lived at Wheatfields in Mowbray.  

The story of Rupert Marais, the swimmer, remains untold. The Marais family name - Rupert, his brother George, and a P. Marais - appears in the newspaper reports of swimming in the Cape between 1898-1902.  Rupert won the 220-yard Western Province Championship in January 1899. The Team Race, where he swum for the Leander SC, and where a P. Marais was listed as a reserve. It is unclear how the Marais children returned to the Cape, and became involved with the Leander Swimming CLub. 

His brother Charles Marais also played water polo for Western Province, winning the Currie Cup in 1901. 

Rupert was born in 1880 and died on 1 August 1924, in Pretoria. He married Stella Felicia Emmett in St Peter's Church in Vryheid, Natal, on 5 October 1905. Stella passed away in Pretoria on 11 November 196. Her sister Venetia married Charles Marais, another brother of Rupert Marais, in Vryheid on 5 October 1893. She also lived in Pretoria until she passed in 1954.

In June 1901, he passed the Law Certificate Examination at the University of Cape Town, and by 1902 he was practising as an attorney in Pretoria. Rupert Marais was joined by Norman Price (later to become Judge N. C. B. Price) and Charles William Clark, and the firm became known as Marais Price and Clark. Both Rupert and Norman Price were on the Board of Directors of the Standard Motor Company of Africa, where Rupert was also the Chairman. 

In the year 1882 a farmer Petrus Johannes Marais (nicknamed Oom Lang Piet) who owned the farm Varkensfontein in the Heidelberg district made an agreement with a prospector named Johnstone allowing him to prospect for gold on the farm Varkensfontein.

Mr. Johnstone' s prospecting operations continued for a considerable time shrouded in secrecy.

Then one day a stranger turned up at Oom Lang Piet's home and made an offer to buy the farm.

At the time of the offer Oom Lang Piet was by chance busy reading "The Fortunes of Nigel" by Sir Walter Scott, a story about a young man who was the victim of a dishonest intrigue but eventually achieved his goal in life

The stranger's visit immediately aroused Mr. Marais's suspicions to the extent that he decided to visit his farm himself.

https://www.nigel.co.za/history.htm


In 1882 a farmer Petrus Johannes Marais (nicknamed Oom Lang Piet who owned the farm Varkensfontein in the Heidelberg district) made an agreement with a prospector named Johnstone, allowing him to prospect for gold on the farm Varkensfontein.

Johnstone’ s prospecting operations continued for a considerable time shrouded in secrecy until a stranger turned up at Oom Lang Piet’s home and made an offer to buy the farm. At the time, Marais was reading “The Fortunes of Nigel” by Sir Walter Scott (a story about a young man who was the victim of a dishonest intrigue but eventually achieved his goal in life).
The stranger’s visit immediately aroused Marais’s suspicions to the extent that he decided to visit his farm himself. Once at the farm, he found that his suspicions were well founded.

With the experiences of the character in the novel in mind, he determined not to allow himself to be cheated by cunning fortune seekers and at once set about to establish his own company.  In July 1888 (two years after the discovery of gold on the Witwatersrand) Marais achieved his goal.

Marais attributed his luck to the novel he had been reading and therefore, called his company Nigel (after the character in the novel) and in this way, the town of Nigel came into being. In 1888 the state president Paul Kruger declared Nigel as a public digging under notice 331 and since then the history and development of Nigel are inseparable from those of the gold mines.

Once at the farm he found that his suspicions were well founded.

With the experiences of Nigel, the character in the novel in mind, he determined not to allow himself to be cheated by cunning fortune seekers and at once set about to establish his own company.

In July 1888, two years after the discovery of gold on the Witwatersrand, he achieved his goal.

Marais attributed his luck to the novel he had been reading and, therefore, called his company Nigel. In this way, the town of Nigel came into being.

https://www.citizen.co.za/heidelberg-nigel-heraut/news-headlines/2017/09/22/history-nigel-relived-iconic-buildings/  

https://www.bronberger.co.za/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=6732:Ons%20vat%20die%20Marais%20spoor%20van%20Jan%20die%20Gewer%20tot%20by%20Lang%20Piet%20en%20veldkornet%20Melt&catid=50:toeka-se-dae&Itemid=76

News - Toeka se dae
Monday, 19 August 2024 10:00

Angie Kleijn

Noem die naam Eugène Marais en almal weet van wie jy praat . . . Digter, skrywer, advokaat, koerantredakteur, kenner van dieregedrag, prospekteerder, hipnotiseur, sterrekundige, ‘wonderdokter’, dwelmverslaafde. Minder is egter geskryf oor presies hoe hy in die Marais-familie inpas, hulle verbintenis met die goud- en diamantvelde en die grootste filantroop wat Suid-Afrika nog gehad het.

In Pieter Kapp se boek, ‘Nalatenskappe sonder einde’, skryf hy oor die enorme bydrae wat Jannie Marais, bekend as Jan die Gewer, en die Marais-broers van Stellenbosch nagelaat het. Danksy dié broers se kombinasie van versiendheid, hardwerkendheid en kundigheid het hulle rykdom op die destydse diamantvelde opgebou. Hulle is met dié geld terug na Stellenbosch waar hulle dieselfde eienskappe laat tel het in die onderwys, in belang van Stellenbosch, op sakegebied en veral in hulle pionierstoewyding aan Afrikaans.


Catharina Helena Cornelia Marais, ’n nooi Van Niekerk
Bron: geni.com

Eugène Nielen Marais se oupa, Charles Gerhardus Marais, wat op die familieplaas Nektar op Jonkershoek in die Stellenbosch-distrik geboer het, was ’n broer van Jan die Gewer se pa. Charles is met Petronella Johanna Elizabeth, ’n nooi Nielen, getroud en dit is waar die Nielen-naam in die familie vandaan kom.

’n Karakter, wat later groot naam in Pretoria sou maak, Petrus Johannes (Lang Piet) Marais, gebore op die plaas Nektar op 22 Mei 1838, was ’n ruk lank saam met die Marais-broers op die diamantvelde, maar het sy rykdom op die goudmyne gemaak, waar hy ’n miljoenêr geword het.


Eugène Nielen Marais omstreeks 1931, sowat vyf jaar voor sy dood
Bron: Wikipedia

Jan
Lang Piet se broer, Jan Christiaan Nielen Marais, was Eugène se pa. Hy is op 29 November 1822 op Stellenbosch gebore en is op 28 Maart 1843 met Catharina Helena Cornelia, ’n nooi Van Niekerk van Malmesbury, getroud. Hulle het 13 kinders gehad, waarvan Eugène die jongste was. Drie kinders is vroeg oorlede, maar ses dogters en vier seuns het grootgeword.

Die gesin het op die Marais-familieplaas Nektar gewoon. Jan was ’n prokureur en in 1860 het hulle Bloemfontein toe getrek waar Jan in 1863 as staatsekretaris aangestel is.


Jannie Marais, bekend as Jan die Gewer
Bron: ‘Nalatenskappe sonder einde’

Toe tref tragedie: Jan is in 1867 uit die staatsdiens ontslaan op aanklag van geldverduistering. Hy is vir ’n ruk onder huisarres geplaas en om verdere vervolging te voorkom, het die gesin in 1868 na Pretoria gevlug.

Jan en sy broer Lang Piet het in 1868 ’n gedeelte van die plaas Daspoortrand gekoop en dit Les Marais genoem. Dit was eers ’n tabakplaas, genaamd ‘Edith’s Farm’. Al Jan se seuns het aanvanklik op die plaas gewoon. Ná 1881 het die plaas aan Hennie Marais behoort voor 100 erwe in 1890 deur MH Walker opgemeet is.


Jan Christiaan Nielen Marais
Bron: geni.com

Nigel
Lang Piet was met Sarah Mary Catherine Florence, ’n nooi Belfield, getroud. Volgens CJ Mieny se ‘Eugène Nielen Marais – Feit en Fabel’ in die ‘SA Tydskrif vir Natuurwetenskap en Tegnologie, no. 3 1984’, het Lang Piet skatryk geword uit die goudmynbedryf omdat hy die plaas waarop die dorp Nigel begin is, besit het.

Die plaas se naam was Vlakfontein en Lang Piet het dit in 1881 gekoop, maar het nie daar gewoon nie. In 1882 het hy ’n prospekteerder aangestel om goud te soek. Vyf jaar later het ’n groep gouddelwers van Natal op Vlakfontein kampeer en gesien dat die prospekteerder, sonder Lang Piet se wete, goud gevind het. Hulle het Lang Piet £1 000 vir die plaas aangebied.


Lang Piet Marais en King Coffee – die langste en kortste man in toeka se Pretoria
Bron: Engelbrecht, SP, Eeufees-Album. Pretoria se eerste eeu in beeld

Lang Piet was besig om Sir Walter Scott se boek, ‘The Fortunes of Nigel’, te lees – ’n storie oor ’n jong man wat die slagoffer van oneerlikheid was. Met dié storie in sy agterkop, is Lang Piet self plaas toe en het gesien dat ’n goudrif ontdek is. Só is die naam Nigel gebore.

In ’n alternatiewe weergawe van dié storie word daar vertel dat Lang Piet ’n Skotse prospekteerder, Nigel MacLeish, aangestel het. Hy het die goudrif gevind en het dit Nigel’s Reef genoem. Lang Piet het die helfte van die plaas op 15 April 1887 aan sakemanne van Pretoria, wat hulleself die Nigel-sindikaat genoem het, verkoop. Die Nigel Goudmynmaatskappy is op 31 Maart 1888 geregistreer en het die tweede helfte van die plaas op 4 Junie 1888 by Lang Piet gekoop.


Veldkornet Melt Marais
Bron: Rosa Swanepoel-versameling

Lang Piet
Tog moet daar ’n verbintenis met die boek, ‘The Fortunes of Nigel’, wees want alle kerke op die dorp is na kerke in die boek vernoem. Lang Piet het heelwat eiendomme in Pretoria besit en een daarvan was Nigel House, die eerste dubbelverdiepinghuis op die dorp. Die tuine om die huis het amper die hele blok tussen Schoeman-, Pretorius- en Prinsloostrate beslaan. Die huis het later ’n hotel geword en het as Nigel House Hotel bekend gestaan.

Lang Piet het ook ’n erf op die noord-westelike hoek van Kerkplein, wat eers aan kaptein Struben behoort het, besit. Een van die geboue wat later op die erf gestaan het, was as die Marais-gebou bekend.


’n Groep offisiere van die staatsartillerie met Melt Marais in die middel
Bron: Rosa Swanepoel-versameling

Lang Piet was direkteur van die Lydenburg Gold Prospecting Co en aandeelhouer in Transvaal Mining. Verskeie winkel- en dranklisensies is aan hom toegestaan en hy het op menige komitee gedien, soos die een vir die stigting van ’n skool vir jong dames; ’n komitee vir die stigting van ’n hoërskool; en hy was voorsitter van die komitee vir die stigting van ’n perdereisiesklub.

Maraisstraat in Brooklyn is na Lang Piet vernoem. Ander strate in dié voorstad is na sy seuns vernoem (Rupertstraat en Charlesstraat), na sy dogter (Farrellstraat na Dorothy Noreen Farrell) en na sy skoondogters: Stellastraat na Rupert se vrou, Stella Felecia, ’n nooi Emmett, en Maystraat na Charles se vrou, Catherine May Venitia, ook ’n nooi Emmett.


Robert Kuranda
Bron: Men of the times

Melt
Waar Lang Piet se kinders Engelse name gehad het en grootliks met Engelse vrouens getrou het, was een van Jan se seuns, Melt Marais, veldkornet vir Pretoria en het ’n leidende rol in die verset teen die Engelse gespeel.

Melt is op 19 Julie 1860 op Stellenbosch gebore en sy skoolonderrig het op Grey College, Bloemfontein begin. Hy het in 1868 saam met sy gesin na die plaas Les Marais getrek.

Melt het in sport uitgeblink en is gereeld in ‘De Volksstem’ genoem. In 1876 is ’n sportdag gehou om president Burgers se verjaarsdag te vier en die 16-jarige Melt het die 150 jaarts gewen en ook die hoogspring vir seuns met ’n hoogte van drie voet 10 duim.

Melt het vir agt jaar op Les Marais geboer en het daarna ’n klerk in die handelsfirma Field & Hoffmann in Pretoria geword. Hier het hy genoeg ondervinding opgedoen om op sy eie te begin handel dryf en hy het in 1885 ’n algemene agent en makelaar geword.

Hy was vir 15 jaar veldkornet van Pretoria en was vir vyf jaar in bevel van die berede en voetsoldaat-vrywilligers. Met die Anglo Boere-oorlog was Melt in bevel van Pretoria en oor ’n jaartydperk het hy met die rang van veldkorent in Natal geveg. Hy was in die veldslae by Tugela en Ladysmith.

Toe die Britte Pretoria in 1900 ingeneem het, is Melt gevange geneem en na Groenpuntkamp in die Kaap gestuur. Ná die vrede van 1902 is Melt terug na Pretoria waar hy aangegaan het met sy gevestigde sakebelange.


Melt Marais se graf
Bron: eggsa.org

Trou
Melt het in 1887 met Magdalena Maria Marais (Lenie), die derde dogter van JM Boshoff, later tesourier-generaal van Transvaal, getrou en hulle het ses seuns en drie dogters gehad. Hy was ’n vrederegter vir die Pretoria-distrik en ’n lid van die Pretoria-klub en New-klub.

Sy broer, die digter Eugène, het Lenie se niggie, Aletta (Lettie) Beyers, in 1893 ontmoet toe sy in Pretoria kom kuier het en het in Augustus 1894 met haar getrou. Elf maande later (op 17 Julie 1895) het sy aan kraamkoors gesterf ná die geboorte van hulle seun (Eugène Charles Gerard Marais) op 8 Julie 1895; ’n verlies wat Eugène die res van sy lewe bygebly het.


Die grafsteen van Jan Christiaan Nielen Marais en sy vrou, Catharina Helena Cornelia
Bron: geni.com

Eugène was in ’n stadium ’n prokureursklerk by Melt se firma, Kuranda & Marais. Melt se vennoot was Robert Kuranda, wat in 1862 in Oostenryk as die seun van A Kuranda, ’n bekende lid van die Oostenrykse parlement, gebore is. Hy het in 1879 as troep in Suid-Afrika aangekom om in die Zoeloe-oorlog te veg.

Robert het in 1882 ’n ZAR-burger geword en het vir Alois Hugo Nellmapius as aankoper van plase gewerk. Hy was betrokke by die vind van goud op die plaas Doornfontein en het in 1888 saam met Melt Kuranda & Marais gestig, ’n firma wat met tye soveel as 2 500 bouwerkers in Johannesburg in diens gehad het.


Mabel Malherbe
Bron: Wikipedia

Kuranda & Marais se kantoor was in die Commercial Chambers, wat oorspronklik ’n woonhuis op Kerkplein was. Die firma se advertensie het vertel dat hulle die volgende doen: Die koop en verkoop van eiendomme, belê van geld, likwidasie van boedels, die oordrag van aktes en notariswerk. Hulle het ook adverteer dat hulle sake voor die laer en rondgaande howe in die republiek behartig en dat die dienste van ’n ervare prokureur daarvoor gebruik word.

Die Commercial Chambers is in 1892 gesloop om vir die Nasionale Bank-gebou plek te maak en Kuranda & Marais het na die Transvaal Mortage & Loan-gebou geskuif. Ná die vennootskap ontbind is, het Melt in 1899 na die Erasmus-gebou getrek.


Die middelste gebou met die groot stoep op Kerkplein was die Commercial Chambers
waar Kuranda & Marais se kantore was
Bron: Rosa Swanepoel-versameling

Jess
Een van Eugène en Melt se susters, Gezina Wilhelmina Constantia (Jess) het ook bekendheid verwerf. Die Engelse skrywer, Henry Rider Haggard, het haar glo as inspirasie vir die hoofkarakter van sy boek, ‘Jess – A tale of the Boer War’, gebruik. In die laat 1870’s het Henry twee akkers aan die “bokant van Pretoria” gekoop. Met die tyd van die Britse okkupasie in die Eerste Vryheidsoorlog het Henry en sy vriend, Arthur Cochrane, daar vir hulle ’n sinkdakhuisie gebou wat hulle spottenderwys ‘The Palatial’ gedoop het. Dié kothuis het later as Jess’s Cottage bekend gestaan.

Jess Marais het met Frank Rex, ’n afstammeling van George Rex, stigter van Knysna, getrou. Hulle dogter, Mabel Catherine Rex, het met Kenne Malherbe getrou en is in 1931 as Pretoria se eerste vroue-burgemeester gekies. Sy was die tweede vrou en die eerste Afrikaanssprekende vrou wat tot die parlement verkies is.

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EM Wearin

Edward Melville Wearin

Ted Wearin

Edward "Ted" Melville Wearin was born September 25, 1876, in Australia. He lived from 1916-1935 at "Granville" on Romney Road, Greenpoint. Married Olive Gwladys Palgrave Potter (born Powys). In 1900, he travelled to the Cape Colony on the SS Kent, with 500 horses destined for the British soldiers fighting in the Boer War. (Another source states: The first to deliver the NSW Lancers from Sydney to South Africa, departing 28 October 1899 and arriving 6 Dec 1899. The transport consisting of 3 officers and 37 men of the Lancers, 6 officers and 80 men of the Medical Corps, 4 special service officers and 189 horses.)

Ted Wearin won a number of South African swimming championships, including both the 100 and 500 yards in 1902. In 1904 he won again won all of the races - 100, 220 and 500 yards, but did not return to defend his titles in 1905. In 1911 he re-appears, playing water polo for Transvaal. He came from Maryborough in Australia to fight in the Boer War, settled in the Cape (later in the Transvaal) and was a member of the Green and Sea Point Swimming Club. His story as a sailor is related by Lawrence Green in his book At Daybreak for the Isles seen below.

S.S. Harrier, which Ted Wearin sailed from Glasgow to Cape Town.

At Daybreak for the Isles

by Lawrence Green.

Finally the Cape Government decided to sell the Sea Bird and send a steamer sealing. There was an idea at that time that only a sailing vessel could landmen on a sealing-rock; the old hands swore that the seals would smell a steamer and make for the water. However, the Sea Bird was sold, and Skipper Edward Melville Wearin, owner of the S.S. Magnet, was offered the sealing contract.

A mighty man is Wearin, even in his old age. He and Mister Milo went sealing together for many years – a strong partnership. They worked Hollam's Bird successfully, and there they made the record catch of 2,400 seals in one day. There was a small fortune in it, and yet you should hear Skipper Wearin' s views of that islet."Of all the accursed places..."

Wearin is a man worth knowing, are incarnation of the fine seamen of last century. This huge Australian has massive shoulders and arms; he was a champion swimmer in his youth. As a boy he wanted to go to sea, but his father made him serve his time in an engineering works. He arrived at the Cape as a soldier during the South African War and stayed on in the Cape Town railway workshops after the war. The pay was good and he was able to have a twenty-two-foot yacht built for the weekends.

Wearin still hankered after the sea, and the little Advance helped to satisfy his longing. Then came a depression, and in 1905 Wearin was sacked. He took out a sealing-licence for Cape waters and turned his yacht into a sealer. After a few profitable seasons along the Cape coast Wearin heard of the rich sealing-grounds near Luderitz. So he sailed north, five hundred miles in his twenty-two-foot cutter, and thought nothing of it. He set nets for seals off Long Island, parallel nets in the seaweed, close to the reef. Lights attracted the seals at night, and those that jumped the first net were taken in the second. German poachers were raiding the British rocks, using dynamite, but they sheared off when they saw Wearin and the Advance. Once in a long while Wearin was able to land on Eighty-Four Rock, a treacherous place, but good for anything up to five hundred seals if the weather lasted. "I sent the large skins to Russia – they used them for sleigh-covers," recalled Wearin. "

Pup skins went to New York, and in a few years I was able to sell the Advance and buy a steamer. Poor old Advance! She dragged her anchor off Staple Rock and was lost with all hands. "Ay, it's a dangerous game, sealing. You're often close to the surf, and many a cutter has been caught between the rocks and the beach, caught broadside and turned over. Staple Rock has an iron bolt on the summit - you lash yourself to the bolt when the sea sweeps over. I was always lucky about accidents, though. I got two bites on the left arm and two on the left leg ... nothing more. They get excited and snap as they rush past you."

Wearin's tiny hooker, the fifty-ton Magnet, had been plying for years between Table Bay Docks and Robben Island. He ran her as an excursion steamer and did some fishing. Then the superintendent of the guano islands called him in and asked him whether he would go sealing for the government. "So I took the job on," said Wearin."

The government found the coal and stores, I provided the Magnet at £20 a month, and I was paid by results. Four shillings a skin I got for myself, and I signed on a sealing crew of twelve white men. Everyone said I was daft." On the October day in 1911 when Wearin steamed out for the islands, a group of old sealers gathered on the wharf at Table Bay Docks and jeered. "We'll eat all the skins you bring back," shouted the old sealers. "I hope you have a damned good feed," called back Wearin, and on that note the tiny Magnet slipped off to sea. That was the first time Wearin saw Hollam's Bird. He picked up Mister Milo and six coloured boatmen at Ichaboe and anchored off Hollam's Bird. "Of all the accursed places..."

Wearin pointed to it on the large scale-chart. "I worked it for twenty-five years - me and Milo," he told me."Since I retired in 1936 never a man has worked that island. The gear you need! Marks and anchors, buoy ropes, six-inch warps, barrels and chain. The bottom there is like polished granite, with nowhere for an anchor to hold."

Somehow the Magnet's anchors would grip at last, and then Wearin and Mila would climb the rocks and see how the seals were lying. One day they made a rough count - there were sixty thousand seals on the island. It usually supplied them with one-third of the season's catch. That first season Wearin cleared £1,000 in two months. He returned to Table Bay with five thousand pelts, a larger haul than any the Sea Bird had ever made. Wearin had six thousand skins on board the Magnet in August 1914,when war was declared. He knew nothing of it; but the Halifax Island headman, who was friendly with a German lighthouse-keeper, had received a warning. The headman passed it on to Wearin just in time. Wearin got his anchor up and steamed south at full speed; and as he departed a saw a German tug rounding Pedestal Point in pursuit of the Magnet. He got away with his six thousand skins.

When the South African forces invaded South-West Africa, the little Magnet was commandeered to reconnoitre the German-held coast. Wearin showed the troops the best landing-places and put intelligence officers on shore near Luderitz. One night he had to swim back to the Magnet - three-quarters of a mile, with a German patrol firing at him, trying to ignore bullets, the risk of sharks and the icy water. Only a man who held fifty gold and silver cups and medals for swimming could have done it. Wearin lost the Magnet in a Hout Bay gale in 1916.

Six years later he visited Britain and bought the ninety-ton Ranza, a Glasgow herring-carrier. He brought her to Table Bay with a crew of seven in six weeks, and went on with his sealing. South Africa's "one-man shipping line", as people called him, was established again. The Ranza served him well for five years; then he sold her and travelled to Britain again in search of another ship. This time he bought the coaster Harrier, his last ship and his largest -200 tons, and 120 feet in length. He and Milo made rich hauls at Hollam's Bird, and loaded her long fore-deck with skins. "

But I had to clear out for my damn life when the weather made," said Wearin. "You can't steam into the wind with a heavy deck-load like I often had - it meant running to save the skins." Wearin told me about a sealer who lost his nerve on Hollam's Bird when he saw the whole herd rushing towards him. This man lay flat in a rocky crevice, protecting his head. Scores of seals passed right over him, making for a cliff from which they dived fifty feet into the sea. The man got up unhurt. One of the tricks of the trade is to wear old; tattered clothes - garments that fall apart if a seal grips a coat-sleeve or trouser leg.

Covering a thousand miles of South African coastline and the offshore islands. Adventures to far places, a peek into the lives of people living on these remote islands, shipwrecks, treasure and looting. Strange characters, like Black Sophie, who kept a seaman’s boarding house in Cape Town and gave her name to an island. 

Captain Wearin home from South Africa

5 August, 1950

1913 EM Wearin

The accompanying picture is that of capt. ‘Ted’ Wearin, taken in his youth. He is adorned with 47 medals, and beside his is a magnificent cup, gold watch and chain, and silver filigree jardinière – all of the spoils of sport. Most of the medals are of gold.

A notable figure, Mr. Wearin is at present on a extended holiday from Cape Town, South Africa. He and his wife are the guests of his sisters, the misses Amy and Isabel Wearin, at their home in Granville just off the Granville bridge. A host of old friends remember Mr. Wearin for his prowess in the world of sport. He rowed with the champion four-oared crew of Queensland in Maryborough in 1896 when it was ‘stroked’ by Mr. Billy Gordon, still of this city. Again, in 1899, he was with the champion four-oared crew of Queensland in Rockinghampton, stroked by Newt. Barton, a man with a notable sporting career and since dead.

The next year, 1900, saw Mr. Wearin onboard the S.S> Kent with 500 horses for use as army remounts for the Boer War in South Africa. There he joined the 1st Brabant’s Horse at Port Elizabeth, and did two years service. Discharged in Cape Town, Mr. Wearin joined the South African workshops and for five years worked as a moulder. Sea called Although the job was well paid the call of the sea was too strong and he became the owner of a half-decker 22ft. boat., in which he went seal fishing.

The job proved remunerative, but ceased owning to the Government refusing to issue private licenses. The next three years saw Mr. Wearin at his trade in Johannesburg, where he earned big money. It is a wonderful place for a mechanic, he says. After this he bought a 50-ton steamer, the Magnet. With this he ran excursions around the bay, and carried cargo in the off-season. He then worked for the Government, taking stores and labour to the Guano Islands, and also doing seal fishing. His ship was lost three year4s later.

Nothing daunted, Mr. Wearin went to Glasgow and bought a 100-tonsteamer, the Ranza, and sailed her to Cape Town. After ten years he sold her. Mr. Wearin holds his Masters Certificate, which he gained in 1921. It was during the coal strike of 1916 that another trip to Glasgow that resulted in the purchase of a 300-ton steamer. She got as far as Bay of Biscay, struck bad weather, and to turn back and run before the storm. They put into Guernsey and then ran back to London and sold all stores, coal and ship and returned to Cape Town.

The S.S. Harrier After the coal strike, he again visited Glasgow and bought another 300-tonner, S.S. Harrier and this time took his purchase safely to Cape Town. He continued to work for the Government for a further 10- years and 1938 sold out. Altogether Mr. Wearin served the South African Government for a matter of 30 years. His duties took him from Bird Island, Port Elizabeth to Cape Town and the West Coast. During World War I, he did some work for the navy and was at the landing of troops at Luderitz and Walker’s Bay in South West Africa.

During the years Mr. Wearin proved his prowess in the water, winning over 50 swimming races. For five years he held the Championship form the 80, 100, 500 and 880 yards. In water polo, he represented Cape Town for five years in the Currie Cup tournaments and for two years he represented Johannesburg. Maryborough identities who remember Mr. Wearin’s swimming from the Tinana Bridge to the Granville bridge and who knew he would rather swim home from the boat shed than walk, will not be surprised to read of his activities in South Africa.

Featured in novels Carol Birkby, author of that fine book “Thirstland treks” has in it a full page photograph of Capt. Wearin, Master of the Table Bay coaster “Harrier”. In his tales of scaling ledges he writes: ”A seal can easily kill a man in the water – and the hunter’s boats are upset at times. Yet I knew one man, skipper Wearin, of the coaster “Harrier”, who plunged into the sea with a knife one day to dispatch a seal that was floundering in a net in which he had taken a shoal of fish.”

Lawrence Green in his book “So few are free” writes – “Then there was the famous little Harrier owned by her master Captain Ted Wearin. A genuine lover of the sea, Wearin was first a yachtsman. He decided to make the sea his profession, gained at certificate and entered the coastal trade. For years he hunted seals, carried labourers and stores to the Guano Isles, and became known in every port along the West Coast.”

Mrs. Wearin, born of British parents in South Africa is a direct descendent of the old famous 1820 Settlers who landed in Port Elizabeth and founded the colony. Their descendants are amongst the prominent South African peoples. Trip Home Deciding, with his wife, to pay the homefolk and old town a visit, Mr. and Mrs. Wearin left Cape Town on May 10 and had fine trip to Freemantle. There, he said, the trouble began, and because of strikes the boat was held up for fourteen days.

In Melbourne they were delayed ten days, partly because of rain. Arriving in Sydney they found the rail services to Brisbane dislocated, and after a wait of ten days they secured a passage on the P. and O. liner Maloja, to Brisbane. So far Mr. Wearin has not been very complimentary to us, for he is planning already to get back to Cape Town and says he will be delighted to see dear old Table Mountain again.

5th August 1950

SS Kent

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