The Village Management Board of Caledon was established on 25 November 1839, under the provisions of Ordinance 9 of 1836.
The Municipality was constituted on 11 January 1884 under proclamation No 10 of 1884 in terms of the provisions of the Municipality Act of 1882.
The Municipality of Caledon ceased to exist from December 2000 when it amalgamated with Genadendal, Grabouw, Greyton, Riversonderend, Villiersdorp, Botriver and Tesselaarsdal to form the Theewaterskloof Municipality.
The Municipality of Richmond was constituted on 27 June 1854 under provision of Ordinance No 9, 1836.
In 1994 Richmond became part of the Northern Cape Province. It forms part of the Ubuntu Local Municipality, one of eight local municipalities that falls under the Pixley ka Seme District Municipality.
A Municipal Corporation was established at King William’s Town by Ordinance No 1 of 8 February 1861 (BK 438 British Kaffrarian Ordinance).
In 1994 King William's Town became part of the Eastern Cape Province.
King William's Town (now known as Qonce) is part of the Buffalo City metropolitan municipality and it includes the towns of East London and Bhisho, as well as the large townships of Mdantsane and Zwelitsha.
The Municipality of Ceres was constituted on 11 October 1864 under Proclamation No 53 of 1864 in terms of Ordinance No 9 of 1836.
In terms of the Local Government: Municipal Structures Act, 1998 (Act 117 of 1998) the existing Ceres Municipality together with the Municipality of Wolseley, Matroosberg Transitional Representative Council, Municipality of Prince Alfred’s Hamlet, Witzenberg Transitional Representative Council and Municipality of Tulbagh was disestablished and the Witzenberg Local Municipality established (Province of Western Cape Provincial Gazette Extraordinary No 5590, 22 September 2000, Provincial Notice No 487, 22 September 2000). The Witzenberg Local Municipality forms part of the larger Cape Winelands District Municipality.
During the period 1881 – 1882 Claremont, Mowbray, Rondebosch and Wynberg had all been given Village Management Boards.
In October 1882, however, the inhabitants of these four suburbs petitioned the Government to establish a municipality which would incorporate them all.
As a result by Proclamation 97 of June 1883 the Municipality of Liesbeek was established. The municipal regulations were published in February 1884 and in the same month the Municipal Council of Liesbeek began to function.
The Liesbeek Municipality was comprised of the following wards: Wynberg and Diep River (ward 1), Claremont (ward 2), Newlands (ward 3), Rondebosch (ward 4), and Mowbray (ward 5). Each had its own Ward Committee which met separately but fell under the control of the Central Municipal Council of Liesbeek.
Under Proclamation 115 of July 1886 the designation of the Municipality of Liesbeek was altered and the municipality was from then on known under the name of the Municipality of Wynberg, which only included Wynberg and Diep River. The other wards were severed and became independent municipalities – Mowbray falling under Rondebosch until September 1890 and Newlands divided between Claremont and Rondebosch.
The Village Management Board of Wynberg was created under Proclamation No 103 of July 1882.
Wynberg obtained municipal status through Proclamation No 115 of 1886. This municipality functioned until 1927 when it was amalgamated with the Cape Town Municipality.
In 1878, for purpose of increasing the revenue of the Colony, the Excise Duty Act (Act No 2 0f 1878) was promulgated. This act made provision for the imposition of duty on spirits. The Governor was to appoint excise officers for the execution of this task.
Thomas Crowe was the first official to be appointed by the Governor as Inspector of Excise of the Cape Colony on 2 November 1882.
Thereafter this title was changed to Chief Inspector of the Excise Department in 1884, to Controller of Licences (1886), to Controller of Licences and Stamps (1890), and to Chief Inspector of Excise (1914).
On 1 July 1897 Thomas Crowe was succeeded by GWA Cloete as Superintendent of Excise. In turn, he was succeeded by LB Smuts as Controller of the Excise Department on 23 June 1904.
Smuts held this position until 1912, when EA Thomas took over as Chief Inspector of Excise. On 1 September 1913 the title was changed to Superintendent of Excise.
Since 1914 the Superintendent of Excise was the local representative of the Department of Excise in Cape Town with the Commissioner of Customs and Excise in Pretoria as head of the Department.
The Mansion House Fund Central Committee, Cape Town was organised by Lord Milner at the outbreak of the war for the purpose of encouraging the formation of relief committees in the various towns to which refugees were sent and for the purpose of organising a uniform system of relief and a standard scale of expenditure. Under the direction of Lord Milner, the committee granted sums in aid of the various committees so formed after they had collected as much money locally as was possible. The various committees supplied through the central committee with funds relieved the class of persons who at the outset of the war had no funds.
The Imperial Relief Fund came into existence in December 1900, being supplied with funds by the imperial government for the relief of those refugees who ultimately would be able to return the money advanced to them. The funds were administered under the direction of Lord Milner and a consultative committee at Johannesburg, by the Cape Town Committee.