Identity area
Type of entity
Authorized form of name
Parallel form(s) of name
Standardized form(s) of name according to other rules
- 1/TBH
Other form(s) of name
Identifiers for corporate bodies
Contact area
Description area
Dates of existence
History
On 11 July 1804 the district of Stellenbosch was subdivided into two districts. The southern portion of the original district retained the name Stellenbosch, while the northern portion was named Tulbagh. A former Landdrost of Stellenbosch, Hendrik Bletterman was temporarily appointed to institute the administration of the district of Tulbagh. The inhabitants strongly opposed the proposed boundaries of the new district as well as the decision to establish the seat of the magistracy at Jandisselsvlei. Therefore, Bletterman was instructed to investigate the matter and find a solution.
In his report of September 1804 Bletterman recommended that the Government purchase the farm Rietvalley in Roodezand (Land van Waveren) as the seat of the Landdrost. He also divided the district into 16 field-cornetcies and appointed field-cornets. Bletterman’s proposals were accepted and he was authorised to make any changes which he deemed necessary in the interests of the inhabitants of the district. He was granted 25000 rixdollars to build a residency. H van de Graaff was appointed as the first landdrost of the district.
In February 1808 an Adjunk-Landdrost (Deputy Magistrate) was appointed at Jandisselsvlei, and in 1819 an Adjunk-Landdrost was also appointed at Worcester. After the residency and other public buildings had been damaged by a storm in July 1822, it was decided to move the seat of the Landdrost from Tulbagh to Worcester and to change the name of the district to Worcester. On the recommendation of the Landdrost a Special Heemraad was appointed at Tulbagh in October 1822. When the system of Landdrost and Heemraden was changed to that of Resident Magistrate and Civil Commissioner in 1827, the Special Heemraad was replaced by a Justice of the Peace.
In March 1848 the district of Worcester was divided into the districts of Worcester and Tulbagh. The latter consisted of the field-cornetcies of Tulbagh, Voorste Omtrek (Koue Bokkeveld), Warm Bokkeveld, Voor Vier-en-twintig Riviere and those parts of the field-cornetcies of Breede Rivier and Achterste Omtrek (Koue Bokkeveld) which fell within the parish of the Dutch Reformed Church of Tulbagh. H Piers was appointed as the first Resident Magistrate of the new district.
On 1 January 1872 the seat of the magistracy was moved from Tulbagh to Ceres, while a periodical court was established at Tulbagh. In 1877 a Special Justice of the Peace was appointed at Saron, while a Special Justice of the Peace, with jurisdiction over the field-cornetcies of Tulbagh, Waterval and Vier-en-twintig Riviere, was appointed at Tulbagh in February 1880.
An Additional Resident Magistrate was appointed at Tulbagh in March 1886. He was to hold court at Tulbagh on Mondays and Thursdays and was to act as Road Magistrate for the district of Tulbagh under the provisions of Ordinance No 9 of 1846.
These measures remained in force until May 1889, when the district of Tulbagh was divided into the district of Ceres and Tulbagh, with the town of Tulbagh as the seat of the latter district. The new district of Tulbagh comprised the field-cornetcies of Tulbagh, Winterhoek, Waterval, Breede Rivier, Koopmansrivier and Vier-en-twintig Riviere.
Apart from his normal judicial and administrative functions, the Magistrate of Tulbagh performed the functions of Chairman of the Divisional Council, Chairman of the Licensing Court and, during the Anglo-Boer War, Deputy Administrator of Martial Law in an ex officio capacity.
The Archives:
From the foregoing it is clear that a close interrelation exists between the earliest archives of the Magistrate of Tulbagh and those of the Magistrate of Worcester. Therefore, the archives of the Magistrate of Tulbagh for the period 1804 – 1822 was left with the archives of the Magistrate of Worcester. The archives of the Special Heemraad (since 1828 the Justice of the Peace) at Tulbagh for the period 1822 – 1848 was also transferred to the archives of the Magistrate of Worcester, since that official fell under the jurisdiction of the latter magistrate.
Places
Cape Province.
Cape Colony.
Tulbagh.
Worcester.
Legal status
Functions, occupations and activities
Mandates/sources of authority
Internal structures/genealogy
General context
Relationships area
Access points area
Subject access points
Place access points
Occupations
Control area
Authority record identifier
Institution identifier
Rules and/or conventions used
Status
Level of detail
Dates of creation, revision and deletion
Language(s)
- English
Script(s)
- Latin
Sources
Archives of the Batavian Republic (BR).
Archives of the Colonial Office (CO).
The Cape Town Gazette and African Advertiser.
Cape of Good Hope Government Gazette.