Bridging the divide

Subtitle:
The story of a Boer-British family
Author:
Angela Read Lloyd
Format:
Softcover
Average customer rating:
 (Reviews)

Now:R297.95
eBucks:eB2980

United States of America

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Bridging the divide

Short description

In January 1901, at the height of the 1899-1902 Anglo-Boer War, a Boer woman from the farm Lokshoek in the Orange Free State, Lily Visser, married Herbert Read in Cape Town.It was an unusual event. Neither of their families was able to attend the wedding.

Long description

In January 1901, at the height of the 1899-1902 Anglo-Boer War, a Boer woman from the farm Lokshoek in the Orange Free State, Lily Visser, married Herbert Read in Cape Town.It was an unusual event. Neither of their families was able to attend the wedding. Lily’s sister and her three daughters were detained in a grim concentration camp in Port Elizabeth, where the youngest of her daughters died. One of her brothers was in a prisoner-of-war camp in Cape Town. Her youngest brother was interred in Bloemfontein, while another brother, who had treated Winston Churchill for his wounds when he was captured by the Boers in Natal, was about to be charged with treason by the British in Johannesburg. The Visser family farm had been all but destroyed by British troops in the implementation of their scorched earth policy. Herbert Read was an Uitlander Engelsman working for one of the most imperialistic of all the Witwatersrand mining companies – Ecksteins, better known as the Corner House. But Herbert Read and Lily were in love, and their love bridged a great divide. They built a lovely house on what was at the time the outskirts of Johannesburg, and named it after Lily’s Free State home – Lokshoek. This title, however, is not just the story of the Vissers and the Reads – it is an account of the social transformation of two white middle-class families over more than a hundred years through three wars, the Great Depression, the intense political conflict within the white minority, and the apartheid years. This illustrated history highlights, uniquely and with great insight, the stories, divisions, loyalties and changes within South Africa’s once-dominant white society. Lokshoek in Johannesburg is no more – today an office block in Parktown stands where it once stood. But Lokshoek at Jagersfontein remains as it has been for generations. The current owner, Gert Peet Visser, who farms there with two of his sons, has been involved in discussions with the ANC about the future of the area. The social transformation of white South Africans has clearly not ended.

Product details

Publisher:
Mousehand Books
ISBN:
9780620424332
Publication date:
November 2008
Length:
244mm
Width:
170mm
Thickness:
26mm
Weight:
900g
Pages:
506

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Bridging the divide

Bridging the divide

Now:R297.95
eBucks:eB2980
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