Cradock (inhabited place)
Found in 9 Collections and/or Records:
Another view if St Martins in the Field. Cradock, 1928-06-22
Album of mostly 80 x 54 mm prints. There is a brief list describing items 1-98, which document the trip from Southampton to South Africa, travel in South Africa, and the visit to Southern Rhodesia. Many photos do not appear in the exact numerical order given in the listing. The rest of the images are uncaptioned, but their general locations have been identified by reference to the diary RCMS 353/1.
Cape Colony. Cradock from the north, 1906-07-04
A view from a neighbouring hill looking over the town of Cradock, with a plantation of firs on the slope in the foreground.
Cape Colony, Cradock Park, 1906-07-04
A view looking across lawns and flowerbeds in the park at Cradock.
Cradock, 1880
The print is initialled 'SA'.
Cradock, Eastern Province, 1888
191 x 126 mm. A general view of the town of Cradock, situated 120 miles north of Port Elizabeth, with the bridge over the Great Fish River in the foreground.
Cradock, street in, 1900 - 1910
196 x 121 mm. Showing the main street in Cradock (on the Great Fish River 120 miles north of Port Elizabeth) with the Masonic Hotel in the foreground and the church beyond.
Picture of the Market Place at Cradock, 1928-06-22
You can see the typical transport of the country. They use either donkeys or oxen. The Church is called St Martins in the Field, and is an exact copy. It was built in 1866 but the stone is still perfectly white.
Victoria Hotel. Cradock, 1928-06-22
Album of mostly 80 x 54 mm prints. There is a brief list describing items 1-98, which document the trip from Southampton to South Africa, travel in South Africa, and the visit to Southern Rhodesia. Many photos do not appear in the exact numerical order given in the listing. The rest of the images are uncaptioned, but their general locations have been identified by reference to the diary RCMS 353/1.
Views of Port Elizabeth and Cradock
A collection of loose prints measuring approximately 210 x 155 mm or 150 x 105 mm, with handwritten captions on the reverse. The captions have been used as titles and have been recorded as found. Photographs probably by Revd. Alfred Hall.