Due to the mistaken belief that the British Officers’ P.O.W. Camp was at Waterval, this facility has, until now, been covered in the Waterval thread.
However, after a bit of digging, it has become apparent that the officers’ quarters were not at Waterval, but instead on the northern outskirts of Pretoria, some twelve miles to the south.
For more on this see:
Waterval.
As the officers’ camp was quite separate from the rank-and-file establishment at Waterval, it seems a good idea to start a new topic devoted to the “Birdcage”, as the camp came to be known by British detainees.
Photograph taken while the compound was being used as quarters for captured British officers.
The distinctive skyline in van Hoepen’s image (see below) helped ascertain that the camp was not at Waterval, a flat featureless place. Google Street View suggested an approximate location on the northern edge of 1900 Pretoria, the hill in the background seemingly resembling Meintjes Kop, the current site of the 1913 Union Buildings. Using the 3D feature in Google Earth, I was able to narrow the location down to an area just to the north of the Aapjes River, in the shadow of the east-west Dasport Range. This district is now occupied by the National Zoological Gardens, and, searching their website I was amazed to find a photograph taken from almost exactly the same spot as van Hoepen’s. By transposing the field of view shown in the latter image onto current mapping, I have now been able to locate the site of the camp with some accuracy.
The good news is that the area has not been built over; the bad news is that if you intend to visit, you run the danger of being charged by a white rhino.
Google Street View: screenshot of what appeared to be the hill in van Hoepen’s photograph.
As seen from the University of Pretoria Basic Medical Sciences Building.
Google Earth (3D) - rather “blocky” screenshot of the view, as seen from the cable car station above the Zoological Gardens.
Photograph from the National Zoological Gardens website, showing almost exactly the same view as that in van Hoepen’s shot.
The latter photograph was taken after the British occupation of Pretoria, once the facility had been repurposed as a rest camp for Imperial troops. The Aapjes River flows along the bottom of the escarpment, the top of which is just visible in the middle distance on the right, running parallel to the huts..
Van Hoepen’s field of view transposed onto current mapping, allowing for the approximate location of the POW camp (copyright Mapbox).
Approximate location of the camp, with the southeast corner encroaching on the White Rhino enclosure (copyright Mapbox).
Location transposed onto Jeppe’s 1899 map (very approximate due to quality of 1899 survey).
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