Campbell Collections
Thumbnail | Title | Description |
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John Clark Collection |
Top of Church 1890 |
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John Clark Collection |
Killie Campbell at Muckleneuk |
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John Clark Collection |
Bought by John Clark at Pilgrim's Rest, E. Transvaal, 01 October 1980- R1 |
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John Clark Collection |
Byrne: The Oaks, December 1975 |
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John Clark Collection |
Lieutenant F.G. Farewell (1793-1829), one of the two ex-nanal officers who poineered the opening-up of Natal as a trading-station. No picture exists of his partner in the trading venture, James Saunders King, who later died of dysentery in Durban and is buried on the Bluff. |
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John Clark Collection |
Sir George White house at 16 Poort Road, still stands, slightly altered and supplied with a modern garage |
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John Clark Collection |
Killie Campbell, photo by John Clark |
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John Clark Collection |
Isandlwana |
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John Clark Collection |
Officers carrying out shooting practice during the voyage to Natal. Note the ammunition box from which the lid has been removed by means of hammer and screwdriver. |
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John Clark Collection |
A view of military cemetery at Langsnek, with Majuba in the distance. Colley's casualties in the engagement were 7 officers, 76 men killed, 2 men taken prisoner, and 111 men wounded. The Beers had 14 dead 29 wounded. |
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John Clark Collection |
The steamship Durban used both sail and steam in the transition stage of the latter half of the 19th century. The early steamers were much underpowered as well as liable to engine breakdowns. Their sails were therefore an essential auxiliary on long voyages. |
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John Clark Collection |
Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Matthew Nathan (3 January 1862 – 18 April 1939) was a British soldier and colonial administrator, who variously served as the Governor of Sierra Leone, Gold Coast, Hong Kong, Natal, and Queensland. He served as Governor of Natal from 1907-1909. |
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John Clark Collection |
A rather pathetic letter written to Captain Smith by nine well-known Port Natal settlers imprisoned at Pietermaritzburg by the Boers. Although they assure Smith that they are being treated with great kindness, it emerges a few lines later that they are in the stocks. |
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John Clark Collection |
Isandlwana |
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John Clark Collection | ||
John Clark Collection |
Natal Native Contigent |
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John Clark Collection |
John Bird |
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John Clark Collection |
19 January 1959: Time heals. Eight years have passed since the battle of Isandlwana. In this picture, taken yesterday on the anniversary of the battle, two people, descendants of people from opposite camps, talk not of the hatred but the glories and heroism of that day. |
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John Clark Collection |
General Redvers Buller |
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John Clark Collection |
Gold mine adit |