𝗠𝗮𝘁𝗷𝗶𝗲𝘀𝗳𝗼𝗻𝘁𝗲𝗶𝗻
View On WordPress
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Saudi Arabia

seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Lithuania

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from Brunei

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from Kazakhstan
seen from United States
𝗠𝗮𝘁𝗷𝗶𝗲𝘀𝗳𝗼𝗻𝘁𝗲𝗶𝗻
View On WordPress
For the "Chasing Dead Guys" to-do list
Physicist C.S. Wright visited this tiny settlement east of Cape Town when the Terra Nova stopped in South Africa in August 1910, to measure radiation. Apparently it was stronger there than in Canada or England.
I looked it up because I was curious (not procrastinating at all, definitely no) and it appears not to have changed one single bit since then, except there are cars in the photos.
Apparently the trains there were terrible – in his memoir, Wright wrote “I had my first taste of a really well-run Government railway,” but he is very snarky about this railway in a letter to his father so I think perhaps this may be some of that Silas Sarcasm.
"Waiting on Mishaq to start the day; we'd begun #TourOfAra here July end, then also the last stage to Matjiesfontein early August, so there was a sense of familiarity between place, crew, riders of both. Community within cycling is a contextual thing, but with rides like these it runs deep, with bonds almost familial." Sutherland 10•October•2017 Photograph by @LiamLynchPhoto #Karoobaix #Stage2 #Moordenaars #Sutherland to #Matjiesfontein #185km #Karoo #SouthAfrica #MoordenaarsKaroo #Desert #GravelRace #CyclocrossStyle #DropHandlebars #400km #KBX
The Ghost of Kate
Matjiesfontein is a small historic town, and like many places with a long past, it has its share of ghost stories. One of the most well known is that of Kate. Kate was a 19-year-old nurse. It’s not clear whether she arrived during the time Matjiesfontein was used as a British military hospital during the Anglo Boer War, or later when the Lord Milner Hotel operated as a health retreat. What is known is that she used to spend time in the turret room at the top of the hotel, playing cards with patients as part of their recovery.
Then Kate died under unclear circumstances. There are no records explaining what happened. After her death, guests and staff began noticing unusual activity in the turret room and nearby passages. One evening, a guest saw a woman floating silently through a lower hallway. A few minutes later, the same guest and a friend climbed the stairs to the turret room. Although the room was empty, they both felt as if someone else was there. Then, the locked door leading to the roof began to rattle. It shook for about a minute, even though no one was outside. Since then, others have reported hearing strange sounds, feeling cold spots, or seeing things move in the turret room. A few have even noticed playing cards laid out on the table with no explanation.
Der Geist von Kate
Matjiesfontein ist eine kleine historische Stadt und wie viele Orte mit langer Vergangenheit gibt es auch hier viele Geistergeschichten. Eine der bekanntesten ist die von Kate.
Kate war eine 19-jährige Krankenschwester. Es ist nicht klar, ob sie zu der Zeit ankam, als Matjiesfontein während des Burenkriegs als britisches Militärlazarett genutzt wurde, oder später, als das Lord Milner Hotel als Kurort betrieben wurde.
Bekannt ist, dass sie sich im Turmzimmer im obersten Stockwerk des Hotels aufhielt und mit Patienten Karten spielte, um deren Genesung zu unterstützen.
Dann starb Kate unter ungeklärten Umständen. Es gibt keine Aufzeichnungen darüber, was geschah. Nach ihrem Tod bemerkten Gäste und Mitarbeiter ungewöhnliche Aktivitäten im Turmzimmer und den umliegenden Gängen.
Eines Abends sah ein Gast eine Frau lautlos durch einen unteren Flur schweben. Wenige Minuten später stiegen derselbe Gast und ein Freund die Treppe zum Turmzimmer hinauf. Obwohl das Zimmer leer war, hatten beide das Gefühl, als sei jemand anderes da. Dann begann die verschlossene Tür zum Dach zu klappern. Sie bebte etwa eine Minute lang, obwohl niemand draußen war.
Seitdem berichteten andere, seltsame Geräusche gehört, kalte Stellen gespürt oder Dinge im Turmraum bewegt gesehen zu haben. Einige bemerkten sogar Spielkarten, die ohne Erklärung auf dem Tisch lagen.
What could be better than an impromptu road trip to Matjiesfontein in the Great Karoo? We packed up and headed to the hotel with a few stops on the way.
By Roxanne Reid Imagine the foresight it must take to see a bare patch of veld and dream up a fully fledged village and health spa in the middle of nowhere. This is what happened when Scottish railwayman James Logan founded in South Africa back in 1884. Discover why to visit Lord Milner Hotel and in the .
Imagine too the tenacity of Logan going ahead with his plans to build The Lord Milner Hotel in 1899, in the early stages of the Anglo Boer War of 1899-1902. Before long some 10 000 British troops were camping around the village and the hotel was taken over as a military hospital, the turret as a lookout.
The facade of the Lord Milner Hotel
Once the war was over, the town and hotel were restored to their intended purpose as hotel and health spa while the concession at the station did a roaring trade supplying steam trains with water and passengers with refreshments. People who flocked to for its curative clean air in those early days included the likes of writer and feminist Olive Schreiner, Winston Churchill’s father Randolph, colonial empire builder Cecil John Rhodes and writer Rudyard Kipling. That today is a time capsule of the Victorian era is thanks to another visionary who came along almost a century later. Hotelier David Rawdon did such a good job of restoring the hotel and town to their former glory that was declared a National Monument in 1975.
Old fashioned fuel pumps and broekie lace on the main road
There’s an ageless tranquillity here that’s hard to find in the fast-paced modern world. There’s little traffic so you can wander the streets in peace, admire old buildings and outdated petrol pumps on the side of the road, follow a puff of dust and see where it takes you.
The Laird's Arms pub
When the Blue Train or Rovos Rail stops at the Victorian station, visitors pour out like ants to visit the museum and the hotel, to admire the buildings in a time warp. It’s a frenetic time with lots of foot traffic and clicking of cameras, but things settle down when the whistle blows and the train moves away again on its trans- journey. Then it’s time for those left behind to take tea in one of the hotel’s lounges or order a drink in the pub, to go for a walk across the veld or, later in the afternoon, to watch the sunset and the first glimmerings of what will be a spectacular night sky here in the dry . Relax. Breathe in the clean air. Surrender yourself to be restored and revitalised so you can face a return to city life with equanimity.
train on its trans- journey
Things to do in 1. Download the free VoiceMap app (Apple and Android) as a guide to walk you around the village, point out some of the old buildings and fill you in on the little village’s intriguing history. 2. Take a trip on the old London double-decker red bus. At 18:00 each day except Sunday it takes visitors on a short tour of the village, picking out some of the landmarks like the house where Olive Schreiner stayed and the field where England and South Africa played the first friendly cricket match (James Logan was a great cricket fan). Finish your whistle-stop tour at the Laird’s Arms (see point 5) next to the hotel in time for a drink before dinner.
Old carts and a London red bus outside the station
3. Delve into the past in the museum – all three of them. The Transport Museum has a collection of vintage cars from the 1930s to 1960s, old bikes and train carriages. The Railway Museum on the station platform has a station master’s office dating back to the 1890s and the original signal room.
Wouldn't you love these see these gents out on the road in ?
Victorian furniture in one of the small, cold rooms beneath the station
By far my favourite place to get lost for an hour or two is the Marie Rawdon Museum under the station. There are vast collections of everything from kitchen utensils, old cameras and typewriters, to bedpans, dolls and war souvenirs, even a full-on pharmacy. The rooms under the station used to be a jail during the Anglo Boer War; feel the cold and damp and imagine what it must have been like for the prisoners during a winter.
Collection of bedpans and basins in the museum
Museum collections include cobbler's equipment and woodworking tools
The apothecary, or pharmacy, in museum
4. Walk around the village with your camera to capture memories of the restored old buildings. See the house where Olive Schreiner stayed in attempt to cure her asthma in the dry air, the old post office (now a gift shop) where she used to post her letters. Admire the bank building with its original teller’s counter and banking equipment intact, the pink church that used to be a concert hall and school until the 1960s.
The old post office
The yellow courthouse and jail would have been known to Boer hero Gideon Scheepers who spent time in the jail before he was tried for treason in Graaff-Reinet and executed by firing squad in 1902.
court house and jail
Visit Logan’s General Store (now a coffee shop) and see the flourmill and mineral waterworks where Logan produced lemonade and ginger beer to sell to travellers. A windmill harnessed the winds to generate electricity – a South African first – and power the mill. There’s a rather nice collection of succulents in the garden today.
General Store, now a coffee shop
5. Spend some time in the Laird’s Arms to soak up its saloon-like ambience. A local character, Johnny, plays rousing honky-tonk tunes in the evenings while you order a drink at the polished wooden bar with its shiny brass taps. It’s a wonderful place to imagine what the atmosphere in must have been like more than a hundred years ago. If you’re here at lunch time, order a pub lunch.
Johnny at the piano in the Laird's Arms
Atmospheric dark wood and brass in the Laird's Arms pub
6. Explore the hotel, its grand staircase and reception rooms for a feel of what those who came here for their health at the turn of the 20th century would have experienced. Take a seat here or there to fully appreciate the moment.
The grand staircase in the hotel's lobby
One of the sitting rooms at the Lord Milner Hotel
I love the sitting room at the back where the piano is; last time we visited a young couple was enjoying a cup of tea, retreating into the coolness from a stinking hot day outside.
The music room, with its piano and harp
7. Ask the staff about the ghosts that are said to haunt the hotel. On our very first visit we heard about a woman in white who is sometimes seen near the tower. On our most recent visit, we commented on the strange eyes of the blonde-haired child in a painting in the Marie Rawdon Museum. The chap in the museum told us that a visitor had recently taken a photo of it with her cell phone, another with her daughter’s camera. Then she screamed and came scuttling out as if the hounds of hell were at her heels. Turned out the cell phone pic was fine, but in the other there was a shadow over the child’s shoulder as if someone was standing behind her. A ghost? Who can tell?
Painting of the girl who may have a ghost over her shoulder
8. Explore the gardens behind the hotel to appreciate how they survive in the extremes of really hot summers and really cold winters. If you go far enough you’ll discover the swimming pool, where residents can relax on a lounger with a good book.
Rooms set in green gardens
9. Duck into the tiny traveller’s chapel along the river behind the hotel to imagine how perfect it would be for an intimate wedding. Take a moment to appreciate the serenity and listen to the sounds of the tinkling fountain outside. The building’s original use was far less unruffled; it used to house gas-generating equipment to light the town.
Traveller's chapel,
10. See David Rawdon’s house where he died in 2010. It’s the last cottage down the side road where the pink church is. Someone told us he ordered champagne the night he died and the bottle and glass have been left untouched. Someone else told us it was whisky so – as with all good legends – the stories are already getting jumbled. 11. Enjoy dinner in the Victorian-style dining room with its dark antique furniture and heavy drapes. The food is of the traditional variety, with bobotie, lamb shank and malva pudding making an appearance. Service is friendly but slow when the dining room is full, so try to relax and downshift to time.
Things to do in : take a walk on the veld
12. Go for a walk in the veld, to feel the ‘sense of wild exhilaration and freedom’ that Olive Schreiner so loved. There used to be a British encampment with 10 000 men and 20 000 horses here in about 1900, so you might even pick up a relic from those days.
The hotel at night
accommodation When it comes to your accommodation, you get a choice between suites or rooms in the hotel, historic cottages in the village, or the lower priced Matjies Motel for more budget conscious travellers. I’ve stayed in a cottage in the village, the main hotel (which I love for its classic style) and the Riverbank Rooms at the motel. The latter aren’t as posh as the hotel but still perfectly comfortable at a lower price, with the bonus of a parking spot close to your door. Like it? Pin this image!
You may also enjoy Spend a night in jail at Willowmore in the National Park: the ultimate guide Copyright © Roxanne Reid - No words or photographs on this site may be used without permission from roxannereid.co.za