Cape Town Castle was one of the four constituencies created out of the multi-member Cape Town seat for the
Cape Parliament. At the time, it extended from
Adderley Street in the west to the then-city limit, now in the suburb of
Woodstock, in the east and
Table Mountain in the south. It changed extent quite frequently in its early years, gaining most of
Vredehoek in 1915 but losing it again in 1920 and becoming a much more CBD-focused seat. In 1924, the Castle itself was moved into the neighbouring seat of
Salt River, for which reason Cape Town Castle was renamed to
Cape Town Hanover Street. However, this was undone in the following election, and for most of its later history, the seat covered the eastern half of the
City Bowl. Like the rest of Cape Town, it was a largely English-speaking seat and loyal to the pro-British side of South African politics. Its first and most notable MP,
Morris Alexander, was a leader of Cape Town’s Jewish community, and enjoyed wide popularity in the seat. When his
Unionist Party merged with the
South African Party, he rejected the merger and sat as a “Constitutional Democrat” independent. Alexander was re-elected under this label for Hanover Street in 1924, but in 1929 opted to run as a
Labour candidate in neighbouring
Cape Town Gardens, leaving Castle to the SAP candidate A. J. McCallum. However, he returned in 1933, representing first the SAP and then the
United Party, and only leaving parliament on his death in 1946. The MP elected in the by-election,
Abe Bloomberg, would represent the seat until its abolition in 1958. == Members ==