When the control of railways in the Cape of Good Hope was taken over by the Colonial Government on 1 January 1873 and the
Cape Government Railways (CGR) was established with the object of railways expansion, a Select Committee was appointed to study the question of track gauge. The choice which had to be made was between the existing
Standard gauge of and the narrower gauge of , which would effect savings of up to one-third on construction cost. The CGR Chief Railway Engineer William George Brounger was opposed to the adoption of a narrower gauge on the grounds that, while initial cost would be less, operating costs would be higher. The narrow gauge had been proposed by civil engineer R. Thomas Hall, Superintendent of the narrow gauge
Redruth and Chacewater Railway in
Cornwall, who was involved in the construction, beginning in 1869, of the
Namaqualand Railway which was being built to that gauge between
Port Nolloth and
O'okiep for the Cape Copper Mining Company. The committee, with a three-to-one vote, settled on a compromise between the two recommended gauges and the Cape gauge came into existence in Southern Africa. ==Manufacturer==