The pass was named after Francois Du Toit, a 17th-century
Huguenot refugee and pioneer who settled in the foothills. Prior to 1825, farmers used the pass to get to the interior beyond. At that time, Detlef Siegfried Schonfeldt (a former lieutenant in the 45th
Württemberg Hussars) of the farm Du Toitskloof asked the Cape Colony government for money for a road through the pass but no funds were provided. Another pass became the better route and in 1845, the route over the
Bainskloof Pass was constructed, named after engineer
Andrew Geddes Bain. In 1930, engineer P.A. de Villiers explored the idea of a road over the pass and in 1938 it was investigated further by the National Roads Board with the route finalised in 1940. The project was started in the summer of 1941/42. It cost R1.25 million and was 40 km long with the road opened in March 1949 by Prime Minister
DF Malan. ==References==