Before the colonial era as from 1810, the settlement was known as
ǂNūǂgoaes, the Nama name given it by Kaptein Hendrik Tseib of the Kharo!oan or !Khara|gôan aka the Tseis, one of fourteen tribes of the indigenous Namakhoen or Nama of
Namibia. The Afrikaans translation is
Swartmodder. Both names mean "(place of) black mud" and refers to the presence of a spring which was rich in surface iron deposits in the area. Gaob Hendrik Tseib discovered the spring in 1808 near the Leeurivier about 40 km northeast of the Kharo!oan settlement when he and a few of his horsemen and four dogs went on a hunting expedition. The first white settler,
Guilliam Visagie, arrived here in 1785. When in February 1850 the Kharoǃoan clan (
Keetmanshoop Nama) split from the
Red Nation, the main subtribe of the
Nama people, they settled permanently in the area. In 1860 the
Rhenish Missionary Society founded a mission there to
christianise the local
Nama people. The first missionary, Johann Georg Schröder, arrived in Keetmanshoop on April 14, 1866, which is now marked as the founding date of Keetmanshoop. The mission station was named after the German trader and director of the Rhenish Missionary Society, , who supported the mission financially, although he never actually visited the place himself. ==Economy and infrastructure==