Religion Kimberley, from its earliest days, attracted people of diverse faiths, which are still reflected by practising faith communities in the city. Pre-eminently these are various denominations of
Christianity,
Islam,
Judaism,
Hinduism, as well as other faiths. Traditional African beliefs continue as an element in the
Zionist Christian Church (ZCC). Kimberley is the seat of the
Anglican Diocese of Kimberley and Kuruman and also of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Kimberley – previously the Apostolic
Vicariate of Kimberley in Orange. Other denominations having churches in the city are the
Methodist Church, the
Presbyterian Church, the
Congregational Church, the
Dutch Reformed Church (Afrikaans: Nederduitse Gereformeerde Kerk), the
Baptist Church, the Afrikaans Baptist Church (Afrikaans: Afrikaanse Baptiste Kerk), the
Apostolics,
Pentecostals. The
Seventh-day Adventist Church in South Africa was first established in Kimberley.
Art, music, film and literature Notable artists from Kimberley include
William Timlin and
Walter Westbrook, while an artist noted for his depiction of Kimberley was
Philip Bawcombe. Writers from the city or with strong Kimberley links include
Diane Awerbuck,
Benjamin Bennett,
Lawrence Green,
Dorian Haarhoff,
Dan Jacobson, E P Lekhela,
Z.K. Matthews,
Sarah Gertrude Millin,
Sol Plaatje,
Frank Templeton Prince,
Olive Schreiner,
A.H.M. Scholtz,
Sabata-Mpho Mokae. A notable
reggae and
rhythm and blues musician from Kimberley is
Dr Victor.
Museums, monuments and memorials • The
Big Hole, previously known as the Kimberley Mine Museum, is a recreated townscape and museum, with Big Hole viewing platform and other features, situated next to the Kimberley Mine ("Big Hole"). It houses a rich collection of artefacts and information from the early days of the city. • The
McGregor Museum, which celebrated its centennial in 2007, curates and studies major research collections and information about the history and ecology of the Northern Cape, which are reflected in displays at the museum's headquarters at the Sanatorium in Belgravia and nine branch museums. • The
William Humphreys Art Gallery. • The Kimberley Africana Library. • Dunluce and Rudd House Museums. • Pioneers of Aviation Museum: In 1913, South Africa's first flying school opened at Kimberley and started training the pilots of the South African Aviation Corps, later to become the
South African Air Force. The museum is located on the site of that flying school and houses a replica of a Compton Paterson biplane, one of the first aircraft to be used for flight training. The first female on the African continent to receive her pilot's license, Ann Maria Bocciarelli, was trained at this facility. •
Robert Sobukwe's Law Office • The
Sol Plaatje Museum is located in the house where
Sol Plaatje lived and wrote
Mhudi. • Transport Spoornet Museum • Clyde N. Terry Hall of Militaria • Freddie Tate Museum • A
heritage tramway was opened in 1985, putting one of
Kimberley's historic trams back on the rails. • On the outskirts of Kimberley, on the Barkly West Road, the
Wildebeest Kuil Rock Art Centre, as well as
Nooitgedacht Glacial Pavements. To the south of the city, the Magersfontein Battlefield Museum (see
Battle of Magersfontein), while blockhouses can be seen at
Modder River. Memorials include: • The Miners' Memorial, also known as the Diggers' Fountain, located in the Oppenheimer Gardens and designed by
Herman Wald. It was built in honour of all the miners of Kimberley. The memorial consists of five life-sized diggers lifting a diamond sieve. • The
Honoured Dead Memorial commemorates those who died defending the city during the
Siege of Kimberley in the
Second Boer War. • The
Cenotaph erected originally to commemorate the fallen of
World War I, with plaques added in memory of fallen Kimberley volunteers in
World War II. There is a memorial dedicated to the
Kimberley Cape Coloured Corps who died in the Battle of Square Hill during
World War I. Consisting of a gun captured at the battle, it originally stood in Victoria Crescent,
Malay Camp, but, post-1994, was moved to the Cenotaph. • The Concentration Camp Memorial remembers those who were interned in the Kimberley concentration camp during the Second Boer War and is located in front of the Dutch Reformed Mother Church. • The
Henrietta Stockdale statue, by
Jack Penn, commemorates the Anglican nun, Sister Henrietta CSM&AA (her reinterred remains are buried alongside), who petitioned the Cape Parliament to pass a law recognizing nursing as a profession and requiring compulsory state registration of nurses - a first in the world. • The statue of
Frances Baard was unveiled by Premier
Hazel Jenkins on Women's Day, 9 August 2009. • The
Sol Plaatje Statue was unveiled by South African President
Jacob Zuma on 9 January 2010, the 98th anniversary of the founding of the
African National Congress. Sculpted by Johan Moolman, it is at the Civic Centre, formerly the Malay Camp, and situated approximately where Plaatje had his printing press in 1910–13. • Burger Monument near Magersfontein Battlefield •
Cape Police Memorial • Mayibuye Memorial • Rhodes equestrian statue • Malay Camp Memorial
Architecture •
Alexander McGregor Memorial Museum (1907) • De Beers Head Office • Dunluce (Late Victorian) • Harry Oppenheimer House (mid-1970s) •
Honoured Dead Memorial • Kimberley Africana Library • Kimberley City Hall (Neo-classical) • Kimberley Club • Kimberley Regiment Drill Hall (1892) • Kimberley Sanatorium (
McGregor Museum) (1897) • Kimberley Undenominational Schools •
Masonic Temple •
Northern Cape Provincial Legislature •
Old School of Mines (Late Victorian) • Rudd House (The Bungalow) •
The Lodge (Duggan-Cronin Gallery)
Notable religious buildings • Dutch Reformed Mother Church Newton is a good example of
Stucco architecture in Kimberley. It was declared a
National Monument in 1976, now a Provincial Heritage Site. • Kimberley's older Mosques were replaced by newer ones as a result of the Group Areas Act and the forced resettlement of the city's Muslim communities. •
Kimberley Seventh-day Adventist Church is a small L-shaped corrugated-iron building and is considered the mother church of Seventh-day Adventists in South Africa. It was declared a
National Monument in 1967, now a Provincial Heritage Site. •
St Cyprian's Anglican Cathedral was designed by Arthur Lindley of the firm of Greatbatch, the building of the nave being completed in 1908. The remainder of the cathedral was completed in stages, partly under guidance of
William M. Timlin (also of the firm of Greatbatch). In 1926 the Chancel was dedicated (and as a
World War I memorial); in 1936 the
Lady Chapel, Vestry & new organ were added; and in 1961, the tower (a
World War II memorial). The cathedral contains notable stained glass windows including works by the Pretoria artist
Leo Theron. • St Mary's Roman Catholic Cathedral. • Synagogue in the Byzantine style designed by D.W. Greatbatch, and based on the synagogue in Florence, Italy.
Media Newspapers The earliest newspaper here was the
Diamond Field, published initially at Pniel on 15 October 1870. Other early papers with the
Diamond News and the
Independent. The
Diamond Fields Advertiser is Kimberley's current daily newspaper, published since 23 March 1878.
Football Richard Henyekane, South African footballer, is from Kimberley, his younger brother Joseph played for Golden Arrows.
Jimmy Tau is from Kimberley.
Swimming Karen Muir, born in Kimberley, became in 1965 the youngest person to break a world record in any sport. This age group record stands to this day. She set it in August 1965 at the junior world champions in
Blackpool, England, in the
backstroke at the age of 12. She went on to break many more world records but was denied a role in world swimming when she lost the opportunity to represent her country at the
1968 Olympic games in
Mexico City as a result of South Africa being excluded for its racial apartheid policies. Kimberley also saw a world record broken in the municipal pool that now bears Muir's name. It was
Johannesburg's Anne Fairlie who beat Karen Muir and Frances Kikki Caron in a time breaking the world record.
Charl Bouwer, the
Paralympic swimmer from
South Africa who won gold in the 50m freestyle at the
2012 Summer Paralympics in London, was born in Kimberley.
Athletics Bevil Rudd, Olympic medallist.
Lawn bowls Elsie McDonald was a Springbok bowler.
Skateboarding The first
Maloof Money Cup World Skateboarding Championships were held in Kimberley in September 2011 and again in 2012. When the Maloof family sponsorship ended in 2013 the event became known as the Kimberley Diamond Cup.
Sporting facilities •
Griqua Park •
De Beers Diamond Oval •
Galeshewe Stadium Quotations "Kimberley has had a profound effect on the course of history in Southern Africa. The discovery of diamonds there, more than a century ago, proved to be the first step in the transformation of South Africa from an agricultural into an industrial country. When gold and other minerals were later discovered to the north, there were already Kimberley men of vision and enterprise with the capital and technology to develop the new resources". -
H.F. Oppenheimer, 1976. Foreword to
Brian Roberts's book,
Kimberley, Turbulent City.
Anthony Trollope visited Kimberley in 1877 and was notoriously put off by the heat, enervating and hideous, and the dust and the flies of the early mining town almost drove him mad: "I sometimes thought that the people of Kimberley were proud of their flies and their dust". Of the townscape, largely built of sun-dried brick, and of plank and canvas and corrugated iron sheets brought up by ox-wagon from the coast, he remarked: "In Kimberley there are two buildings with a storey above the ground, and one of these is in the square: this is its only magnificence. There is no pavement. The roadway is all dust and holes. There is a market place in the midst which certainly is not magnificent. Around are the corrugated iron shops of the ordinary dealers in provisions. An uglier place I do not know how to imagine". In the early 1990s, the writer
Dan Jacobson returned to Kimberley, where he had grown up in the 1930s, giving a sense of how things had changed: "The people I had known had vanished; so had their language. That contributed to my ghostlike state. In my earliest years the whites of Kimberley spoke English only; Afrikaans was the tongue of the Cape Coloured people.... Now I was addressed in Afrikaans everywhere I went, by white, black, and Coloured alike". "Kimberley dull?" asked the
Virtualtourist reviewer Catherine Reichardt. "Happily, the answer is a resounding 'No', provided that you have a passion for history - in which case Kimberley has it in spades, and you'll probably need to overnight to fully appreciate its attractions and charms. In many ways, exploring Kimberley and its heritage is like experiencing South African history in microcosm". ==See also==