The original inhabitants of the region were the
Khoikhoi herders and the
San hunter gatherers. Following the arrival of the early European colonists, the area was settled by
Afrikaner Trekboers and
Griqua people.
Railway origins The town itself owes its existence to the
Cape Government Railways, and to the route that their founder,
Cape Prime Minister
John Molteno, chose for a railway line that would connect
Cape Town's port to the diamond fields of Kimberley. The Royal Commonwealth Society (1898) records that in a meeting with his consulting engineers, the Prime Minister called for a map of Southern Africa to be brought to him and, taking a ruler, drew his pen along it from Cape Town all the way inland. He then handed the map to the engineers, telling them to build the railway accordingly. The line rapidly extended inland, and a station was built on 1 February 1878, that was named "Matjiesfontein". The name was derived from a type of sedge,
Cyperus textilis, used by Khoekhoen to make mats (matjies) employed in the construction of their huts.
Logans refreshment station Originally, Matjiesfontein was only a small depot and farm, however a Scotsman by the name of James Douglas Logan, who was superintendent of this stretch of railway, bought land at Matjiesfontein, moved there because of his weak chest, and opened a refreshment station for the passing trains. This was so successful that the business soon formed the nucleus of a growing village. Logan was unintentionally very influential in South African history as he had secured the catering contract for the railways through his friend in
parliament,
James Sivewright, and discovery of the corruption involved led to the fall of the first government of Prime Minister
Cecil Rhodes in 1893. Logan was also considered to be one of the founding fathers of South African cricket.
Development and layout A town was laid out in the 1880s, and formally purchased in 1968 to be preserved for its Victorian charm. The whole town was declared a National Monument on 12 September 1975, the railway station on 15 December 1989 and the cemetery on 23 September 1994. The cemetery houses the graves of British Army Major-General
Andrew Wauchope (1846–1899) and English cricketer
George Lohmann (1865–1901). In 2022, a new ground station for
NASA's lunar exploration program was announced to be under construction in Matjiesfontein, scheduled to come online in 2025. ==Location and surrounds==