The farm Middelwater, on which Trompsburg would later be established, was owned in the mid-19th century by Jan and Bastiaan Tromp . The Tromps were among the
Voortrekker pioneers who settled the area after the Boers' victory over the Zulu at the
Battle of Blood River in 1838. The town was formally laid out on portions of the farm Middelwater in 1891. Originally, the town was called Jagersfontein Road because it served as a railway stop linking it to the nearby the
Jagersfontein diamond mine. This railway stop was vital for transporting diamonds, goods, and passengers between Jagersfontein and other major Free State towns. The railway station attracted traders, merchants, and farmers, gradually forming the foundation of what would become a permanent settlement. The town was later briefly known as Hamilton, in honour of Sir
Hamilton John Goold-Adams, Lieutenant-Governor of the
Orange River Colony from 1901 to 1910. It was renamed Trompsburg in 1902 in honor of the Tromp family, coinciding with the granting of municipal status and broader reconstruction efforts after the
Second Boer War. This restored the Afrikaans-rooted name, emphasizing its Voortrekker heritage amid shifting colonial influences. Trompsburg's development accelerated with the arrival of the railway in the 1890s, linking it to broader trade networks and positioning it as a key stopover on the Johannesburg-Cape Town route. A school opened as early as 1893 with about 50 students. The Dutch Reformed Church heavily influenced it, using the building for church services and public gatherings. The early 1900s saw the building of the local Dutch Reformed Church and associated buildings. In the 1920s, efforts focused on establishing a school hostel, reflecting growing educational needs. The town hall was inaugurated in 1926. By the mid-20th century, Trompsburg had become a major center for
Merino sheep farming, renowned for wool production and hosting one of South Africa's largest shearing barns. Innovative farming practices in animal husbandry solidified its role in the national wool industry. The town's economy diversified slightly with grain and cattle farming, but it retained its rural character. In the apartheid era, Trompsburg mirrored broader Free State patterns of segregation and labor migration. The town received its first municipal electricity supply in 1960. This was part of a broader rollout by the Electricity Supply Commission (ESCOM, now
Eskom) to electrify towns in the Southern Orange Free State, including Trompsburg and nearby towns like
Reddersburg,
Bethulie,
Edenburg,
Philippolis and
Springfontein. Prior to this, electricity was limited or absent in such non-urban, agricultural areas, with national electrification efforts initially prioritizing mining centers and larger cities from the 1880s onward. A
tornado struck Trompsburg on November 5, 1976. This was a notable long-track event and remains one of the longest recorded tornado paths in South African history. It started near
Hanover, tracking some 175 km through rural/farmland areas. It reached Trompsburg, with a F3 rating on the
Fujita scale, with wind speeds estimated at 250–330 km/h. Along with some injuries and damages to properties in the town, 5 fatalities were reported in rural areas. The damage was relatively limited because much of the path went through open farmland rather than densely populated zones. Post 1994, integration into democratic South Africa emphasized community development, with the Kopanong Municipality formed in 2000 through the amalgamation of nine towns to manage local services. This restructuring emphasized equitable development, including RDP housing programs that provided thousands of homes to previously disadvantaged residents since 1994. The
Albert Nzula District Hospital serves as a key public health resource in the region, offering general wards, emergency services, dispensary, and specialized care to the underserved Xhariep community. In early 1996 the town was the site of racial tensions and incidents related to school desegregation efforts following the end of apartheid. The events centered on attempts by black parents and students to enroll in the local white-dominated Trompsburg Secondary School. Reports from February 1996 describe hundreds of black parents marching to demand access for their children to the school. On February 20, 1996, a group of white men attacked approximately 300 black students who were protesting outside the school after it refused to enroll them. Police reportedly stood by and watched during the incident. This occurred amid broader national struggles over school integration. South Africa's post-apartheid constitution and policies aimed to end racial segregation in education, but resistance persisted in conservative rural areas like Trompsburg. White communities often opposed rapid integration, fearing loss of cultural control or standards in Afrikaans-medium schools. The South African Schools Act No. 84 of 1996 (often abbreviated as SASA) was the primary law that formalized the end of racial segregation in schools and established a unified, non-racial education system. Today, Trompsburg remains a peaceful stopover for travelers, while preserving its Voortrekker heritage amid the semi-arid landscapes of the Free State. == Coat of Arms (pre-2000) ==