Dirk Gysbert van Breda

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from D. G. van Breda)

Dirk Gysbert van Breda
Mayor of Cape Town
In office
1860–1860
Preceded byHercules Crosse Jarvis
Succeeded byGillis J. de Korte
In office
1865–1866
Preceded byJoseph Barry
Succeeded byGillis J. de Korte
Personal details
Born
Dirk Gysbertus van Reenen van Breda

5 May 1803
Cape Town, Cape Colony
Died14 November 1870(1870-11-14) (aged 67)
Oranjezicht, Cape Town, Cape Colony
NationalitySouth African
SpouseSusanna Hendrina Wilhelmina Meyer
Children12
Parent

Dirk Gysbertus van Reenen van Breda (5 May 1803 – 14 November 1870) was a South African public official, farmer and twice Mayor of Cape Town.[1]

Biography[edit]

Van Breda was born in Cape Town, the second son of the first mayor of Cape Town, Michiel van Breda and his first wife, Catharina Geesje van Reenen. He married Susanna Hendrina Wilhelmina Meyer on 9 September 1828 in Cape Town.[1]

In 1839 he bought the farms Rietfontein and Buffeljagt in the Swellendam district, where he farmed mainly with merino sheep.[2] After his father's death in 1847, and in 1851, van Breda bought the two properties, Oranjezicht and Oudekraal from the deceased estate.[3][4] Van Breda was a shrewd and intelligent farmer and was a member of the Legislative Council of the Cape Colony’s first elected parliament and a Cape Town municipal commissioner. In 1860 he became chairman of the Municipal Board of Cape Town, effectively the role of Mayor. He fulfilled the role for only one year, but between 1865 and 1866, served a second term as Mayor, being the first to do so.[5]

Unfortunately, two of his sons, Dirk Gysbert and the younger Pieter Johannes Albertus, did not inherit their father's good nature. Both were known for their violent and abusive behaviour towards slaves and even their own wives and barely six months after their father's death they both killed their wives.[2]

Dirk Gysbert van Reenen van Breda died on his farm, Oranjezicht on 11 November 1870.[4]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Heese, J. A. (2004). South African Genealogies: Vol11. Stellenbosch: Genealogical Institute of South Africa. p. 490. ISBN 0-7972-1031-8. OCLC 18051341.
  2. ^ a b "South African National Parks: Ratel River" (PDF). www.sanparks.org/.
  3. ^ "Oranjezicht - MareAscott". sites.google.com. Retrieved 20 September 2020.
  4. ^ a b "History of Oranjezicht City Farm". Oranjezicht City Farm. Retrieved 20 September 2020.
  5. ^ Bloomberg, David (2011). The chain gang : mayors who served in Cape Town's City Hall. Newlands, South Africa: Ampersand Press. pp. 3–5. ISBN 978-1-919760-78-0. OCLC 712769486.