Banner
YOU ARE HERE: Home A Village Green

History of Stanford

E-mail Print PDF

  

 

final crop 

Born in 1805, Captain Robert Stanford, who had served with distinction in Burma, married a general’s daughter and bought the farm Kleine Riviers Valley in the Overberg District in South Africa, and proceeded to turn it into a hugely successful enterprise.

After the failed Irish rebellion following the 1845 famine in Ireland, a number of the captured rebels were banished to the British Cape Colony.

 

The colonists did not wish the Cape to be turned into a penal colony and were up in arms. This, despite the fact that the Irish were hardly criminals, but just ordinary men. The colonists put an embargo on the delivery of any supplies to the ship containing the rebels.

The poor Irish, who were kept at sea for five months, might have perished had it not been for a few who broke they embargo out of loyalty to the crown. One of them was Captain Stanford who was called in the early hours one night by the authorities, begging him for supplies. He felt himself duty-bound to comply.

 

Captain Stanford’s actions were regarded as treason by the Colonists and he was ostracized. He and others were relentlessly persecuted; banks refused to do business with him, his servants left his farm, and his family was ‘pelted in the street with eggs … his children were expelled from school. The list of persecutions goes on. When one of his children fell seriously ill, the doctor refused to come, resulting in the death of the child.


When Captain Stanford went to England to plead his case, he was knighted and received 5 000 pounds. But upon his return he discovered he had been completely swindled by the persons he'd left in charge of his farms, And that was not all.

He also discovered that his agent had bought, on his behalf, a herd of cattle suffering from lung disease, and this caused him to have a stroke. What’s more, his beloved Kleine Riviers Valley in Stanford was sold under suspicious circumstances and for a pittance, effectively reducing the family to genteel poverty. Sir Stanford, broken by life, by deceit and by now a disillusioned man, died in Manchester at the age of 70.

 

 

Last Updated ( Monday, 06 September 2010 05:48 )