
Nahoon
(East London suburb)
East London in about 1857
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The East London suburb of Nahoon was named after the nearby
Nahoon River. The area first came under settler development
in 1857, with the arrival at East London of the Anglo-German
Legion. The legionnaires were given plots of land at Panmure and
Cambridge, as well as acre lots at North End and
Southernwood. Their main agricultural land (10 acres
allotted to each soldier) stretched along the ridge on the
south-western side of the Nahoon River, the area that today
forms the suburbs of Nahoon, Stirling, Berea and Vincent.
Indeed, the western boundary of these 10 acre lots is today
known as Western Avenue.
When East London became a municipality in 1873, it was
decided to incorporate only the original villages of East London
(today the West Bank) and Panmure (today the city centre).
North End, Southernwood and Cambridge were omitted, as
were the 10 acre agricultural lots. In 1876 North End and
Southernwood were incorporated so as to give the municipality
more logical boundaries. Cambridge and the 10 acre lots,
however, were still omitted.
In 1881 the residents of Cambridge decided to form a Village
Management Board of their own, with Amelius Vincent as its first
Chairman. The 10 acre lots, now evolving into residential areas
in their own right, became part of this new dispensation. When
East London was declared a city in 1914, attempts were made
to bring the Cambridge Municipality, with its suburbs, under
one banner but the offer was refused.
It would only be in 1942
that the Cambridge Municipality at last joined the greater
metropolitan area, and so Nahoon was finally a part of the East
London Municipality.
Dr Keith Tankard