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Plettenberg Bay
 

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Plettenberg Bay





HISTORY


Mesolithic

Caves in Nelson's Bay Cave and Matjes River Cave indicate were inhabited for over 100000 years by Mesolithic (Middle Stone Age) man and then later by ancestors of the Khoisan , were possibly the same people who traded with the Portuguese Survivors of the San Gonzales wreck. Their tools, ornaments and food debris can be viewed in these caves which are still being excavated.


Modern

Long before Jan Van Riebeeck landed at the Cape, in the 15th and 16th centuries Portuguese explorers of charted that bay, the first being Bartholomew Dias in 1487. Ninety years later Manuel da Perestrello aptly called it "Bahia Formosa" or the Bay Beautiful. The first European inhabitants were the 100 men stranded here for 9 months when the San Gonzales sank in 1630. In 1763 the first European settlers in the Bay were stock farmers, hunters and frontiersmen from the Western Cape .

A Stinkwood navigational beacon was first erected on Beacon Island in 1771. The original was a square block of stinkwood, inscribed with the latitude and longitude of Plettenberg Bay and erected to enable mariners to set their Chronometers by it. It was replaced by a stone one by Captain Sewell in 1881.

A barracks for the Dutch East India Company in 1776. In 1869 it was bought by St Peters Church and used as a rectory for the next 70 years. Today it is presently privately owned.

In 1787/88 by Johann Jerling and the Dutch East India Company , erected a Timber Shed, The remains can still be seen and are preserved as a National Monument.


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