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RCS contains:
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Y3055A News of the camp
Y3055B Views in the Transvaal
Y3055H Transvaal Annexation Commission
Y3057A Photographs of the German South-West Africa [i.e. Namibia] Campaign, 1915
Y3057C Photographs of Bushmen, Herero and Ovambo
Y3058A Redwood Natal [i.e. Province of KwaZulu-Natal] and Zululand Album. 1879-80
Y3059C Illustration of Diamond Industry from 'Mining the ground' to 'Diamonds classified for shipment'
Y3059L Kimberley Diamond Diggings
Y3059V Views in Port Elizabeth
Y3059Y Photographs of Cape Province and of African types
Y305A Views in South Africa and Mozambique, circa 1875-80
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Redwood Natal [i.e. Province of KwaZulu-Natal] and Zululand Album. 1879-80

Title Redwood Natal [i.e. Province of KwaZulu-Natal] and Zululand Album. 1879-80
Reference GBR/0115/Y3058A
Creator Redwood, Charles Lewis
Covering Dates 1879–1880
Extent and Medium 51 images in 1 album; The album itself is coming apart, and the pages themselves have mostly come unstuck. The photographs are in fair condition.
Repository Cambridge University Library: Royal Commonwealth Society Library
Content and context

The album was compiled by Charles Lewis Redwood, a goldmining and railway engineer and executive, resident in Durban in 1879. For portraits of Redwood see Y3058A/7 and 9.

An album containing albumen prints, measuring approximately 190 x 130 mm, with handwritten captions beneath the plates. It contains views of Durban and Pietermaritzburg as well as Zulu War Scenes (at Fort Pearson, Isandhlwane and Rorke's Drift).

Natal and Zululand in 1879.

The photographs in this album form an important historical record of several aspects of the hostilities of 1879. The rise of Zulu power under a line of kings starting with Shaka and continuing after his death in 1828 through Dingane, Mpande and finally Cetshwayo was enforced through a ruthless and highly trained standing army which in time of war conscripted almost all able bodied males (see Y3058A/25). The expansionist nature of the Zulu system which had already precipitated large tribal migrations, was eventually bound to come into conflict with the growing European presence (the area around Durban had been signed over to the Natal Trading Co. by Shaka in 1824). The arrival of Sir Bartle Frere as Governor of the Cape in 1877 with his instructions to pursue the cause of South African federation, made some sort of confrontation with the Zulu Kingdom inevitable. A major point of dispute was the border between Zululand and the Transvaal and although (to Frere's consternation and dismay) an independent commission found unequivocally for the Zulus, the report was for a time suppressed and its findings later distorted. Great play was then made of the savagery and cruelty of the 'despot' Cetshwayo. At a meeting called on December 11 1878 beside the drift on the Lower Tugela (see Y3058A/30), John Wesley Shepstone read out the results of the Boundary Commission: this, despite Frere's amendments, largely satisfied the Zulus. A further document however struck at the heart of Zulu autonomy and was clearly designed as a pretext for invasion (plans for which were already well advanced). The document, drafted by Frere on his own authority and without informing his superiors, demanded, as well as reparations and fines for what would previously have been considered minor boundary infringements, extensive changes in the whole system of Zulu social and military life and the installing of a British resident to oversee these changes.

This quite explicit attempt to break Zulu power was bound to be repudiated, although Cetshwayo did in fact attempt to meet the fines demanded (600 head of cattle). Frere however would give no extension of his time limit for the animals to be collected and on January 11 1879 the invasion began. The plan was straightforward and sound: three columns would enter Zululand from three points along the border converging on to the King's Kraal at Ulundi and supporting each other as the advance progressed. The reality was different: the main force of the central column was massacred at Isandhlwana on January 22 (see Y3058A/34-44); Pearson's eastern column (see Y3058A/26-30) was besieged at Eshowe, while Woods' western column suffered a defeat at Hlobane (March 28) before inflicting heavy casualties on the Zulu force at Kambula (March 29). Chelmsford's relief column entered the successful action at Gingindlovu (April 2) before relieving Pearson and returning to Natal. Cetshwayo now attempted to sue for peace but his power over his own people was such that he was unable to meet British demands (one of which was the token surrender of a Zulu regiment).

Chelmsford invaded Zululand for the second time in May 1879, his force attacking Ullundi in a large square: the battle (July 4) lasted 30 minutes and represented the final breaking of Zulu military power: the British lost 10 men to well over 1000 Zulus. Cetshwayo, who had foreseen the defeat, had already prudently retired, but was captured by the end of August. With Wolseley's later dismemberment of the Zulu State and Cetshwayo's death in 1884, Zulu power was finally broken.

The album contains photographs by (?William Laws) Caney (4, 8, 10, 16, 19 and 21), James Lloyd (32, 35, 37, 41-44), Benjamin Kisch (14, 36, 12), and J.R. Mee (28): unattributed prints are also probably by one or other of these photographers.

William Laws Caney. Photographs in the album signed 'Caney' are presumed to be the work of this man who was advertising his studio in New Rush in 1872. However, several members of the family were also active commercial photographers and it is difficult to disentangle their relationship. William Laws Caney appears to have operated from the jewellery business trading in Durban under the name B.W. Caney. In 1887 a specifically photographic business was opened by William Harry Caney at 15 Church Street, Pietermaritzburg, but this firm seems to have moved back to Durban the following year. In the 1890s D. Edmund Caney was also active in Johannesburg.

James Lloyd. According to Bensusan (1966, p. 20), Lloyd, together with F. Hodgson, was active as early as 1860 photographing the opening of the Durban railway in June of that year. He is listed in 'The Natal Almanac' as a professional photographer in Smith Street, Durban from 1872-99.

Benjamin Kisch was born in 1842 in Wisbech, Cambridgeshire. By 1863 he had emigrated to Natal, where he first worked as a grocer and general dealer as well as a photographer. By 1870 he had established his own photographic studio in Durban, and between 1872 and 1875, he worked in partnership with his brother Henry. Kisch did extensive coverage of the Zulu War of 1879. He died in Pretoria on 16 Feb. 1889.

J.R. Mee. Active c.1879-91 in Durban, Kimberley and Wynberg.

The album was presented in 1965 with the following dedication: 'Presented to the Royal Commonwealth Society in memory of Charles Lewis Redwood and Olivia Elizabeth Redwood (née Lys), Pioneers of Natal and Johannesburg by their daughters Gwendolyn Mary Redwood and Zoë Olivia Mellor Evans'.

Access and Use

Please cite as Cambridge University Library: Royal Commonwealth Society Library, Redwood Natal [i.e. Province of KwaZulu-Natal] and Zululand Album. 1879-80, Y3058A

Further information

For a more detailed listing of the dates and locations of the photographers see: Bensusan, A.D. (1963), '19th Century Photographers in South Africa', Africana Notes and News, volume 15, no. 6, pp. 219-52.

Further information can also be found in: Bensusan, A.D. (1966), Silver images: history of photography in Africa, Cape Town: H. Timmins.

For a biography of Benjamin Kisch's second cousin Tiberias Kisch see: Bull, Marjorie, and Denfield, Joseph (1970), Secure the shadow: the story of Cape photography from its beginnings to the end of 1870, Cape Town: T. McNally.

Indexed

This collection level description was entered by SG using information from the original typescript catalogue.

This collection is available on microfiche: Africa, fiche number 181-82.

Index Terms
Africa
Kwazulu-Natal, Province of
South Africa
Zululand
Redwood, Charles Lewis (fl 1879)
RCS/Y3058A contains:
1 Durban, Natal (from the Berea). 355 x 124 mm. Two prints joined. A panoramic view looking eastwards over Durban from the Berea, the residential area on a rise to the west of the city. In the foreground are cultivated fields with the town beyond and The Bluff and the Indian Ocean in the background. The enclosed Bay of Natal can be seen at the right. An army camp can be seen at the left to the north of the Umgeni River.
Creator: Unknown.
Poor condition, some fading and chemical spotting..
1879–1880
2 The Bar and Bluff, Port Natal [i.e. Durban]. 315 x 133 mm. Two prints joined. A view from the South Beach looking across the narrow entrance of the Bay of Natal towards the Bluff. With steamers and sailing ships lying outside the harbour bar.
Creator: Unknown.
Poor condition, some fading and chemical spotting..
1879–1880
3 'Eastern Star' ashore on Back Beach, Durban. 196 x 135 mm. Showing the sailing ship 'Eastern Star' beached on Back (South) Beach, with spectators on the sands watching the efforts of a group of labourers to moor the ship securely. In the background are the North Pier, the harbour entrance and the Bluff. The ship was probably wrecked during the same storm which beached the 'Surprise' in 1880.
Creator: Unknown.
Good condition, apart for slight chemical spotting..
1879–1880
4 Outer Anchorage, Port Natal [i.e. Durban]. 200 x 109 mm. A view from the beach looking out into the Indian Ocean, with surf breaking in the foreground and ships moored beyond the harbour bar on the horizon. The print is signed 'Caney'.
Creator: Caney, B, W, fl 1880-1889, photographer.
Poor condition, slight fading and slight chemical spotting..
1879–1880
5 'Surprise' ashore and Back Beach, Durban. 195 x 136 mm. Showing the sailing ship 'Surprise' beached on Back Beach on in 1880, with spectators on the sands in the foreground standing beside salvaged cargo.
Creator: Unknown.
Good condition, apart from slight chemical spotting..
1880
6 The Bay, Port Natal [i.e. Durban]. 206 x 139 mm. A view looking down on ships at anchor at The Point in the Bay of Natal with warehouses and jetties on the shore, sandbanks beyond and part of the town of Durban in the background.
Creator: Unknown.
Good condition..
1879–1880
7 Fairlegh, Berea, July 1879. 190 x 135 mm. A view from the garden showing a family group posed on the verandah of a corrugated iron roofed bungalow in The Berea, Durban's residential district. Seated in the deckchair is Charles Lewis Redwood. The woman seated near him is probably his wife, Olivia Elizabeth Redwood (née Lys). The two other men in the photograph are unidentified.
Creator: Unknown.
Good condition..
July 1879
8 West Street, Durban. 206 x 137 mm. A view looking along West Street, Durban, with spans of oxen and wagons waiting on the unsurfaced street outside the hops and commercial premises which line the way. The print is signed 'Caney'.
Creator: Caney, B, W, fl 1880-1889, photographer.
Fair condition, slight yellowing and chemical spotting..
1879–1880
9 Fairleigh, Berea, July 1879. 197 x 132 mm. Showing a family group with Zulu servants outside the bungalow 'Fairleigh'. At the centre of the group are Charles Redwood and his wife. The young man and the three children (two boys, possibly twins, and a girl) in the group are unidentified.
Creator: Unknown.
Good condition..
1879–1880
10 West Street, Durban. 206 x 134 mm. A view looking along West Street from the junction with another, unidentified, road, with the general stores of W.H. Darby in the foreground and long spans of oxen drawing loaded wagons along West Street. The print is signed 'Caney'.
Creator: Caney, B, W, fl 1880-1889, photographer.
Fair condition, some chemical staining..
1879–1880
11 'Sultan', July 1879. 137 x 104 mm. Showing Mrs. Olivia Redwood seated side-saddle on the horse 'Sultan' in the garden of the bungalow 'Fairleigh'.
Creator: Unknown.
Good condition..
July 1879
12 Embarkation of the Prince Imperial's Body at the Point, Port Natal [i.e. Durban]. 203 x 137 mm. Showing the military escort and crowds of spectators on the waterfront at Durban on 11 June 1879 to watch the embarkation of the body of Prince Napoleon aboard the tug 'Adonis' (only the funnel of which is here visible) for transportation out to H.M.S. 'Boadicea' lying beyond the bar.
Creator: Kisch, Benjamin, 1842-1889, photographer.
Good condition, apart from slight yellowing..
11 June 1879
13 'Chorister' - 14 Nov 1880. 185 x 134 mm. Showing an unidentified woman seated side-saddle on 'Chorister', a black horse standing on a lawn.
Creator: Unknown.
Fair condition, slight overall fading..
14 Nov. 1880
14 Embarkation of the Prince Imperial's body at the Point, Port Natal [i.e. Durban]. 152 x 101 mm. Showing the military escort and crowds of spectators on the waterfront, at Durban on 11 June 1879 to watch the embarkation of the body of Prince Napoleon aboard the tug 'Adonis' for transportation out to H.M.S. 'Boadicea' lying beyond the bar. The photographers signature 'Kisch' is stamped on the reverse, but shows through the print.
Creator: Kisch, Benjamin, 1842-1889, photographer.
Good condition..
11 June 1879
15 Maritzburg [i.e. Pietermaritzburg] from Fort Napior [Napier]. 195 x 128 mm. A view from Fort Napier, situated on a hill south-west of the town, looking down on to the neatly laid out tree shaded streets of Pietermaritzburg. With a field gun pointing out over the town from behind earthwork fortifications in the foreground. The garrison at Fort Napier was the only concentration of forces in the colony in the months before the war, and it was these depleted defences, together with the ease with which a Zulu army might cross the undefended Buffalo River into Natal, which were partially responsible for the decision to invade Zululand. The photograph is probably by Caney.
Creator: Caney, B, W, fl 1880-1889, photographer.
Good condition..
1879–1880
16 Maritzburg [i.e. Pietermaritzburg] , Natal [i.e. KwaZulu-Natal]. 198 x 138 mm. A view looking towards Pietermarizburg from the south-east, with a road leading towards the Umsindusi River in the foreground. The print is signed 'Caney'.
Creator: Caney, B, W, fl 1880-1889, photographer.
Good condition, apart from small tear in one corner..
1879–1880
17 Railway bridge over Umgeni [i.e. Mgeni] River. 203 x 123 mm. Showing a steel girder bridge across the Mgeni River, probably near Pietermaritzburg.
Creator: Unknown.
Good condition..
1879–1880
18 Umgeni Falls, Howick, Natal [i.e. KwaZulu-Natal]. 137 x 198 mm. Showing the 365 foot Howick Falls on the Mgeni River fifteen miles from Pietermaritzburg. The photographer is probably Caney.
Creator: Caney, B, W, fl 1880-1889, photographer.
Fair condition, some yellowing..
1879–1880
19 Karkloof Falls, Natal [i.e. KwaZulu-Natal]. 139 x 199 mm. Showing the 250 foot drop over horizontally stratified rock of the Karkloof Falls twenty five miles form Pietermaritzburg. The print is signed 'Caney'.
Creator: Caney, B, W, fl 1880-1889, photographer.
Fair condition, some yellowing..
1879–1880
20 Kafir Kraal, Natal [i.e. KwaZulu-Natal]. 178 x 116 mm. Showing a Zulu Kraal, with characteristic circular huts arranged around a cattle Kraal. With a cultivated patch in the foreground and a group of Zulu men posed near the cattle pen.
Creator: Unknown.
Good condition, apart from slight chemical staining..
1879–1880
21 Umvoti [i.e. Mvoti] Drift, Natal [i.e. KwaZulu-Natal]. 203 x 113 mm. Showing a large span of oxen drawing a wagon across the drift on the Mvoti River. The Mvoti, which flows into the Indian Ocean south-east of Stanger in southern Zululand, crosses the Pietermaritzburg-Greytown road between Hermansburg Road and Seven Oaks; this is probably the location of this photograph. The print is signed 'Caney'.
Creator: Caney, B, W, fl 1880-1889, photographer.
Good condition, apart from slight overall yellowing..
1879–1880
22 Coast Foliage, Natal [i.e. KwaZulu-Natal]. 198 x 113 mm. Showing a clearing in dense woodland on the KwaZulu-Natal coast. The print is unsigned but is probably by Caney.
Creator: Caney, B, W, fl 1880-1889, photographer.
Good condition..
1879–1880
23 Kafir figure. 185 x 132 mm. Showing a Zulu girl reclining on a rock beside a river, her image reflected in the water beneath.
Creator: Unknown.
Good condition..
1879–1880
24 Pinetown, Natal [i.e. KwaZulu-Natal]. 144 x 135 mm. A view from a neighbouring hill looking down on the small town of Pinetown ten miles north-west of Durban, with a military encampment of bell tents at the right of the print.
Creator: Unknown.
Good condition..
1879–1880
25 Zulu warriors. 132 x 177 mm. Showing two Zulu warriors dressed in war regalia and armed with shields and assegais. The two men, the one on the left wearing the 'isicoco' or circular headring denoting a married man, the younger one wearing feathered plumes, are members of a 'black' or relatively inexperienced regiment: this is denoted by their shields which are black with a white latticework supporting structure. As the regiment increased in war service so the shields became progressively whiter, until finally the honour of an all white shield might be achieved. The figure on the left carries the smaller model of shield introduced by Cetshwayo in the 1850's, which is possibly red rather than black to denote his married status. Zulu warriors were kept in enforced celibacy until about the age of forty, at which time whole regiments were often given permission to marry simultaneously.
Creator: Unknown.
Poor condition, some dirt marking and yellowing..
1879–1880
26 Fort Pearson from Zululand. 202 x 137 mm. A view looking south across the Tugela River from Zululand towards Fort Pearson, situated on the summit of the cliffs on the farther bank. The photographer is probably J. R. Mee.
Creator: Mee, J R, fl 1879-91, photographer.
Good condition..
1879–1880
27 Fort Pearson, Lower Tugela, Natal [i.e. KwaZulu-Natal]. 200 x 136 mm. A view from the KwaZulu-Natal side looking over the Tugela River into Zululand with the small wooden Fort Pearson situated on the headland overlooking the crossing into Zululand. In the foreground are tents of the Naval Brigade. The forces at Fort Pearson forming the right, or eastern prong of the advance into Zululand were under the command of Colonel Charles Pearson and consisted of a battalion of the 99th regiment, the second Battilion third regiment, a troop of mounted Imperial Infantry, a mixed mounted force of rifles, a company of Natal Native Pioneers and two battilions of the seconds Natal Native Contingent. Pearson also had at his disposal 200 men of the Naval Brigade armed with two seven-pounders and a gatling gun. This photograph was probably taken by J. R. Mee.
Creator: Mee, J R, fl 1879-91, photographer.
Good condition..
1879–1880
28 Inyoni Drift, Zululand. 204 x 138 mm. Showing wagons from Pearson's column negotiating the deep gully of the Inyoni during the advance into Zululand. While the river itself was a mere trickle, the depth of the gully only permitted the passage of wagons one at a time, and the backlog waiting to cross can be seen on the hill behind the drift. The Inyoni, twelve miles north of the Tugela, was crossed by Pearson and his advance column on 18 January 1879 and he continued on while the rest of the force negotiated the crossing the following day. The print is signed 'J. R. Mee Photo'.
Creator: Mee, J R, fl 1879-91, photographer.
Good condition..
1879–1880
29 Commissariat Stores, Lower Tugela, Natal [i.e. KwaZulu-Natal]. 203 x 136 mm. Showing tents, boxes and sacks of stores on the bank of the Tugela River below Fort Pearson, with a group of soldiers posed for the photographer in the foreground.
Creator: Unknown.
Good condition..
1879–1880
30 Drift, Lower Tugela (from Natal) [i.e. KwaZulu-Natal]. 195 x 126 mm. Showing the drift across the Tugela with a punt crossing the river and with wagons, stores and soldiers waiting on the bank in the foreground. Pearson's advance into Zululand started on 12 January , the majority of the force had crossed from Natal by the evening of 13 January and from then until the 18th was spent contructing Fort Tenedos, a complement to Fort Pearson, and seen here on the farther bank of the river. Leaving a company of the Naval Brigade and several companies of Natal Kafirs to garrison Fort Pearson, and another Naval Brigade Company and two from the 99th Regiment at Fort Tenedos, Pearson's advance force left the Tugela on 18 January for the next major point on the advance to Ulundi, the Mission Station of Eshowe. The tree seen in the foreground of this photograph is that under which John Wesley Shepstone had read out Sir Barle Frere's ultimatum to the Zulus on 11 December 1878.
Creator: Unknown.
Good condition..
1879
31 Natal [i.e. KwaZulu-Natal] Native Contingent. 200 x 137 mm. Showing members of the Natal Native Contingent on parade under the command of an European officer. Donald R. Morris (1966) identified this company as part of Captain Barton's 4th Battalion (originally 2nd Regiment, 1st Battalion before Chelmsford's reorganisation). As the preparations for the war advanced and the imperial forces received no reinforcements from Sir Michael Hicks Beach, it was realised that, in spite of superior firepower, the Zulus outnumbered European forces around 7-1. The original suggestion of levying 7000 native troops, which had come from Lieutant Colonel Anthony William Durnford and had been turned down on the grounds of the political outcry that would come from arming black Africans, was thus taken up on Sir Bartle Frere's insistence. The results were generally disappointing. Original plans to instill esprit de corps by issuing the men with uniforms fell through and all the men were given was (as seen here) red rags to tie around their foreheads. Only about one in ten were issued with firearms, and those of old and motley patterns (the armed men in this group hold Martini-Henry's, but this photograph was probably taken after chelmsford's reorganisation of the regiments into battalions (Morris, 1966, p. 454). Finally the European officers and NCO's, with the honourable exception of the 1st Regiment of three battalions under the command of Durnford himself (killed at Isandhlwana) were generally the dregs of the community who had not already received a military posting.
Creator: Unknown.
Good condition, apart from slight yellowing..
1879
32 Camp of Naval Brigade of H.M.S. 'Active'. 205 x 133 mm. A view looking over scrubland towards the Tugela River with the tents of the Naval Brigade overlooking the river. Not visible in this print is Fort Pearson, beyond the tents. In the foreground small kraals dot the countryside. The print is stamped 'Lloyd Artist Natal.' [James Lloyd].
Creator: Lloyd, James, fl 1879, photographer.
Fair condition, slight fading..
1879–1880
33 Burial ground, Lower Tugela, Natal [i.e. KwaZulu-Natal]. 206 x 136 mm. Showing the graves of other ranks at Fort Pearson or Fort Tenedos, the wooden crosses shaded by two trees. These men were probably killed by disease rather than in action. Legible inscriptions on the crosses are as follows: Private N. Jones, 'D' Coy, 99 D.E. Regt. (Duke of Edinburgh's Lanarkshire), died 3 March 1879; W.J. Lumar of H.M.S. 'Tenedos', died at Fort Tenedos 31 January 1879; Private W. Painter, 'D' Coy. 99 D.E. Regt. Died 13 March 1879 aged 20; Private C. Baden, 'D' Coy 99 D.E. Regt. Died 2 March 1879 aged 20.
Creator: Unknown.
Fair condition..
1879–1880
34 Defenders of Rorkes Drift, 2/24th Regt. 192 x 135 mm. A group photograph showing fifty members of 'B' company, 2nd/24th Regiment who survived the attack on Rorkes Drift on 22-23 January 1879. Lieutenant Gonville Bromhead (c. 1815-91), who commanded the company during the defence of Rorkes Drift, is seated in the front row at the right with a spaniel at his feet.
Creator: Unknown.
Good condition..
1879–1880
35 Rorke's House, Rorke's Drift. 208 x 131 mm. Showing the storehouse at Rorke's Drift which became the final stronghold after the hospital had been abandoned. Originally built by Jim Rorke, at the time of the campaign the buildings were occupied by a Swedish Missionary Otto Witt and his wife and child (Witt and his family had left, separately shortly before the Zulu attack), the storehouse seen here being his chapel and the hospital his living quarters. This week was taken some weeks after the fight, the solid, loopholed stone rampart not having been built at the time of the battle. With the advance of the central column across the Buffalo into Zululand, the Mission Station was taken over as the column's hospital and commissariat store. After the crushing defeat of Glyns's Column in the camp beneath Isandhlawana, a Zulu impi approached Rorke's Drift from the south-east under Dabulamenzi, commander of the Undi Corps, probably acting against specific instructions from Cetshwayo not to enter the British territory, Dabulamanzi's impi, having had little taste of action after being delegated to cut off fugitives at Isandhlawana rather than to fight the main action, attacked the post on the afternoon of 22 January 1879. The ensuing battle, lasting into the small hours of the following day, was one of the truly heroic actions in nineteenth century military history. Before the exhausted Zulu forces abandoned the attack probably 400 or 500 of their number had been killed. No less than eleven Victoria Crosses were awarded among the 140 defenders (thirty of whom were incapacitated in the hospital). The print is stamped 'Lloyd Artist Natal.' [James Lloyd].
Creator: Lloyd, James, fl 1879, photographer.
Good condition..
1879–1880
36 Rorke's Drift from Zululand. 195 x 134 mm. A view looking across the Buffalo River from Zululand into Natal with the road from Isandhlwana to Helpmakaar crossing the drift at the left of the print.
Creator: Kisch, Benjamin, 1842-1889, photographer.
Good condition..
1879–1880
37 Rorke's House, Rorke's Drift. 209 x 139 mm. A view from the Oskarberg Terraces looking northwest down onto the storehouse at Rorke's Drift with the foundations of the destroyed hospital buildings at the left. It was on the Oskarberg Terraces that the Zulus placed most of their available firepower, pinning down the defenders while their main body attacked the hospital and storehouse. The print is stamped 'Lloyd Artist Natal.' [James Lloyd].
Creator: Lloyd, James, fl 1879, photographer.
Good condition..
1879–1880
38 Spot where Prince Imperial fell. 196 x 135 mm. Showing the temporary wooden cross erected to mark the spot where Prince Louis Napoleon died in June 1879. The inscription reads: 'In Memoriam Louis Napoleon Prince Imperial of France who fell near this spot 1 June 1879. Erected by the Royal Scots Fusiliers.'.
Creator: Unknown.
Good condition, apart from slight fading..
1879–1880
39 Melvill's and Coghill's Grave. 203 x 136 mm. Showing the stone cross erected among cluster of rocks with three Zulus and a horse standing near the grave. The inscription reads: 'In memory of Lt. And Adjt. Teignmouth Melvill and Lt. Nevill J.A. Coghill 1 Batt 24th Regiment who died on this spot 22nd Jany 1879 to save the Queen's color of their Regiment.' Melvill had retained the colours during the battle of Isandhlwana and had managed to reach the Buffalo River with them, but here he lost his horse and was dragged on to a rock in midstream by Lieutenant Higginson of the 2nd/3rd Natal Native Contingent. Coghill had already reached the safety of the Natal shore but, seeing Melvill and Higginson helpless in the river and attracting Zulu fire, turned back to help them. Almost immediately his horse was shot from under him, but the three men managed to reach the riverbank, the colours being swept away. Higginson at this point left the two exhausted and wounded men who were shortly afterwards attacked by a party of Zulus and killed. Their bodies were found on 4th February 1879 and the Regimental colours discovered in the river below. At that time the Victoria Cross was not awarded posthumously but it was announced in a supplement to The London Gazette of 1st May 1879 that both men would have been recommended for the decoration had they survived. (Their families finally received the decoration in 1907 when the regulations were changed).
Creator: Unknown.
Good condition..
1879–1880
40 [Memorial to the Prince Imperial]. 137 x 205 mm. Showing the stone cross erected in 1880 by the Empress Eugenie on Queen Victoria's behalf at Ityotyosi. The inscription reads 'This cross is erected by Queen Victoria in affectionate remembrance of Napoleon Eugene Louis Jean Joseph Prince Imperial, to mark the spot where, while assisting in a reconnaissance with the British troops, on the 1st June 1879, he was attacked by a party of Zulus, and fell with his face to the foe.' The Prince Imperial, son of Napoleon III and the Empress Eugenie, took refuge in England with his parents after the Franco-Prussian War of 1870. Entering the army in 1872, the Prince Imperial managed, after some political opposition, to join the army in South Africa in an unofficial 'spectator' capacity. On June 1 he was sent out (or rather requested permission to go out) to continue making sketches of the ground covered by Harrison's column during the second invasion of Zululand. The land being considered free of Zulus, a small escort under Lieutenant J.B. Carey was sent with him. It appears that Carey acceded to the Prince Imperial's request to rest in a badly chosen spot - a deserted kraal on the banks of the Ityotsi surrounded by mealies (maize or Indian corn) and it was here that the group were attacked by a party of Zulus. The Prince Imperial and two other men were killed in the panic that ensued. The impact of the death was enormous and Carey was later found guilty of misbehaviour in the face of the enemy, although this sentence was later quashed. The last lines of the inscription on the grave are a bitter reference to Carey's supposed cowardice.
Creator: Unknown.
Fair condition, slight yellowing..
1879–1880
41 Melvill's and Coghill's grave. 207 x 138 mm. A view from the hillside looking down on the grave, with the Buffalo River visible in the valley. The print is stamped 'Lloyd Artist Natal.' [James Lloyd].
Creator: Lloyd, James, fl 1879, photographer.
Good condition, apart from slight yellowing..
1879–1880
42 Isandhlwana (from Fugitives Path). 208 x 142 mm. A view looking across the battlefield at Isandhlwana towards the rock itself. In the foreground is the south eastern section of the battlefield, littered with the skeletons of men and open and abandoned wagons on the site of Brevet Colonel Anthony William Durnford's last stand. The road leading across the picture leads off to the right towards Ulundi and to the left towards Rorke's Drift. Known as Fugitives Path, it was the route taken by the few NCO's and men of the Natal Native Contingent who managed to escape the slaughter. On the slopes of Isandhlwana itself, men under Colonel Drury-Lowe are searching the battlefield in order to bury the English dead. This took place on 21 May 1879. Colonel Richard Glyn's column had arrived at Isandhlwana on January 20 and while camp was set up, scouts and patrols were sent out to locate the main Zulu force. This was eventually spotted to the north east on January 22, a force consisting of a dozen regiments or about 20,000 men, and having been seen were committed to an immediate attack. Swarming down from the Nqutha Plateau in the traditional Zulu formation of a main body flanked by encircling 'horns', the impi pinned the British force against the slopes of Isandhlwana. The British defence was initially successful in holding the advance but its lines were spread too thinly and ammunition supplies began to fail. From this point the battle became a slaughter, with Zulus pouring into the broken lines of the British and Dabulamanzi's Undi Corps sweeping round to the south-west to harry any fugitives. By evening all the defenders in the camp were dead. 600 men and officers of the 24th Regiment had died and the final toll of British and Zulu losses was well over 3000. The print is signed 'Lloyd Photo' and stamped 'Lloyd Artist Natal.' [James Lloyd].
Creator: Lloyd, James, fl 1879, photographer.
Good condition, apart from slight yellowing..
21 May 1879
43 Isandhlwana. 206 x 142 mm. A view looking across the battlefield with the abandoned wagons in the wagon park in the foreground and cavalry searching through the tent areas beyond (May 21). The photograph is signed 'Lloyd Photo' and stamped 'Lloyd Artist Natal'. [James Lloyd].
Creator: Lloyd, James, fl 1879, photographer.
Good condition, apart from slight fading..
21 May 1879
44 Isandhlwana (The Camp). 204 x 139 mm. Showing a soldier with a shovel (probably on burial duty on May 21) standing beside abandoned wagons in the camp at Isandhlwana. The print is stamped 'Lloyd Artist Natal.' [James Lloyd].
Creator: Lloyd, James, fl 1879, photographer.
Good condition, apart from slight yellowing..
21 May 1879
45 Gardens and Court House, Durban. 195 x 135 mm. A view looking across Smith Street towards the gardens and the Durban Court House (completed in 1866).
Creator: Unknown.
Good condition..
1879–1880
46 Botanical Gardens, Durban. 193 x 134 mm. A view looking along a tree shaded path in the botanical Gardens, situated in the north-western section of the town.
Creator: Unknown.
Good condition..
1879–1880
47 Saturday morning sales, Durban. 198 x 133 mm. Showing traders and customers gathered around goods laid out in the market square outside 'The Mart.'.
Creator: Unknown.
Fair condition, slight fading..
1879–1880
48 Saturday morning sales, Durban. 193 x 131 mm. A view looking down on traders and customers outside the verandahed building of 'The Mart'.
Creator: Unknown.
Fair condition, some overall fading..
1879–1880
49 Umgeni village. 195 x 134 mm. A view from rising ground looking across the Mgeni River towards the village. With a road crossing a bridge at the left and another road and bridge under construction at the right.
Creator: Unknown.
Good condition..
1879–1880
50 Mouth of St. John's River, Kaffraria. 195 x 134 mm. A view looking along the St. John's (Umzimiribu) (?Umzimbuvu) River showing a steamer sailing in mid channel with high cliffs on either bank.
Creator: Unknown.
Fair condition, slight fading and spotting..
1879–1880
51 Mouth of St. John's River, Kaffraria. 195 x 135 mm. A view looking along the Unzimiribu (?Umzimbuvu) River towards the point where it reaches the sea at Port St. John's.
Creator: Unknown.
Fair condition, slight fading..
1879–1880

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