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A Nikon F in District Six, 1966


grahams

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These photographs were taken on a hot December day in 1966, in Cape

Town's District Six. The camera was a Nikon F plain prism, fitted

with a Nippon Kogaku 50mm f2.0 Nikkor-H lens with a Nikkor Y2 filter

and Nikkor clip-on lens hood. The film was Agfa-Gevaert 513 (80

ASA) motion picture stock rated at (if I recall correctly) 320 ASA

for development in Acufine. The scans were done on a Minolta Scan-

Elite 5400 at 3500 dpi and resized down to 940 pixels wide for

posting here.

District Six, for those who are not familiar with South African

history, was named the Sixth Municipal District of Cape Town in

1867. Located to the south-west of central Cape Town which evolved

around it, the area became, by modern standards, a slum which

occupied prime land. Originally established as a mixed community of

freed slaves, merchants, artisans, labourers and immigrants,

District Six was a vibrant centre with close links to the city and

the port. By the beginning of the twentieth century, however, the

history of removals and marginalisation had begun.

The first to be 'resettled' were black african South Africans,

forcibly displaced from the District in 1901. The remaining

inhabitants were people of mixed decent, or "Cape Coloureds" as they

were known, with some of Malay decent and a sprinkling of Indian

families as well. As the more prosperous moved away to the suburbs,

the area became the neglected ward of Cape Town. Crime was the main

industry, and it was said that one could get anything in District

Six. Prostitution, drugs, dealers in stolen goods, car theft

syndicates, they all churned around in a melting pot of criminal

culture brought on by the poverty of the people who lived there.

In 1966, it was declared a "white area" under the Group Areas Act of

1950, which was the only means the government could find that would

allow the demolition of the area as "slum clearance". The

bulldozers moved in and the area was all but flattened by 1970, and

re-named "Zonnebloem". 60 000 people were forcibly removed to

barren outlying areas aptly known as the Cape Flats. The families

that were moved away are now having their land restored to them,

with modern housing having been built to replace the demolished

homes.

The thing that I remember most about District Six was the laughter

of children as they played in the streets and alleys. The people

were ever friendly and hospitable, and despite their poverty, they

were proud. I loved to walk around indulging in my passion for

street photography, and found many willing subjects. The old

Methodist church which was abandoned when I took these photographs,

is now the District Six museum and cultural centre. Harrington

street was the original Jewish quarter of Cape Town, and the

photograph with the Palm tree in the back-ground was taken on Vernon

Terrace, where there were many palm trees planted from seeds brought

back from Mecca by pilgrims.

All now gone, but not forgotten.

 

<a href="http://www.photo.net/photodb/folder?folder_id=545593"

target="_blank">Click here to view the P-Net folder</a>

 

Here are some of the pics at 500 dpi for those on dial-up.<div>00EFeD-26581784.jpg.cc86d4fbc069a1f5686a474e0dfc8b5c.jpg</div>

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Graham, they are absolutely stunning. Sometimes I see the texture of

"the mountain" as a backdrop. My wife was born in Tuine 3 years later, then attended the Zonnebloem campus of the Cape Technikon (I think that might be in a different area, but same mountain!)

 

The rendering of the concrete is superb. What a kick-in-the-stomach set of nostalgic photos. I am blown away.

 

Mark in Toronto

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Thank you all for the kind words - posting my work is all the more rewarding when the audience is so appreciative.

 

 

Michael - No, I wish that I did still have the camera. Especially as it was one of the originals with the Nippon Kogaku logo serial No. 63XXXX. I foolishly allowed the lab where I worked to keep it on the neg copy stand in exchange for an FE2.

 

 

Andrew - The fact that I still have the negs after nearly 40 years and can use them makes me very aprehensive about the longevity of the digital files that are filling more and more CD ROMs in my cupboard.

 

 

Little bits and pieces of memory return the more I look at the shots. I used Acufine almost exclusively in those days. I also always used a Y2 filter, so the increase in film speed helped to compensate for the filter factor. Exposure was by incident reading now & then with a Norwood Director, adjusted according to my own judgement.

 

 

The one shot through the church window shows the sign for a "Leer & Skoen Handelaar" which means "Leather & Shoe merchant". The friend that was with me when I shot these went to collect a pair of shoes there that he had had them custom make for him. They did wonderful work.

 

 

The washer woman was one of many who worked in the wash-house. She did my friends weekly washing and ironing for 2/6 a basket. That's about ten pence in today's money. The wash house was a big roofed area with rows & rows of concrete wash troughs each with a cold water tap, provided and maintained by the city council (or municipality, as it was called). The washer-women did washing in these troughs for most of the batchelors and many of the guest houses in Cape Town, in cold water summer or winter, and hung it out to dry on long lines (visible in the background of the shot) and then ironed it on wooden tables using real cast-iron irons heated on a brazier. You never saw such white whites! Some of them worked there from the time that they were little girls, helping their mother, to old age. "Ownership" of a wash trough was passed down through the family from generation to generation.

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Nice work, Graham. District 7 is my favourite of these. Reminds me a bit of my wanderings in the saxon region in transylvania where, although not strictly forced by anyone, lots of people abandoned their houses/villages and emigrated to germany. Twenty-something years are apparently enough for houses, churches, schools to start falling apart.
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Csab' - It's all the more tragic when the houses are allowed to fall down with the people still living in them, as was the case here.

 

Ron - At our age, we tend to look back through rose tinted lenses. In fact we tend not to remember the bad, except in people, where "the evil men do lives on, the good is oft' interred with the bones" holds true. Still, travelling back in time through our photographs can be most rewarding.

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Mark said "My wife was born in Tuine 3 years later, then attended the Zonnebloem campus of the Cape Technikon (I think that might be in a different area, but same mountain!)"

 

Same area, same mountain - The Cape Technikon is built on ground that was once part of District Six - the original plan was to build housing, but because it was zoned for whites only, no developer would answer any tender as the labour would have to be from the coloured workforce, whose homes had been taken from them and therefore would not work on any such development. Eventually the site was re-zoned for "civic use" and the Cape Technikon built as an educational facility, using African workers imported from the Transkei coast.

 

"Tuine" means "Gardens" and my eldest daughter was also born in the Gardens nursing home in 1969 - she and your wife are very special people!

 

Thanks for the comps - hope you are happy in your new home - lets see some pics.

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