Got the history from the caves website.
http://www.cango-caves.co.za/
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Common myth has it that the Caves were first explored by a local farmer named Jacobus van Zyl (after who the first chamber, vanZyl's Hall, was named) – although research fails to reveal anybody by that name in the Cango area in the 1770's. And besides – we now know that the Caves have been known to man since the Early Stone Age.
Still, even if there never was a Jacobus van Zyl, the Cango Caves have been at the forefront of tourism in South Africa since the end of the 18th century: the first to be protected by environmental legislationand the first to employ a full-time tourist guide, they remain South Africa's oldest tourist attraction.
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Important Dates |
1756: The government awarded the first land grant in the area to Phillip du Pre, whose farm was called Cango-Matjiesrivier.
1760: Hermanus Steyn of Swellendam named another farm grant Combuys aan de Cango (kitchen of the Cango). The entrance to the caves is located on this farm.
1780: Cango Caves is discovered.
1806: The first visit to Cango Caves was recorded.
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Early explorations & surveys |
1816: P.H. Poleman
1816: A plan elevation was made by Rev. George Thom showing the extent of the cave to be 350meters, from the entrance to the African Drum Room.
1822: George Thompson
1880's: Johnny van Wassenaar (established route to Devil's Workshop)
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Some notable visitors |
1816: George Thom (scientist)
1822: George Thompson (Cape Town businessman/graffito)
1831 Sir Lowry Cole (graffito)
1840: Lt. W.H. Sherwill (Indian army officer/graffito)
1855 J.F. Victorin (Swedish naturalist)
Bishop Robert Gray
1860: Sir George Grey (Governor)
1873: Sir Henry Barkly (Governor/graffito)
1890: Lt.Gen. H.A. Smythe (Acting Administrator of the Cape Colony)
1896: Dr. F. Purcell (S.A. Museum)
1898: Sir Alfred Milner
1925: The Prince of Wales visits Cango Caves.
1925/9/30: Prof. A.J.H. Goodwin (UCT archaeologist)
1927: Dorothea Fairbridge
1929: L'Abbe H. Breuil (French palaeontologist) C.J. Langenhoven (author/politician/lawyer/graffito)
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In the 19th century, entrance to the Caves cost 5 rix dollars – the modern equivalent of about R500.00 – but that even didn’t deter them and many carted away parts of the delicate stalactites and stalagmites for souvenirs or engraved their names onto the walls. In response, the governor of the Cape Colony, Lord Charles Somerset, published the first Caves Regulation in 1820. The 1st law designed to protect an environmental resource in South Africa; it banned the collection of souvenirs, proved for fines for anyone caught damaging Caves formations and prescribed an entrance fee which had to be paid to the District Officer – who was made responsible for enforcing the rules.
Many of the most significant discoveries in the Caves were made by its first full-time guide, Johnnie van Wassenaar. – who served for 43 years: from 1891 until his retirement in 1934. He opened many side chambers and introduced thousands of people to Cango 1, which remains the only part of the Caves which the public may visit. Importantly, though, it is clear that the Caves were known to man long before Europeans first landed at the Cape: recent finds – of some tool left behind in ancient hearths in the Cave mouth – prove that humans have lived and sheltered here for at least 80 000 years.
The Cango Caves reveal their secrets painfully slowly. Where once we thought that they’d been inhabited for a thousand centuries, recent archaeological finds have now proved that they’ve sheltered us for more than 80 000 years.
Where once we thought that they were only about one kilometre in length, we now know that they extend for well over 5 kilometres – and that they could be even bigger still.
But the Caves’ history and their size are just two of their many mysteries. The skeletons of three genets (small cats) have been found in Cango 2: is there another secret entrance to the Caves? Or were these unfortunates drowned and left behind by receding floodwaters? And how did the skeletons of bats – which have also been found in Cango 2 – become enclosed in calcite many hundreds of even thousands of years ago?
There is an ancient engraving in the Caves: it’s the only piece of cave art in South Africa in a completely dark area. How did the artist prove himself with a light source to work? The engraving shows and elephant superimposed on an eland – and yet, amazingly, you see only the elephant when you view the work from one side – and only the eland when you view it from the other.
Why have so many Caves guides committed suicide?And is there a ghost in the Sand bypass (a tunnel which branches off from the Drum Chamber)? One of the guides drank poison in the bypass – and nobody has ever been able to solve the puzzle of why the lights in the Sand Bypass fuse so often…
And then there’s the mystery of Johnnie van Wassenaar’s 16-mile tunnel. This level-headed man once spent 29 hours underground – and, according to him, spent much of that time walking upright. Was the entrance to Johnnie’s lost chamber bricked up at some stage – perhaps during the construction of the stairway into the Van Zyl’s Hall?
R500 is 50 American dollars. That was quite a bit of money back then.
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