September 14, 2004
By Lucille Davie
PEACH and cherry orchards, fields of maize, chicken farms, a large dairy . . . Sound way out in the country? It wasn't, this nature lover's paradise existed in Linden in the 1920s, and you can read all about it in Tim Truluck's 'Historical Map of Linden'.
This is Truluck's second fold-out brochure - the first was on Parkhurst - and meticulous research has obviously gone into this history, tracing Linden's history from its earliest beginnings in 1899.
Truluck plans to research the history of all Joburg's suburbs, eventually producing a book.
The suburb was named after Johannes Jacobus Rabie van der Linde, a farmer from Philippolis in the Free State. He co-owned the south western corner of the farm Klipfontein with Louw Geldenhuys, who farmed fruit and vegetables on the neighbouring farm of Braamfontein.
They both bought their portions of the farm in 1896 but in 1898, on the death of Van der Linde's second wife, he had to find £2 195 for inheritance dues, and so, together with Geldenhuys, they divided up the farm with a view to selling off the portions as lots, a procedure that had already made Geldenhuys a wealthy man with the sale of sections of Braamfontein.
The lots did not sell as quickly as Van der Linde had hoped, being so far out of town - some 8km - with access limited to three dirt tracks from town. Then the Anglo Boer War broke out, and everything was put on hold.
After the war the effort was revived and an auction was held, but not much was sold, and Van der Linde had to take out a mortgage on his portion of Klipfontein to cover the inheritance costs, and put 84 more stands up for sale.
After several setbacks - land was rented to tenants who then couldn't pay and the British government declared Van der Linde's portion outside Johannesburg's boundaries - by the 1920s the land had finally been sold and consolidated into small holdings.
The soil turned out to be very fertile - the acidic clay was perfect for growing peaches - and soon flourished with orchards. Once farmhouses were built, roads to Linden were laid out, and in 1932, £3 600 was put aside to tar Rustenburg Road, the thoroughfare on the eastern border to the "fruit producing area in the vicinity of Linden".
By 1934 between 300 and 400 families were living in Linden, and "most appear to be engaged in fruit farming". Water was not a problem - private wells or boreholes supplied good quality, plentiful water. One large dairy, Gieskins, believed to have been "the biggest private retail dairy in South Africa" at the time, supplied residents with fresh milk twice a day from its milking, cooling and bottling operation.

An early corner of Linden
Truluck describes how the farms gradually disappeared and how in the 1950s the Afrikaner elite moved in, resulting in the suburb being referred to as the "Boere Houghton", and by the late 1950s Linden was a "fully developed urban suburb". Nowadays there's a mix of English and Afrikaans speakers in the suburb, with Albertina Sisulu listed as the suburb's most famous resident.
Some of the remaining fruit trees can be seen in the garden of the Paputzi's restaurant in 4th Avenue.
The brochure details lots of interesting titbits about the suburb: the growth of churches, the Linden Hotel, the DJ Swanepoel Butchery (Swanepoel escorted Winston Churchill to jail in Pretoria during the Anglo Boer War), Yugo Stores, still operating today as a general dealer, what to do in Linden, and a list of trees grown in each street, planted by City Parks in the 1950s.
A charming guide through early suburban Johannesburg, the brochure sells for R15, and is available at various shops in Linden, at Exclusive Books in Hyde Park and Estoril Books in Cresta. Contact Tim Truluck on ttruluck@lantic.net or 011 442 5201 for your copy.
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