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You are browsing the archive for 2010 July.

Schoonraad, Johan Frederick

July 31, 2010

Schoonraad, Johan Frederick MOOC 6/9/97 ref: 9232

My voormoeder Krotoa – susterskind van Harry die Strandloper

July 29, 2010

Dalene Matthee se Pieternella van die Kaap was ‘n dogter van Krotoa (dalk beter bekend onder haar Hollandse naam Eva),die Khoi-meisie wat in Jan van Riebeeck se huis gewoon het en as tolk tussen die koloniste en die Khoi opgtree het. Sy was getroud met die Deen Pieter Van Meerhoff, destyds chirurgyn en ontdekkingsreisiger aan die Kaap. Sy sterf op 29 Julie 1674 op Robbeneiland. Dus vandag 336 jaar gelede. Haar ma was ‘n suster van Harry die Strandloper. Krotoa is een van my voormoeders. Baie ander Afrikaners – o.a. ook Genl. Jan Smuts – tel onder haar nasate.

My verbintenis met Krotoa is as volg:

Daniel Zaaiman van Vlissingen. Hy het ‘n kontrak gehad met die Kommandeur van Mauritius om daar patats te plant en gaan later na die Kaap. Aankoms 26.1.1709 en sterf 1714. Hy was getroud met Petronella van Meerhof (Pieternella van die Kaap).

Pieter Zaayman gebore op Mauritius en getroud op 10.1.1712 met Anna Koopman waarskynlik die dogter van Bartholomeus Koopman

Bartholomeus Zaayman gedoop omstreeks 1717, burger Stellenbosch, getroud op 20.10.1741 met Anna van Biljon

Rachel Francina Zaayman, gedoop 29.1.1758, getroud 3.7.1774 met Frans
Siebrits van Oostkeller. Haar tweede huwelik was met Jacobus Hugo en haar derde huwelik met Willem Brevis.

Bernhardus Lambertus Siebrits gedoop op 28.12.1798 en getroud op
6.11.1813in die Paarl met Helena Debora du Toit. Hy sterf op
3.11.1856. Helena is gedoop op 20.7.1794.

Francois Krige Siebrits gedoop op 4.8.1816 in die Paarl en trou in die Paarlop 26.11.1844 met Hester Petronella Meyer wat op 20.9.1820 in die Paarl gedoop is. (Van hulle het ek ‘n foto)

Stephanus Gabriel Siebrits gebore op 19.4.1860 en oorlede in Franschhoek op 2.6.1944 en is getroud te Franschhoek op 12.12.1893 met Margaretha Judith du Toit wat op 14.10.1873 gebore is en op 16.9.1958 in Franschhoek sterf.

Hester Petronella Siebrits gebore op 20.8.1905 en sterf op 29.3.1977 en was getroud met Daniel Johannes Malan Jacobs wat gebore is op 17.11.1897 en sterf op 7.11.1945

Hierdie Hester Petronella is my ouma aan vaderskant.

Medical Practitioners 1870 – 1915

July 28, 2010

Were your ancestors in the medical profession? Start searching our new database of our over 1,700 over registered doctors, dentists, druggists, chemists, midwives & nurses. Find there names, date of registration as well as maiden names for women. Other data includes last known address and qualification.

Find records of famous people such as Karl Bremer and Sir Kendal Franks.

Your might also be interested in reading our article on Nurses on Robben Island as well.

1st World War Military Pensions

July 28, 2010

Looking for your great grandfather’s pension number? Was he wounded in action? Search our latest acquisition of over 3, 600 military men + women’s pension cases and numbers. These were pension disabilities assessed by the Imperial Pensions Board

You might also be interested in the Cape Corps 1st Battalion 1915 – 1919 with over 6,000 records and the World War Honour records of over 31,000 soldiers.

Slabbert, Maria Adriana P

July 27, 2010

Wittstock

July 26, 2010

Clark, William

July 26, 2010

Clark

July 26, 2010

Wolseley

July 24, 2010

Birth Records

July 19, 2010

Birth Certificates, where do I find them?

Search for birth records in our databases

Search our baptisms records to find dates of birth

Contribute your birth certificate to Ancestry24 to get your records online faster for future generations.

Birth announcements are also published in the press and Ancestry24 aggregates many of these records. Below  is a list of handy databases that also provide dates of birth and parents names too.

Browse our birth records, Cullinan Mines Birth Records and Announcement records

Department of Home Affairs

  • Department of Home Affairs which is the official holding office for Births records. Applications should be lodged at your nearest Home Affairs office if applying from within South Africa. If living abroad, you should contact the nearest South African Embassy, Consulate or High Commission. Always request a full, unabridged vault copy. There is no public access at all to the birth registers or indexes held at the Department of Home Affairs.
  • For these certificates you will need to apply+ to the Department of Home Affairs, the official holding office for South African births, marriages and deaths. Applications should be lodged at your nearest Home Affairs office if applying from within South Africa. If living abroad, you should contact the nearest South African Embassy, Consulate or High Commission. Always request a full, unabridged vault copy. There is no public access at all to the birth, marriages and death registers or indexes held at the Department of Home Affairs. There is the index to the Home Affairs Western Cape registers.

When did Civil Registration begin for birth records in South Africa?

Birth certificates were introduced officially in the late 1800?s and was not compulsory until 1905: Cape: 1895 Natal: 1868 Transvaal: 1901 Orange Free State: 1903 Not everybody registered their child in the first month of birth. Some did it years later when they had more than one child to register. Additionally, not all our ancestors were law-abiding citizens and did not always conform. So do not expect to find a registration of birth for every person. For information dating back earlier, you have to consult baptism records, death notices or burial records. Birth dates were not included into baptism registers until around 1800 and in most instances it will say “date of birth unknown”. While the Department of Home Affairs in Pretoria is the official custodian of birth records, the general public may view these in the various provincial archival repositories. Access to the birth registers is closed for a period of 100 years to protect individuals.

  • Below is a table for commencing dates for the registration of births in the various old provinces:
    PROVINCE BIRTHS
    Cape 1895
    Natal 1868
    Transvaal 1901
    Orange Free State 1903

    When contacting the Department of Home Affairs:

    • Expect delays as they are very understaffed. Average waiting time is three months.
    • Take down the details of any official you deal with.
    • Supply an ID number for the person whose certificate you wish to obtain to speed up the process.
    • There is a charge of R45.00 per item.

    However very old birth certificates may be obtained through the National Archives.

    National Archives

    The National Archives is the custodian for birth certificates on behalf of the Department of Home Affairs up to the early 1970′s. Note that a CLOSED period of 100 years exists to all birth records to protect individuals.

    These indexes and registers are heavy and cumbersome. You will first need to know exactly which magisterial district the event took place before you can request the index. These indexes are not made available electronically, but the Western Cape indexes can be searched on Ancestry24. The Home Affairs Western Cape Index (HAWC) is housed in the Cape Town Archives as are the Home Affairs Eastern (HAEC) and Home Affairs Northern Cape (HANC).

    How to search at the Archives for Birth Certificates

    As an example, if someone was born in Cape Town you will need to check places like Cape Town Central, Wynberg, Docks, Green Point, See Point, Woodstock, Observatory etc – all separate registers. To find the birth certificate of an individual you will need to first consult the index to the birth in the area in which it was registered, e.g. Worcester. The earliest reference number begins with 1/3/57/4/1 – which covers 1895 to June 1905.

    Once you have got the register 1/3/57/4/1 you will need to look for the dates between 1895 – 1905 for that birth registration. There are two volumes of birth registers that apply for this period being 1/3/57/3/1 to 1/3/57/3/2. The first volume covers January 1895 to June 1899 and the second one June 1899 until January 1905.

    The size of the initial index will depend on how many volumes of registers there are for each area. Worcester has 62 Birth registers equaling about 4 years per book until 1933 and then one book per year thereafter.

    Some of these books are very large and the pages are difficult to photograph because of the size. They are on the top floor of the archives. First make sure you get your volume numbers correct before you attempt to order any of these books. Once ordered, be prepared for a very long wait.

    • Expect delays as they are very understaffed. Average waiting time is three months.
    • Take down the details of any official you deal with.
    • Supply an ID number for the person whose certificate you wish to obtain to speed up the process.
    • There is a charge of R45.00 per item.