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From:
The Making of a Colonial Elite: Property, Family and Landed Stability in the Cape Colony, c.1750-1834
Wayne Dooling
Journal of Southern African Studies
Vol. 31, No. 1 (Mar., 2005)
page 152
Summarised by Michele Woodroffe
During the recession of the 1820s a number of previously established landowners went bankrupt, many as a result of the Britain withdrawing its protection of the wine industry.
Tobias Mostert declared bankruptcy around 1825, having farmed Klipheuwel farm on the Mosselbanks Rivier since 1785. Ownership of his farm passed to his son, Nicolaas Gerhardus Mostert.
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DEPOT KAB
SOURCE 1/STB
TYPE LEER
VOLUME_NO 18/26
SYSTEM 01
REFERENCE 1
PART 1
DESCRIPTION MOSTERT, TOBIAS. EN HENNOP, PETRONELLA MARIA. TESTAMENT.
STARTING 18160000
ENDING 18160000
______________________________________________________________________________
1764 |
March 1, 1764
|
Malmesbury, West Coast DC, WC, South Africa
|
|
1784 |
1784
|
||
1787 |
1787
|
||
1788 |
1788
|
Cape of Good Hope, South Africa
|
|
1790 |
October 9, 1790
|
Cape of Good Hope, South Africa
|
|
1791 |
1791
|
||
1793 |
1793
|
||
1794 |
1794
|
Cape of Good Hope, South Africa
|
|
1796 |
1796
|
Koeberg, Cape District, Cape of Good Hope, South Africa
|