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Prince Alfred
Johannes Cornelis Goosen was born in Klein Drakenstein and came to the Warm
Bokkeveld as a young farmer. In March 1851 Goosen bought the farm Wagenbooms
Rivier from George Sebastiaan Wolfaardt at the “fantastic” price of £6 000. Ten
years later he measured out first 80 and then another 10 plots and sold them for
£6 000 each. These plots had water
rights and each owner also received one morgen of land to cultivate in the
Bakoven River to grow feed for their animals.

J C Goosen
While Goosen was busy measuring out his plots, the Duke of Edinburgh, Prince
Alfred, visited the Cape Colony. Goosen decided to name the new town after the
Prince and so the name Prince Alfred’s Hamlet was born.
In 1861 the first school was established with 42 pupils under the tutorship of
Master Strobos. The building, a temporary construction, was known as the “House
on Sticks”. In 1871 the “House on Sticks” was demolished when a permanent
building became available. It was also used as the church.
A new schoolmaster, D.G. Roux, was appointed and he was to become a spiritual
leader in the community. After much negotiation, the school committee managed to
get a new building in 1910. Since 1969 the school has been known as the F.D.
Conradie Primary School.
The Commercial Hotel
in Hamlet was outspan and resting place for man and beast. After the discovery
of diamonds in 1870, the owner, John Taylor decided to start a transport
business. He used donkey carts to transport goods from Wellington, through Ceres
and Hamlet, to Kimberley. Wellington was then the nearest train station to
Kimberley.
In 1906 the Prince Alfred’s Hamlet members of the Ceres Dutch Reformed Church
decided to build their own church. D.G. Roux laid the cornerstone on 5 May 1906.
Each member had to help by donating a delivery of the stones and each family
bought its own pew. In 1926 a parsonage was built so that a full-time minister
could be appointed to serve this congregation. On 5 November 1954 they broke
away from Ceres “Mother” Church and Rev. I.B. Fourie took up the position of
minister of the independent parish. On 25 April 1964 Fourie laid the cornerstone
of the new church. The new building was opened on 14 and 15 November and the old
building was converted into a hall.
A Dutch Reformed Mission Church, i.e. a separate church for Coloured people, was
established in 1965 and a church was built. The first minister was J. Marais.
This church, as well as many other old houses, did not survive the earthquake of
1969.
In 1928 Prince Alfred’s Hamlet got its own train station. The Minister of
Railways, W.C. Malan, applied the last bolt to the line before the train, filled
with school children, left Ceres for the ceremony at Hamlet.
A Town Council was inaugurated on 8 December 1874 and on 28 December 1910 the
town was given the status of Municipality under the Municipality Law of 1882. In
1926 a Town Hall was built and in 1979 the offices next to it were added.
The
Hamlet Country Hotel is the oldest business still in operation. Part of the
building was constructed in the 19th century and since 1940 the Kahn family has
run it.

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