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Claremont, Cape Town

Claremont is a suburb of Cape Town, South Africa. It is situated 9 kilometres south of the city, and is one of the so-called "Southern Suburbs", it is situated alongside Lansdowne. It is an important commercial and residential area, which is currently experiencing significant growth and development.

Claremont
Top: Aerial view of the Claremont Central business district in 2007. Bottom left: The Arderne Gardens. Bottom right: St Saviour's Church.
Street map of Claremont
Claremont
Claremont
Claremont
Coordinates: 33°58′50″S 18°27′55″E / 33.98056°S 18.46528°E / -33.98056; 18.46528Coordinates: 33°58′50″S 18°27′55″E / 33.98056°S 18.46528°E / -33.98056; 18.46528
CountrySouth Africa
ProvinceWestern Cape
MunicipalityCity of Cape Town
Main PlaceCape Town
Established1834 as Claremont
Area
 • Total5.21 km2 (2.01 sq mi)
Population
 (2011)[1]
 • Total17,198
 • Density3,300/km2 (8,500/sq mi)
Racial makeup (2011)
 • Black African16.8%
 • Coloured11.1%
 • Indian/Asian4.8%
 • White64.1%
 • Other3.2%
First languages (2011)
 • English83.4%
 • Afrikaans7.2%
 • Xhosa2.2%
 • Other7.2%
Time zoneUTC+2 (SAST)
Postal code (street)
7708
PO box
7735
Websitewww.claremontcentral.co.za

History

Until the arrival of Dutch colonists in 1652, the uncultivated veld of the Cape Peninsula was used by the nomadic Khoisan as grazing for their cattle. The Dutch established an outpost on the shore of Table Bay, and in 1657 they established a number of farms south of the outpost. The most southerly of those original farms, named Louwvliet and Questenburg, are today covered by the suburbs of Claremont and Newlands.

The area was agricultural for about 150 years. Other estates that were established included Veldhuyzen in 1676, Stellenberg in 1697, Weltevreden (originally part of Stellenberg) in 1730, Sans Souci (originally part of Questenburg) in 1786, and The Vineyard in 1798. They produced grain and grapes, and some farmers made wine.

After the colony had been taken over by the British in 1814, the character of the area gradually changed from agricultural to residential. British settlers and officials bought the farms, renamed some of them, and turned them into country residences. Weltevreden was subdivided in 1822, and it was a portion of it that was later to be renamed Claremont. The distinguished British astronomer Sir John Herschel put the area on the map by living at Feldhausen (formerly Veldhuyzen) from 1834 to 1838.

Village (1840–1886)

A village began to develop on the main road near Feldhausen in the 1830s, and by 1840 it had become known as 'Claremont'. The annual Cape Almanac for 1840[2] described the area and stated that :

The new village of 'Claremont' succeeds, near to which, on the left, is 'Claremont House', the property of R. Waters Esq, who has lately laid out the grounds with much taste, in the manner usually known as the English style of landscape gardening.

The village grew during the 1840s and 1850s. Public transport consisted of horse-drawn omnibuses which plied along the Main Road from 1837 until the railway was opened in 1864.[3] In 1845 the timber merchant Ralph Henry Arderne started work on what would become the Arderne Gardens.[4] The gardens, by then regionally renowned, were bought by the municipal government and turned into a public park in 1928.[5]

In 1863, the Anglo-Italian immigrant and businessman John Molteno, who was later to become the Cape Colony's first prime minister, bought 140 acres of land centred on the Claremont House estate. The property was subdivided and developed from 1897 onwards, and Claremont House itself, situated in modern terms between Molteno Road to Pine Road, was later demolished. However its two extensions, Greenfield House and Barkly House, still stand today as schools.[6][7]

 
Claremont Train Station. See photosphere version

The opening of the railway from Cape Town to Wynberg in 1864 spurred subdivision and development.[8] The Feldhausen estate (also known as "The Grove") was subdivided in 1869–1870. A new Congregational Church was built on the Main Road in 1877. The Claremont Hall was opened in 1879.

The land along Lansdowne Road east of the railway line was subdivided and developed from 1882, creating a large residential area which is now known as "Harfield Village".

Municipality (1886–1913)

In 1882, a village management board was formed, and in 1886 it was replaced by the Municipality of Claremont, which managed neighbouring Newlands too. The privately owned Claremont Hall was taken over as a town hall. The first telephone system was installed in the early 1880s.

There was further residential development, with the subdivision of the Claremont House, Lansdowne, Milburn House, and Paradise estates in the 1890s. An electricity power station was built, and an electric tramway service was introduced in 1897.[9]

The housing boom which followed the Anglo-Boer War saw the subdivision of further estates in the 1900s. Most streets were named in 1903–1904, many of them thematically (e.g. after saints, explorers, British counties and towns, American presidents, and British politicians).[10]

Suburb (1913– )

In 1913, Claremont and several other municipalities were incorporated into the city of Cape Town.

Considerable residential growth took place in the 1920s and 1930s, when estates such as Palmyra, Keurboom, Ravensworth, Sanatorium Estate, The Vineyard, Wyndover, and Edinburgh Estate were subdivided and developed. An additional railway station, named "Harfield Road", was built in 1931.

The government enforced its apartheid system on Claremont in the 1960s, forcing the Coloured residents to leave. As a result, large areas of the suburb stood derelict for several years.

Claremont remained predominantly residential until the early 1970s, when commercial development began. A major shopping mall, named Cavendish Square, was opened in 1973, and other shopping centres followed.

There was a further building boom in the 1990s, and the suburb is currently experiencing another, which includes the construction of three large apartment blocks, a hotel, two office blocks, the re-modeling of three other commercial buildings, and the construction of a transport interchange and a bypass road.

Places of worship

 
Claremont Congregational Church (founded in 1840, the present building dating from 1877) in 2010

Claremont places of worship, past and present:

  • Claremont Congregational Church (1840- )
  • Claremont Mosque [11] (1851- )
  • St Saviour's Church (Anglican) [12] (1854- )
  • St Matthew's Church (Anglican) [13] (1888- )
  • Claremont Methodist Church [14] (1890s- )
  • Salvation Army Claremont Temple (1898– )
  • Claremont Baptist Church [15] (1902- )
  • Claremont Wynberg Hebrew Congregation [16] (1904- )
  • New Apostolic Church (1905- )
  • Old Apostolic Church[17]
  • Harvey Road Mosque (1908- )
  • Al-Jamiah Mosque (1911- )
  • Seventh Day Adventist Church
  • St Ignatius Church (Roman Catholic) (1930- )
  • East Claremont Congregational Church (1932- )
  • Christ the King (Anglican) (1941- )
  • St Stephen's Church (Reformed Evangelical Church REACH SA - formerly Church of England) (1941- )
  • Dutch Reformed Church (1941–1991)
  • St Bernard's Church (Roman Catholic) (1955- )
  • Christian Science Church (1959- )
  • Assembly of God
  • Church of the Nazarene (1975- )
  • Bethany Fellowship Full Gospel Church

Schools

Some Claremont schools, past and present:

  • Mrs Harris's (later Mrs Midgley's) seminary (1840–1849)
  • St Saviour's Grammar School (1878–1885)
  • Grove Primary School (1885- )
  • Claremont Primary school[18] (1892- )
  • Union College (1893- ) – in 1919 it moved to Spion Kop close to Ladysmith in Natal. In 1928 it moved to Somerset West and was renamed Helderberg College. Today it is called Helderberg College Of Higher Education.
  • Western Province Primary School [19] (1913- )
  • Talfalah Institute (1917- ) – moved to Athlone in 1971
  • Herschel Girls School (1922- )
  • Lady Buxton Children's Home (1923- )
  • Livingstone High School (1926- )
  • Rosmead Central Primary School (1940- )
  • Barkly House (1945- )
  • Batavia School
  • Oasis Association (1952- )
  • Greenfield Girls' Primary School (1957- )
  • Bel Porto School for Severely Mentally Handicapped [20]
  • Abbott's College[21]
  • Claremont High School
  • Sans Souci Girls' High School

Commerce and industry

Some Claremont businesses, past and present:

  • Oasis Association (1965–present)
  • Coimbra Bakery (1964- )
  • Orchard's Hotel (later Crown Hotel) (1836-c1969)
  • Lansdowne (later Claremont) Hotel (1880s-2001)
  • F.J. Pearce & Co (1882–1966)
  • Hall's Pharmacy (1892-1970s)
  • Vineyard Hotel (1893- )
  • Henshilwoods (1894–1998)
  • Brenner's Stores (1904- )
  • Pavilion Cinema (1912-1930s)
  • Star (later Orpheum) Cinema (1912-1960s)
  • Scala (later Protea) Cinema (1938–1992)
  • Cavendish Square shopping mall (1973- )
  • Werdmuller Centre shopping mall (1975- )
  • Kenilworth Centre shopping mall (1974- )
  • The Atrium (now Stadium-on-Main) shopping centre (1990- )
  • Heritage College
  • Cape Town School of English [22]
  • Cape Town International School of Languages
  • Adèle Beauty Therapy School
  • Cape Town School of Eurythmy [23]
  • School of Practical Philosophy [24]

Many national banks and chains of shops have branches in Claremont.

Sport

Some Claremont sports clubs and facilities, past and present:

  • Claremont Cricket Club (1876- ) – no longer in Claremont
  • Kenilworth Racecourse (1882- ) – Kenilworth later became a suburb in its own right
  • Violets Rugby Club (c1886- ) – moved to Crawford in the 1970s[25]
  • Villagers' Rugby Football Club (1875 -) – moved to Claremont from Mowbray in 1898.
  • Claremont Swimming Baths (1895-1960s)
  • Claremont Tennis Club (1908- )
  • Rosmead Sports Ground (1921- )
  • Cape Technical College Grounds (1927- )
  • Ackerman's Sports Grounds (later Impala Park) (1920s-2000s)
  • Celtic Harriers Athletics Club (1970- )

Medical

Claremont's first medical facility may have been the temporary isolation hospital set up during the 1882 smallpox epidemic. Other medical facilities, past and present:

  • Claremont Medical & Surgical Sanatorium (1896–1901)
  • Kingsbury Maternity Home (1945- )
  • Claremont Medical Centre (1970- ) – on the old Crown Hotel site
  • Kingsbury Hospital (1990s- )

Public amenities

 
The Cape Dutch style Claremont Civic Centre in 2010
  • Claremont Post Office (1846-2019)
  • Claremont Town Hall (1879–1946)
  • Claremont Library (1897- )
  • Arderne Gardens (1927- )
  • Clareinch Nurses' War Memorial Home (1934- ) – moved to Pinelands in the 1960s
  • Janet Bourhill Institute (1944- ) – moved to Bonteheuwel in the 1970s
  • Clareinch Post Office (1936- )
  • Claremont Civic Centre (1960- )

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b c d "Sub Place Claremont". Census 2011.
  2. ^ South African Directory & Almanack (1840)
  3. ^ Coates, P.R. (1976). Track and Trackless
  4. ^ . www.capetown.gov.za. Archived from the original on 2015-04-16. Retrieved 2015-08-21.
  5. ^ . Friends of the Arderne Gardens. Archived from the original on 23 September 2015. Retrieved 21 August 2015.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 2013-03-13. Retrieved 2013-04-18.
  7. ^ "Places important to the Family". Molteno Family History. 2012-08-12. Retrieved 2018-06-18.
  8. ^ . www.atlanticrail.co.za. Archived from the original on 2011-09-26.
  9. ^ . heritage.eskom.co.za. Archived from the original on 2018-12-31. Retrieved 2018-12-21.
  10. ^ Hart, P. (1999). Claremont, Newlands and Bishopscourt Street Names
  11. ^ Gamildien, F. (2004) Claremont Main Road Mosque
  12. ^ Langham-Carter, R.R. (1973) Under the Mountain
  13. ^ Thomas, L.R. (1993) St Matthew's Church
  14. ^ Anon (1979). Claremont Cavalcade
  15. ^ Tudor, D. (1980) Claremont Baptist Church 1905–80
  16. ^ Claremont Wynberg Hebrew Congregation (Kehillat Agudat Achim)
  17. ^ Old Apostolic Church Congregation, Claremont 2011-10-04 at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ Claremont Primary School
  19. ^ Western Province Primary School 2007-09-06 at the Wayback Machine
  20. ^ Bel Porto School 2013-02-15 at the Wayback Machine
  21. ^ Abbotts College 2007-05-24 at the Wayback Machine
  22. ^ Cape Town School of English
  23. ^ Cape Town School of Eurythmy
  24. ^ School of Practical Philosophy 2008-05-17 at the Wayback Machine
  25. ^ Booley, A. (1998) Forgotten Heroes

References

  • Field, S. (Ed) (2001). Lost Communities, Living Memories.
  • Henshilwood, N. (1972). A Cape Childhood.
  • Louw, J. & Malan L. (1984). The Louws of Louwvliet.
  • Murray, J. (1958). Claremont Album.
  • Playne, S. (1911). Cape Colony – Its Commerce, Industry and Resources.
  • Tredgold, A. (1990). The Ardernes and their Garden.

External links

  • Claremont Directory

claremont, cape, town, claremont, suburb, cape, town, south, africa, situated, kilometres, south, city, called, southern, suburbs, situated, alongside, lansdowne, important, commercial, residential, area, which, currently, experiencing, significant, growth, de. Claremont is a suburb of Cape Town South Africa It is situated 9 kilometres south of the city and is one of the so called Southern Suburbs it is situated alongside Lansdowne It is an important commercial and residential area which is currently experiencing significant growth and development ClaremontTop Aerial view of the Claremont Central business district in 2007 Bottom left The Arderne Gardens Bottom right St Saviour s Church Street map of ClaremontClaremontShow map of Western CapeClaremontShow map of South AfricaClaremontShow map of AfricaCoordinates 33 58 50 S 18 27 55 E 33 98056 S 18 46528 E 33 98056 18 46528 Coordinates 33 58 50 S 18 27 55 E 33 98056 S 18 46528 E 33 98056 18 46528CountrySouth AfricaProvinceWestern CapeMunicipalityCity of Cape TownMain PlaceCape TownEstablished1834 as ClaremontArea 1 Total5 21 km2 2 01 sq mi Population 2011 1 Total17 198 Density3 300 km2 8 500 sq mi Racial makeup 2011 1 Black African16 8 Coloured11 1 Indian Asian4 8 White64 1 Other3 2 First languages 2011 1 English83 4 Afrikaans7 2 Xhosa2 2 Other7 2 Time zoneUTC 2 SAST Postal code street 7708PO box7735Websitewww claremontcentral co za Contents 1 History 1 1 Village 1840 1886 1 2 Municipality 1886 1913 1 3 Suburb 1913 2 Places of worship 3 Schools 4 Commerce and industry 5 Sport 6 Medical 7 Public amenities 8 Footnotes 9 References 10 External linksHistory EditUntil the arrival of Dutch colonists in 1652 the uncultivated veld of the Cape Peninsula was used by the nomadic Khoisan as grazing for their cattle The Dutch established an outpost on the shore of Table Bay and in 1657 they established a number of farms south of the outpost The most southerly of those original farms named Louwvliet and Questenburg are today covered by the suburbs of Claremont and Newlands The area was agricultural for about 150 years Other estates that were established included Veldhuyzen in 1676 Stellenberg in 1697 Weltevreden originally part of Stellenberg in 1730 Sans Souci originally part of Questenburg in 1786 and The Vineyard in 1798 They produced grain and grapes and some farmers made wine After the colony had been taken over by the British in 1814 the character of the area gradually changed from agricultural to residential British settlers and officials bought the farms renamed some of them and turned them into country residences Weltevreden was subdivided in 1822 and it was a portion of it that was later to be renamed Claremont The distinguished British astronomer Sir John Herschel put the area on the map by living at Feldhausen formerly Veldhuyzen from 1834 to 1838 Village 1840 1886 Edit A village began to develop on the main road near Feldhausen in the 1830s and by 1840 it had become known as Claremont The annual Cape Almanac for 1840 2 described the area and stated that The new village of Claremont succeeds near to which on the left is Claremont House the property of R Waters Esq who has lately laid out the grounds with much taste in the manner usually known as the English style of landscape gardening The village grew during the 1840s and 1850s Public transport consisted of horse drawn omnibuses which plied along the Main Road from 1837 until the railway was opened in 1864 3 In 1845 the timber merchant Ralph Henry Arderne started work on what would become the Arderne Gardens 4 The gardens by then regionally renowned were bought by the municipal government and turned into a public park in 1928 5 In 1863 the Anglo Italian immigrant and businessman John Molteno who was later to become the Cape Colony s first prime minister bought 140 acres of land centred on the Claremont House estate The property was subdivided and developed from 1897 onwards and Claremont House itself situated in modern terms between Molteno Road to Pine Road was later demolished However its two extensions Greenfield House and Barkly House still stand today as schools 6 7 Claremont Train Station See photosphere version The opening of the railway from Cape Town to Wynberg in 1864 spurred subdivision and development 8 The Feldhausen estate also known as The Grove was subdivided in 1869 1870 A new Congregational Church was built on the Main Road in 1877 The Claremont Hall was opened in 1879 The land along Lansdowne Road east of the railway line was subdivided and developed from 1882 creating a large residential area which is now known as Harfield Village Municipality 1886 1913 Edit In 1882 a village management board was formed and in 1886 it was replaced by the Municipality of Claremont which managed neighbouring Newlands too The privately owned Claremont Hall was taken over as a town hall The first telephone system was installed in the early 1880s There was further residential development with the subdivision of the Claremont House Lansdowne Milburn House and Paradise estates in the 1890s An electricity power station was built and an electric tramway service was introduced in 1897 9 The housing boom which followed the Anglo Boer War saw the subdivision of further estates in the 1900s Most streets were named in 1903 1904 many of them thematically e g after saints explorers British counties and towns American presidents and British politicians 10 Suburb 1913 Edit In 1913 Claremont and several other municipalities were incorporated into the city of Cape Town Considerable residential growth took place in the 1920s and 1930s when estates such as Palmyra Keurboom Ravensworth Sanatorium Estate The Vineyard Wyndover and Edinburgh Estate were subdivided and developed An additional railway station named Harfield Road was built in 1931 The government enforced its apartheid system on Claremont in the 1960s forcing the Coloured residents to leave As a result large areas of the suburb stood derelict for several years Claremont remained predominantly residential until the early 1970s when commercial development began A major shopping mall named Cavendish Square was opened in 1973 and other shopping centres followed There was a further building boom in the 1990s and the suburb is currently experiencing another which includes the construction of three large apartment blocks a hotel two office blocks the re modeling of three other commercial buildings and the construction of a transport interchange and a bypass road Places of worship Edit Claremont Congregational Church founded in 1840 the present building dating from 1877 in 2010 Claremont places of worship past and present Claremont Congregational Church 1840 Claremont Mosque 11 1851 St Saviour s Church Anglican 12 1854 St Matthew s Church Anglican 13 1888 Claremont Methodist Church 14 1890s Salvation Army Claremont Temple 1898 Claremont Baptist Church 15 1902 Claremont Wynberg Hebrew Congregation 16 1904 New Apostolic Church 1905 Old Apostolic Church 17 Harvey Road Mosque 1908 Al Jamiah Mosque 1911 Seventh Day Adventist Church St Ignatius Church Roman Catholic 1930 East Claremont Congregational Church 1932 Christ the King Anglican 1941 St Stephen s Church Reformed Evangelical Church REACH SA formerly Church of England 1941 Dutch Reformed Church 1941 1991 St Bernard s Church Roman Catholic 1955 Christian Science Church 1959 Assembly of God Church of the Nazarene 1975 Bethany Fellowship Full Gospel ChurchSchools EditSome Claremont schools past and present Mrs Harris s later Mrs Midgley s seminary 1840 1849 St Saviour s Grammar School 1878 1885 Grove Primary School 1885 Claremont Primary school 18 1892 Union College 1893 in 1919 it moved to Spion Kop close to Ladysmith in Natal In 1928 it moved to Somerset West and was renamed Helderberg College Today it is called Helderberg College Of Higher Education Western Province Primary School 19 1913 Talfalah Institute 1917 moved to Athlone in 1971 Herschel Girls School 1922 Lady Buxton Children s Home 1923 Livingstone High School 1926 Rosmead Central Primary School 1940 Barkly House 1945 Batavia School Oasis Association 1952 Greenfield Girls Primary School 1957 Bel Porto School for Severely Mentally Handicapped 20 Abbott s College 21 Claremont High School Sans Souci Girls High SchoolCommerce and industry EditSome Claremont businesses past and present Oasis Association 1965 present Coimbra Bakery 1964 Orchard s Hotel later Crown Hotel 1836 c1969 Lansdowne later Claremont Hotel 1880s 2001 F J Pearce amp Co 1882 1966 Hall s Pharmacy 1892 1970s Vineyard Hotel 1893 Henshilwoods 1894 1998 Brenner s Stores 1904 Pavilion Cinema 1912 1930s Star later Orpheum Cinema 1912 1960s Scala later Protea Cinema 1938 1992 Cavendish Square shopping mall 1973 Werdmuller Centre shopping mall 1975 Kenilworth Centre shopping mall 1974 The Atrium now Stadium on Main shopping centre 1990 Heritage College Cape Town School of English 22 Cape Town International School of Languages Adele Beauty Therapy School Cape Town School of Eurythmy 23 School of Practical Philosophy 24 Many national banks and chains of shops have branches in Claremont Sport EditSome Claremont sports clubs and facilities past and present Claremont Cricket Club 1876 no longer in Claremont Kenilworth Racecourse 1882 Kenilworth later became a suburb in its own right Violets Rugby Club c1886 moved to Crawford in the 1970s 25 Villagers Rugby Football Club 1875 moved to Claremont from Mowbray in 1898 Claremont Swimming Baths 1895 1960s Claremont Tennis Club 1908 Rosmead Sports Ground 1921 Cape Technical College Grounds 1927 Ackerman s Sports Grounds later Impala Park 1920s 2000s Celtic Harriers Athletics Club 1970 Medical EditClaremont s first medical facility may have been the temporary isolation hospital set up during the 1882 smallpox epidemic Other medical facilities past and present Claremont Medical amp Surgical Sanatorium 1896 1901 Kingsbury Maternity Home 1945 Claremont Medical Centre 1970 on the old Crown Hotel site Kingsbury Hospital 1990s Public amenities Edit The Cape Dutch style Claremont Civic Centre in 2010 Claremont Post Office 1846 2019 Claremont Town Hall 1879 1946 Claremont Library 1897 Arderne Gardens 1927 Clareinch Nurses War Memorial Home 1934 moved to Pinelands in the 1960s Janet Bourhill Institute 1944 moved to Bonteheuwel in the 1970s Clareinch Post Office 1936 Claremont Civic Centre 1960 Footnotes Edit a b c d Sub Place Claremont Census 2011 South African Directory amp Almanack 1840 Coates P R 1976 Track and Trackless Arderne Gardens www capetown gov za Archived from the original on 2015 04 16 Retrieved 2015 08 21 History The Arderne Gardens Friends of the Arderne Gardens Archived from the original on 23 September 2015 Retrieved 21 August 2015 History of Greenfield Girls Primary School Claremont Cape Town South Africa Archived from the original on 2013 03 13 Retrieved 2013 04 18 Places important to the Family Molteno Family History 2012 08 12 Retrieved 2018 06 18 History of Stations on the Cape Town to Simonstown line Atlantic Rail Heritage Steam Train Cape Town www atlanticrail co za Archived from the original on 2011 09 26 About Company Information heritage eskom co za Archived from the original on 2018 12 31 Retrieved 2018 12 21 Hart P 1999 Claremont Newlands and Bishopscourt Street Names Gamildien F 2004 Claremont Main Road Mosque Langham Carter R R 1973 Under the Mountain Thomas L R 1993 St Matthew s Church Anon 1979 Claremont Cavalcade Tudor D 1980 Claremont Baptist Church 1905 80 Claremont Wynberg Hebrew Congregation Kehillat Agudat Achim Old Apostolic Church Congregation Claremont Archived 2011 10 04 at the Wayback Machine Claremont Primary School Western Province Primary School Archived 2007 09 06 at the Wayback Machine Bel Porto School Archived 2013 02 15 at the Wayback Machine Abbotts College Archived 2007 05 24 at the Wayback Machine Cape Town School of English Cape Town School of Eurythmy School of Practical Philosophy Archived 2008 05 17 at the Wayback Machine Booley A 1998 Forgotten HeroesReferences EditField S Ed 2001 Lost Communities Living Memories Henshilwood N 1972 A Cape Childhood Louw J amp Malan L 1984 The Louws of Louwvliet Murray J 1958 Claremont Album Playne S 1911 Cape Colony Its Commerce Industry and Resources Tredgold A 1990 The Ardernes and their Garden External links EditClaremont Central The Claremont Community Website Claremont Directory Wikimedia Commons has media related to Claremont Cape Town Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Claremont Cape Town amp oldid 1117033694, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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