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Descendants of William Park and Mary Martin
Park Family History The following pages have a highly speculative attempt to reconstruct the history of the family of William Park, of Bath, Belfast and Quebec, who died in Bath, Somerset, England in 1844. It is known that his daughter Matilda married Richard Vause in Bath in January 1852, and that Matilda's sister married Frederick Hawkins on the same day, and that his wife was Mary Martin, daughter of John Martin, a merchant of Belfast, Antrim, Ireland. Most of the other information is based on circumstantial evidence and “connecting the dots”. Recently several people have helped by giving new dots to connect, but fresh evidence may show that they could be connected in entirely different way, so please do not add this information to your family tree yet. I've been helped a great deal by ShaunJ of the Rootschat website, who found some of the dots. I have compiled this family tree as a research tool only, as a working hypothesis to see where other family members might fit in. I will send this to some other family members who may be interested. If you have any more information on this family, please let me have it. If you would like me to pass on anything else I may find, please let me know. Please note the date on these documents. I am continuing my research and so the information here may be out of date and superseded within a few days, so please get in touch with me for the latest information. Stephen Hayes PO Box 7648 Pretoria 0001 South Africa E-mail: [email protected] Web: http://hayesgreene.wordpress.com http://hayesgreene.wikispaces.com Mon 26 September 2011 Family Group Record- 15 Page 1 of 3 Husband William PARK-2231 Born Place Abt 1780 Died-2 Place 23 May 1844Bath, Somerset, England Married Place Husband's father James PARK MRIN: 514 Husband's mother Elizabeth Wife Mary MARTIN-2223 Born-4 Place Abt 1784Belfast, Ulster, Ireland Died Place 19 Aug 1851Bath, Somerset, England Wife's father 5 John MARTIN-221 MRIN: 9 Wife's mother Children List each child in order of birth. -
Between Empire and Revolution : a Life of Sidney Bunting, 1873-1936
BETWEEN EMPIRE AND REVOLUTION: A LIFE OF SIDNEY BUNTING, 1873–1936 Empires in Perspective Series Editors: Emmanuel K. Akyeampong Tony Ballantyne Duncan Bell Francisco Bethencourt Durba Ghosh Forthcoming Titles A Wider Patriotism: Alfred Milner and the British Empire J. Lee Th ompson Missionary Education and Empire in Late Colonial India, 1860–1920 Hayden J. A. Bellenoit Transoceanic Radical: William Duane, National Identity and Empire, 1760–1835 Nigel Little Ireland and Empire, 1692–1770 Charles Ivar McGrath Natural Science and the Origins of the British Empire Sarah Irving Empire of Political Th ought: Indigenous Australians and the Language of Colonial Government Bruce Buchan www.pickeringchatto.com/empires.htm BETWEEN EMPIRE AND REVOLUTION: A LIFE OF SIDNEY BUNTING, 1873–1936 BY Allison Drew london PICKERING & CHATTO 2007 Published by Pickering & Chatto (Publishers) Limited 21 Bloomsbury Way, London WC1A 2TH 2252 Ridge Road, Brookfi eld, Vermont 05036-9704, USA www.pickeringchatto.com All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without prior permission of the publisher. © Pickering & Chatto (Publishers) Limited 2007 © Allison Drew 2007 british library cataloguing in publication data Drew, Allison Between empire and revolution : a life of Sidney Bunting, 1873–1936. – (Empires in per- spective) 1. Bunting, Sidney Percival, 1873–1936 2. Social reformers – South Africa – Biography 3. Communists – South Africa – Biography 4. Lawyers – South Africa – Biography 5. South Africa – Politics and government – 1909–1948 6. South Africa – Politics and government – 1836–1909 7. South Africa – Social conditions I. -
Final Environmental Impact Assessment Report for the Cornubia Retail Park
Final Environmental Impact Assessment Report for the Cornubia Retail Park A Report for Tongaat Hulett Developments 8 August 2013 DM/0034/2012 KZN/EIA/0000802/2012 DOCUMENT DESCRIPTION Client: Tongaat Hulett Developments Project Name: Environmental Impact Assessment for the Proposed Cornubia Retail Park Development, eThekwini Municipality, KZN Royal HaskoningDHV Reference Number: E02.DUR.000484 Authority Reference Number: DM/0034/2012 KZN/EIA/0000802/2012 Compiled by: Humayrah Bassa Date: 8 August 2013 Location: Durban Review: Prashika Reddy _____________________________ Signature Approval: Malcolm Roods _____________________________ Signature © Royal HaskoningDHV All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, without the written permission from Royal HaskoningDHV. PUBLIC REVIEW OF THE FINAL ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT ASSESSMENT REPORT Royal HaskoningDHV (RHDHV) would like to thank all Interested and Affected Parties (I&APs) for their continued participation and input into this Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) process. The comments received to date have proven invaluable to this process and we do appreciate your time and effort. The Draft Environmental Impact Assessment Report (EIAR) has been made available for comment for a period of 40 days from Monday 20 May 2013 until Friday 28 June 2013. All comments which were received have been critical in the finalisation of this final EIAR. The comments received to date are included in a Comments and Responses Report which is provided in Appendix D. The final EIAR will be available for a further commenting period of 21 days after which it will be submitted to the Department of Agriculture and Environmental Affairs (DAEA) for acceptance. -
Provincial Road Network Provincial Road Network CLASS, SURFACE P, Concrete L, Blacktop G, Blacktop On-Line Roads !
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South Africa
Safrica Page 1 of 42 Recent Reports Support HRW About HRW Site Map May 1995 Vol. 7, No.3 SOUTH AFRICA THREATS TO A NEW DEMOCRACY Continuing Violence in KwaZulu-Natal INTRODUCTION For the last decade South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal region has been troubled by political violence. This conflict escalated during the four years of negotiations for a transition to democratic rule, and reached the status of a virtual civil war in the last months before the national elections of April 1994, significantly disrupting the election process. Although the first year of democratic government in South Africa has led to a decrease in the monthly death toll, the figures remain high enough to threaten the process of national reconstruction. In particular, violence may prevent the establishment of democratic local government structures in KwaZulu-Natal following further elections scheduled to be held on November 1, 1995. The basis of this violence remains the conflict between the African National Congress (ANC), now the leading party in the Government of National Unity, and the Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP), the majority party within the new region of KwaZulu-Natal that replaced the former white province of Natal and the black homeland of KwaZulu. Although the IFP abandoned a boycott of the negotiations process and election campaign in order to participate in the April 1994 poll, following last minute concessions to its position, neither this decision nor the election itself finally resolved the points at issue. While the ANC has argued during the year since the election that the final constitutional arrangements for South Africa should include a relatively centralized government and the introduction of elected government structures at all levels, the IFP has maintained instead that South Africa's regions should form a federal system, and that the colonial tribal government structures should remain in place in the former homelands. -
Office Market Report Umhlanga/La Lucia, Kwazulu-Natal
Office Market Report Umhlanga/La Lucia, KwaZulu-Natal April 2019 Broll Insight Accessibility Amenities The combined Umhlanga and La Lucia node is Amenities include retail and medical facilities, banks, accessible from the N2 highway via the M41, with La conference facilities and hotels. The Umhlanga New Lucia south and Umhlanga north of the M41. Since the Town Centre, in particular, hosts a large hospitality recent completion of the major N2 intersection sector. The area known as Umhlanga Village (between upgrade, congestion to/from the area has been the M4 and the beachfront, around Chartwell Drive) is significantly lessened. Additionally, a new ‘fly-over’ the premier restaurant and bar district with the from Cornubia into Umhlanga via Umhlanga Ridge beachfront and promenade being major additional Boulevard has also been completed. This further attractions to tourists and locals alike. Gateway Theatre lightens the traffic burden in the area and includes an of Shopping is a popular retail destination, while on-ramp from the N2 South (King Shaka Airport) Cornubia Mall opened its doors at the end of 2017. directly into Umhlanga, acting as an alternative to the Nedbank’s Park Square also boasts a 5,500m² retail main M41 intersection. component focussed at the convenience shopper. With Makro Cornubia, measuring 20,000m² and being the Aesthetic Appeal first tenant in the Cornubia Logistics Park, having successfully opened its doors at the end of March 2019. Approximately 76% of total stock is A-grade with many buildings having sea views and attractively landscaped gardens. Building height restrictions are notably more Security generous in the Ridgeside district with high quality, The node is well established and secure. -
The Cholera Outbreak
The Cholera Outbreak: A 2000-2002 case study of the source of the outbreak in the Madlebe Tribal Authority areas, uThungulu Region, KwaZulu-Natal rdsn Edward Cottle The Rural Development Services Network (RDSN) Private Bag X67 Braamfontein 2017 Tel: (011) 403 7324 www.rdsn.org.za Hameda Deedat International Labour and Research Information Group (ILRIG) P.O. Box 1213 Woodstock 7915 Tel: (021) 447 6375 www.aidc.org.za/ilrig Edited by Dudley Moloi Sub-edited by Nicolas Dieltiens Funders: Municipal Services Project SOUTH AFRICAN MUNICIPAL WORKERS’ UNION Acknowledgements A special word of thanks to: Fieldworkers Dudu Khumalo and Sikhumbuso Khanyile from SAMWU KZN, for their help with the community interviews. And to our referees: Dr. David Hemson (Human Science Research Council) Dr. David Sanders (Public Health Programme, University of the Western Cape) Sue Tilley (Social Consultant) Stephen Greenberg (Social Consultant) Contents Executive summary 1 Section 1: Introduction 7 1.1 Objectives of the study 9 Section 2: Methodology 10 2.1 Research methods 10 2.1.1 Transepts 10 2.1.2 In-depth Interviews 11 2.1.3 Interviews in Ngwelezane 11 2.1.4 Interviews in the rural areas 12 2.1.5 Interviews with municipal officials 12 2.2 Limitations of the research 13 Section 3: The Policy Context 14 Section 4: The Geographic Context 16 4.1 A description of the area under Investigation 16 4.1.1 Introduction 16 4.1.2 Brief History 16 4.1.3 Demographic information 17 4.1.4 Economic Expansion 18 4.1.5 Climate & Disease 20 4.1.6 Water & Sanitation 20 4.2 Post-apartheid -
Msunduzi Co-Operative Development Strategy
MSUNDUZI MUNICIPALITY __________________________________________ CO-OPERATIVE DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY Final Development Strategy Issue Date: September 2017 Revision No.: 02 Project No.: 14511 Date: September 2017 Document Title: Final Co-operative Development Strategy Author: Leon Katambwe Revision Number: 02 Checked by: Kavi Soni Approved by: Kavi Soni Signature: For: SiVEST SA (PTY) LTD MSUNDUZI MUNICIPALITY CO-OPERATIVE DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY TABLE OF CONTENTS 2. INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................................................... 1 2.1. BACKGROUND ....................................................................................................................... 1 2.2. OVERALL OBJECTIVE OF THE STUDY .................................................................................................. 2 2.3. SCOPE OF THE STUDY .................................................................................................................... 2 2.4. URBAN-ECON’S APPROACH: THE THEORY OF CHANGE OR OUTCOMES APPROACH .................. 3 2.5. METHODOLOGY ........................................................................................................................... 5 2.6. ACTION STEPS ............................................................................................................................. 6 2.7. REPORT OUTLINE .......................................................................................................................... 8 3. CO-OPERATIVE -
Draft IDP 2019 2020
MTHONJANENI MUNICIPALITY 2019/2020 FINANCIAL YEAR DRAFT REVIEWED IDP 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS SECTION A: EXECUTIVE SUMMARY .......................................................................................... 10 1.1 INTRODUCTION .......................................................... Error! Bookmark not defined.- 1.2. WHO ARE WE .................................................................................................................... 10 1.3. CURRENT SITUATION .................................................................................................. 11 1.4. CURRENT EMPLOYMENT STATISTICS ................................................................... 11 1.5. TRADITIONAL AUTHORITIES ................................................................................... 13 1.6. WHAT ARE THE CHALLENGES WE FACE ............................................................... 14 1.7. MTHONJANENI MUNICIPAL VISION ...................................................................... 14 1.8. WHAT ARE WE DOING TO IMPROVE OURSELVES ............................................ 14 1.9. HOW WILL OUR PROGRESS BE MEASURED ......................................................... 19 1.10. SPATIAL VISION FOR THE MUNICIPALITY .......................................................... 19 1.11 PREPARATION – HOW WAS THIS IDP DEVELOPED .......................................... 21 1.11.1 THE PROCESS PLAN ....................................................................................................... 21 1.11.2. THE IDP ALIGNMENT PROCESS -
Umlalazi Strategic Planning Session
UMLALAZI STRATEGIC PLANNING SESSION INTEGRATED DEVELOPMENT PLANNING Lizette Dirker IDP Coordination Business Unit INFORMANTS OF THE IDP SOUTH AFRICAN PLANNING SYSTEMS National Provincial Local District wide PGDS Vision 2030 DGDP (Vision 2035) (Vision 2035) National IDP PGDP Development 5 years Plan National Provincial Municipal Planning Planning Council Commission Commission WARD BASED SDGs SDGs PLANS “KZN as a prosperous Province with healthy, secure and skilled population, living in dignity and harmony, acting as a gateway to Africa and the World” Sustainable Development Goals AGENDA 2063 50 Year Vision • Agenda 2063 is a strategic framework for the socio-economic transformation of the continent over the next 50 years. It builds on, and seeks to accelerate the implementation of past and existing continental initiatives for growth and sustainable development Adopted in January 2015 • Adopted in January 2015, in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia by the 24th African Union (AU) Assembly of Heads of State and Government 10 Year implementation cycle • Five ten year implementation plan – the first plan 2014-2023 1. A prosperous Africa based on inclusive growth and sustainable 5. An Africa with a strong cultural development identity, common heritage, shared values and ethics 2. An integrated continent, politically united and based on the ideals of Pan-Africanism and the 6. An Africa whose development vision of Africa’s Renaissance is people-driven, relying on the potential of African people, especially its women and youth, and caring for children 3. An Africa of good governance, democracy, respect for human rights, justice and the rule of law 7. Africa as a strong, united and influential global player and partner 4. -
Government Gazette Staatskoerant REPUBLIC of SOUTH AFRICA REPUBLIEK VAN SUID-AFRIKA
Government Gazette Staatskoerant REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA REPUBLIEK VAN SUID-AFRIKA November Vol. 641 Pretoria, 9 2018 November No. 42025 PART 1 OF 2 LEGAL NOTICES A WETLIKE KENNISGEWINGS ISSN 1682-5843 N.B. The Government Printing Works will 42025 not be held responsible for the quality of “Hard Copies” or “Electronic Files” submitted for publication purposes 9 771682 584003 AIDS HELPLINE: 0800-0123-22 Prevention is the cure 2 No. 42025 GOVERNMENT GAZETTE, 9 NOVEMBER 2018 IMPORTANT NOTICE: THE GOVERNMENT PRINTING WORKS WILL NOT BE HELD RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY ERRORS THAT MIGHT OCCUR DUE TO THE SUBMISSION OF INCOMPLETE / INCORRECT / ILLEGIBLE COPY. NO FUTURE QUERIES WILL BE HANDLED IN CONNECTION WITH THE ABOVE. Table of Contents LEGAL NOTICES BUSINESS NOTICES • BESIGHEIDSKENNISGEWINGS Gauteng ....................................................................................................................................... 12 KwaZulu-Natal ................................................................................................................................ 13 Mpumalanga .................................................................................................................................. 13 North West / Noordwes ..................................................................................................................... 14 Northern Cape / Noord-Kaap ............................................................................................................. 14 Western Cape / Wes-Kaap ............................................................................................................... -
Childcare Arrangements of Migrants: a Case Study of Mothers in Imbali, Pietermaritzburg
Childcare arrangements of migrants: A case study of mothers in Imbali, Pietermaritzburg. By Thobelani Nompilo Majola Submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Masters in Population Studies, in the School of Built Environment and Development Studies, University of KwaZulu-Natal November 2018 i COLLEGE OF HUMANITIES DECLARATION- PLAGIARISM I, Thobelani Nompilo Majola declare that: 1. The research reported in this thesis, except where otherwise indicated, is my original research. 2. This thesis has not been submitted for any degree or examination at any other university. 3. This thesis does not contain other persons’ data, pictures, graphs or other information, unless specifically acknowledged as being sourced from other persons. 4. This thesis does not contain other persons' writing, unless specifically acknowledged as being sourced from other researchers. Where other written sources have been quoted, then: a. Their words have been re-written but the general information attributed to them has been referenced b. Where their exact words have been used, then their writing has been placed in italics and inside quotation marks, and referenced. 5. This thesis does not contain text, graphics or tables copied and pasted from the internet, unless specifically acknowledged. Sources being detailed in the thesis are properly acknowledged in the references sections. Signed ............................................................ Date ............................................................ ii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I would like to thank everyone who have assisted me throughout my studies: Firstly, I thank God, for guiding and protecting throughout my journey, without him I would not have made it this far. To my loving mother N.S Mngadi, words alone cannot express my gratitude.