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Ata with Bessie
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Attorney General William Porter Photograph of William Porter, attorney general of the Cape Colony, 1839-1865.
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Audrey Photograph of Audrey [Bierly?] in a garden
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Audrey Chaplin (Golightly), Valerie Chambers (Harvey), Cynthia Asher (Barnes) and Betty Cowden (Muggleston)
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Audrey Fray's baby Photograph of Audrey Fray's baby in a swing
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Aunt Amelia with boy
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Aunt Bee caught unaware (wife of Cooper Apperly)
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Aunt Florence
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Aunt Florence Apperly
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Aunt Maggie and Marjorie
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Aunt Maggie Evans, unknown and Uncle Emerd Bone
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Aunt Maggie in the park
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Author and management at the entrance to the Lych Gate Pairwich Church
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Avenue of First at Rondebosch - Cape Town, 1891 Photograph showing Avenue of First at Rondebosch, in Cape Town, 1891. Inscription: "To dear Ethel, from Joe, Xmas 1891"
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Award of honorary D.Litt to Frederick Guy Butler by the University of Natal, 1970
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Ayton's Hotel in New Street, afterwards known as the Phoenix Hotel
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B B Burnett
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B B Burnett on Rag float, 1938
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B.P.C. Satara 15.3.02 During the Anglo-Boer War, Satara (India) was one of the Prisoner-or-War (POW) camps used by the British Forces to imprison for Boers from South Africa. Elria Wessels wrote the following as a caption to the image, on the Facebook group “The Anglo-Boer War (The South African War) – 189 – 1902” (retrieved 19 August 2020). ‘This was a camp for 200 parolees and was situated 128 km south of Poona. They were mostly from Ahmednagar and were moved there in March 1902 after uproar broke out in the camp over the signing of parole. The men willing to sign feared for their life and had to be removed for their own safety. Petrus Joubert and his brothers were amongst the 180 men who finally signed the parole agreement at the station at Poona. They could move freely within a radius of 6 miles from the camp —a highly appreciated privilege especially after fifteen months confined in Ahmednagar. Major C.T. Wayte was in charge of the camp until its closure on 9 August 1902. The men were housed in huts which were slightly better appointed than those at Ahmednagar but they were uncomfortably hot. The camp itself was open i.e. it had no fence surrounding it.’
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Baakens River and Fort Frederick, 1840
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Babs Phillips and Lynne Edley at the Bloemfontein Hotel on their way to the gymnastics Nationals
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Baby
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Baby
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Baby
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Baby