McGregor - one of the jewels of South Africa. The village of McGregor has been described as the best preserved and most complete example of mid-nineteenth century townscape in the Cape Province
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Some History



The charming village of McGregor lies at the foot of the Riviersonderend mountains, 20 km from Robertson on a good tarred road.  A dirt road does connect the village with the N2 via the Stormsvlei Pass, but the tar peters out a little way beyond the village towards the famous McGregor to Greyton walk via the Bushmanskloof Pass.  It is this physical sense of  isolation which has helped to preserve some of the most attractive 19th century architecture in the Western Cape.

HistoryThe village shares the climate of the Little Karoo: hot in summer and cool to cold in winter, when the rain falls and occasionally snow shimmers in the sunshine on the encircling hills.  It is good farming country, and although the !Xan travelled through the area en route to the sea, it was the soil which drew the first farmers to settle in the late 1700s. 

A few scattered houses were built in the early 1800s.  Some were used for nagmaal (such as a terrace of three known as Die Trein in Voortrekker Street), some housed labourers and some were built by people such as the miller and the whipstock maker.  The village was officially proclaimed only in 1862 and divided into 2½ha. Plots.  By 1905, all the land had been bought by 19 smallholders and farmers, and their names are recorded on a contemporary map now in the McGregor Museum.

Die TreinWhen the plots were auctioned, an advertising poster apparently claimed that the main road to Cape Town from the north would probably pass through the village.  This never happened, and neither did the planned road over the mountains through the Boesmanskloof Pass to Greyton. As a result, the village has retained its friendliness and peaceful feel, with thatch-roofed cottages,  vines, apricot trees and olive groves adding a special beauty. 

The local Heritage Society aims to maintain its historical significance, in architectural and social terms, to promote conservation awareness and continue the development of the surrounding Nature Reserve.

The growing settlement was originally called Lady Grey.  Confusingly for the authorities of the day and the post office, the village shared this name with another in the Eastern Cape.  But in 1904 the congregation of the Dutch Reformed Church decided to call their parish and new church in Voortrekker Street after their much-loved pastor, the Rev. Andrew McGregor, who had just retired after 40 years of dedicated service in Robertson.   Two years later, in April 1906, the relieved authorities followed suit and gazetted an official name change to McGregor.



Lady Eliza Lucy Grey



Lady Eliza Lucy GreyWhen McGregor was proclaimed in 1862, it was named Lady Grey in honour of Eliza, the wife of Cape Governor Sir George Grey.  Anthony Abbott has written the following fascinating story about her.

According to documentation sent to him by a Mrs. Julie Lund, of the Strawberry Hill Farm management committee in Australia, Lady Grey was by no means colourless . She caused a lot of trouble. If Helen of Troy had a face that launched a thousand ships, Lady Grey managed the no mean feat of turning a ship around in mid-Atlantic.

George as visiting magistrate to Albany Western Australia met the young Eliza Lucy, the seventh child of Sir Richard and Lady Ann Spencer, at the Strawberry Hill Farm , as we know, the Spencer family home. Sir Richard had served under Lord Nelson
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Myths of The Road to Nowhere

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AN EXCELLENT ROAD runs from Robertson to McGregor. It carries on through the heart of the village and then… stops.

Originally, this road was meant to continue through the mountains to Greyton, and then on to Cape Town. In 1861 it was decided
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McGregor Now



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AN AESTHETICS COMMITTEE has been commissioned by the local council to vet building plans. They have drawn up a series of guidelines for building in McGregor in order to try to maintain and perpetuate the historic building styles of the village. Anyone planning to build must
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Clan MacGregor

Clan McGregor crest

The Clan Gregor is a Highland Scottish clan. Outlawed for nearly two hundred years after losing their lands in a long power struggle with the Clan Campbell, the Clan Gregor claims descent from the third son of Kenneth MacAlpin, the first King of Scotland, a descent which is proclaimed in the motto, 'S Rioghal Mo Dhream, translated as Royal is my Race.
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A famous son (of a son of a son) of McGregor

Chris McGregor

The great grandson of the Reverend McGregor was the famous jazz musician, Chris McGregor, who is credited with discovering the black jazz scene (or, more correctly, bringing it to a wider audience). McGregor moved from South Africa to London in the early 60's,
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