Kruger National Park in the 1950s
Appearance
This article has no lead section. (August 2021) |
1950
[edit]Year | Total visitors |
---|---|
1950 | 71 279 |
1954 | 91 106 |
1955 | 101 058 |
1956 | 105 183 |
1957 | 117 187 |
1958 | 116 849 |
1959 | 135 740 |
- July - A Zambesi shark, Carcharhinus leucas, was caught at the confluence of the Limpopo and Luvuvhu Rivers.[3]
- November 19 - Ranger Nyokane Shilobane shot dead by poachers near Malelane.[4]
1953
[edit]- November – The construction of Orpen rest camp starts. After completion in 1954, it replaced the old Rabelais rest camp and entrance gate.[5]
1957
[edit]- December 10 - Major James Stevenson-Hamilton, warden of the Sabi Game Reserve and the Kruger National Park (1902 - 1946), dies at the age of 90 in White River.
1958
[edit]- September 22 - Ranger Johannes Maluleke murdered with an axe near Punda Maria. The three poachers responsible were arrested and convicted of murder.[4]
1959
[edit]- April - Mahlangeni ranger post, situated at the confluence of the Groot Letaba and Klein Letaba Rivers, opens.[5]
- September 28 – An outbreak of anthrax rapidly spreads throughout the area north of the Letaba River. 101 carcasses, mainly kudu, are found and burnt before the epidemic ends in November 1959.[6]
See also
[edit]- History of the Kruger National Park
- The Kruger National Park in the 1960s
- The Kruger National Park in the 1970s
- The Kruger National Park in the 1980s
References
[edit]- ^ Bulpin, T.V., Treasury of Travel Series: Kruger National Park, Creda Press, 1974.
- ^ Labuschagne, R.J., 60 years Kruger Park, National Parks Board of Trustees of the Union of South Africa, 1958.
- ^ Pienaar, U. de V., The Freshwater Fishes of the Kruger National Park, Koedoe Vol 11, No 1 (1968)
- ^ a b Pienaar, U. de V., Neem uit die Verlede, Sigma Pers, 1990.
- ^ a b Joubert, Salomon, The Kruger National Park: A History Volume I, High Branching, Johannesburg, 2007
- ^ Pienaar, U. de V. (1960). "'n Uitbraak van miltsiekte onder wild in die Nasionale Krugerwildtuin 28.9.59 tot 20.11.59". Koedoe. 3 (1): 238–251. doi:10.4102/koedoe.v3i1.850.