As most of you know, I’m on a quest to visit all the places featured in the Hidden Johannesburg book. Last week I went to the View, a historic Victorian mansion in Parktown, as part of a tour with the Johannesburg Heritage Foundation. This brings my total number of Hidden Joburg places visited to 18, with 10 left to go.
The View, believed to be the oldest surviving Victorian mansion in Joburg, is at 18 Ridge Road, Parktown. You can see the Hillbrow Tower peaking out from behind it.
The Queen-Anne-style architecture of the View, which was built in 1896 by City Engineer Charles Aburrow and Philip Treeby, is not considered to be particularly remarkable. “It’s actually rather ugly on the outside,” wrote Hidden Johannesburg author Paul Duncan. And the actual “view” toward Pretoria and the Magaliesberg Mountains, which the house was named for, is long gone thanks to Joburg’s relentless growth. The View is now surrounded by ugly academic and hospital buildings.
But the View’s interior is unlike anything I’ve ever seen.
Our guide, Monique Jefferson, tells us about the View from its spectacular entrance hall.The hand-painted friezes were apparently almost destroyed in the late 20th century, by cigar smoke and general lack of care. But they have since been restored to their original glory.I love the stairway.One more view of the entryway.
The View was built for Sir Thomas Cullinan – founder of the Premier Diamond Mine, where the Cullinan Diamond was discovered – and his wife and ten (!) children. Thomas Cullinan and Lady Anne Cullinan both lived at the View until their deaths, in 1936 and 1963, respectively. Today the View is home to the Transvaal Scottish Regimental Association.
The Transvaal Scottish Bar, manned by a member of the Association who opened up the View for our visit.The former billiard room, with its ornate textured wallpaper and painted pressed steel ceilings.A portrait of Sir Thomas, who started his career as a bricklayer before striking it rich in the diamond business.The dining room.
Villa Arcadia is still my opulent Hidden Joburg mansion of choice. But the View is a must-see for the bird paintings alone.
I can’t get enough of these.I actually think the outside of the house is kind of pretty, unlike that drab medical building right behind it.
The remaining 10 Hidden Joburg places might take me a while to crack. But I hope to achieve one or two more by the end of the year.
Thanks to the Johannesburg Heritage Foundation for putting on a great set of tours over Heritage Weekend.
I guess it’s wrong to say I’ve never blogged about 44 Stanley; I’ve mentioned it countless times over the years (see here and here) when writing about specific restaurants or shops that are there. But I’ve never written a dedicated post about 44 Stanley as a destination and it’s about time I did – especially now, with the holidays upon us.
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It makes me smile, when I see it.