Tuynhuys - History

History

The last National Party President of RSA, F.W. de Klerk announced from its steps, on 18 March 1992, that South Africa had ‘closed the book on apartheid’.

The building was constructed in 1700 by the Dutch East India Company as a residence for important visitors to the Cape, lies between the South African National Parliament buildings and the President’s Council in Company's Gardens, Cape Town. It has been used as an official residence by almost all the governors of the Cape - Dutch, Batavian and British - and by State Presidents after the country became a Republic in 1961.

Historians have put together a sketch of Tuynhuys’s history and, it seems, it began as little more than a tool shed. This was converted into a guesthouse in the year Simon van der Stel became Governor in 1679, and by 1710 the guesthouse had already become a double-storey building with a flat roof.

However, there is evidence that Tuynhuys was not always livable. Lord Charles Somerset, who was responsible for adding a beautiful ballroom and for much of the re-decoration, had to move out of the building in 1824 as it was uninhabitable. Towards the end of the 19th century a debate as to its very existence occurred as authorities considered demolishing it, and a further restoration of the residence took place in 1967.

Tuynhuys was the venue for the opening of the first Cape Parliament by the British Governor in 1854.

Today, De Tuynhuys is the office of the Presidency of a democratic South Africa that has emerged after centuries of colonization and decades of apartheid.

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