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In March 1897 Rhodes secured the first of more than 20 farms, including
Boschendal and Rhone. Twelve young managers were appointed, many of whom had been trained in California. Under Pickstone's tutelage they transformed the farms, introducing modern methods of pruning, grafting and irrigation, and
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epidemic, caused by tiny, sap-sucking insects, spread through the Cape vineyards in the 1880s and 1890s, destroying the vines of the
Boschendal area in 1890. It caused much damage and led to a farming depression before resistant American vine stocks were introduced on a scale wide enough to stop the
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in 1688 and the title deed was written in 1713. In 1715 the farm was acquired by another
Huguenot, Abraham de Villiers, who sold it to his brother Jacques in 1717. The De Villiers family farmed Boschendal until 1879. In 1812 Paul de Villiers and his wife, Anna Susanna Louw, completed a new house at
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Rhodes's political career had seen him rise to Prime
Minister of the Cape Colony. When he was implicated in the Jameson Raid, an unsuccessful attempt to overthrow the Boer Republic in the Transvaal, he was left with little option but to resign. In 1896 Rhodes decided to invest further in fruit
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Harry
Pickstone, an Englishman with experience of growing fruit in California, convinced Rhodes that a commercial nursery was needed to propagate new varieties of fruit trees for the industry. Rhodes financed his first venture, the Pioneer Fruit Growing Company.
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In the meantime, farmers needed alternative forms of agriculture, and the lucrative fruit industry in
California provided a suitable model for the Cape. Pioneering work was done by fruit farmers in Wellington and the Hex River Valley. In 1892, shipping magnate
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developed and introduced refrigerated cargo space on Union-Castle shipping lines, between the Cape and the largest consumer markets in Europe, which revolutionized the industry and made the export of fresh fruit an attractive proposition.
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and
Boschendal in 1969 one of the key projects was the re-establishment of a range of wines under the Boschendal brand. In 1978, Achim van Arnim took charge as Cellarmaster, vowing to restore pre-eminence for the Estate's produce.
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Boschendal on the site of his father's home. This is the homestead as restored today. Among the guests in the later years of the De
Villiers era was the British Governor at the Cape, Sir
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It was then that "Blanc de Noir" ( white from black) was created — a "blush" white wine made from red grapes, an innovation that sets
Boschendal Wines apart.
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In its new incarnation as
Boschendal - The Estate, the former "Rhodes Fruit Farms" continues to be a major source of employment for local communities.
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manor house, which is open to visitors, together with associated wine tasting venues, restaurants and outbuildings and visitor attractions.
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The vineyards at Boschendal cover 2.54 km between Groot Drakenstein and Simonsberg, and include substantial plantings of
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training farm workers in the new skills. They planted 200 000 deciduous fruit trees - pears, apricots, plums and peaches.
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The farm's title deeds are dated 1685. The estate's first owner, Jean le Long, was one of the party of 200
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farming. Pickstone advised him to buy old wine farms in the Groot Drakenstein, Wellington and
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refugees who were fleeing religious persecution in Europe. He was granted land in the
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344:. Published by Boschendal Limited in association with Keith Phillips Images - 2007,
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Le Rhone House, one of several early 19th century buildings on the farm in the
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Fruit and Food Technology Research Institute, Stellenbosch:
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Site by Boschendal Founders Estate, Dwarsrivier Valley
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151:The Boschendal estate is crowned by the original
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336:Boschendal Silver Book. Boschendal 2007 -
327:. Cape Town: Saayman & Weber Ltd. 1983.
259:"A Valley Emergent: Groot-Drakenstein", by
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97:which has become today's Boschendal Farm.
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384:Official Boschendal Restaurants web site
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40:) is one of the oldest wine estates in
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374:Official Boschendal The Estate Website
193:When Anglo American took ownership of
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325:Tree of Life, The Story of Cape Fruit
85:Rhodes Fruit Farms and Anglo-American
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274:"Boschendal Wine Estate, Cape Town"
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379:Official Boschendal Wines web site
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89:In 1887 the estate was bought by
455:Huguenot history in South Africa
389:Boschendal in Australia web site
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355:link retrieved 12 March 2010
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470:South African heritage sites
369:Official Boschendal web site
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450:Economy of the Western Cape
299:Information Bulletin no.22.
278:South Africa History OnLine
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16:Wine estate in South Africa
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160:Anglo American Corporation
314:. Cape Town: PPECB, 2003.
211:Huguenots in South Africa
445:Wineries of South Africa
74:Dutch East India Company
351:5 November 2009 at the
147:Boschendal - The Estate
44:and is located between
346:Boschendal 2007 E-Book
123:Rhodes & Pickstone
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421:33.87417°S 18.97583°E
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465:South African brands
426:-33.87417; 18.97583
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312:160 Years of Export
261:Eric Lloyd Williams
101:Phylloxera Epidemic
226:Rhodes Fruit Farms
195:Rhodes Fruit Farms
180:Cabernet Sauvignon
95:Rhodes Fruit Farms
52:in South Africa's
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342:978-0-620-38001-0
216:Cecil John Rhodes
70:Cape of Good Hope
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60:Huguenot Origins
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281:. Retrieved
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236:Stellenbosch
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134:Stellenbosch
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42:South Africa
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460:Wine brands
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79:George Grey
46:Franschhoek
439:Categories
412:18°58′33″E
409:33°52′27″S
242:References
172:Chardonnay
153:Cape Dutch
110:epidemic.
107:phylloxera
34:Boschendal
27:Cape Dutch
166:The Wines
105:A global
349:Archived
205:See also
36:(Dutch:
283:27 June
136:areas.
72:by the
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301:(1971)
188:Shiraz
184:Merlot
398:SAHRA
396:, at
231:Paarl
29:style
338:ISBN
285:2022
186:and
174:and
48:and
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250:^
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