|

Cradle and four poster bed in main bedroom of homestead.

Four 19th Century Cape copper and brass laundry irons by Joseph
Lawton with a 19th century copper pot at the back

The kitchen of the farmstead with a variety of 18th and 19th
century furniture and kitchen utensils on exhibition

The Cloete family conducted their wine trade from this desk in
the wine cellar
|
The house is furnished as the home of
affluent farmers of the 18th to early 19th century at the Cape.
Furniture was placed in pairs and paintings according to themes where
possible. Most of the furniture in the house was made at the Cape.
During restoration in 1926, the architect Kendall and his team
discovered traces of decorative motifs which included stencilwork and
dados on the interior of the entrance hall of the house. These motifs
must have been removed, as no trace of them could be found during the
recent restoration. The paint colours and dadoes are typical of Cape
houses of the 18th century.
The entrance hall contains furniture and paintings which date
from the late 18th to early 19th century. The festoon blinds or
ophaalders are similar to those used by the Cloetes, the family who
owned the farm from 1778 - 1885.
The study is to the left of the entrance hall. The men
traditionally gathered here to converse and to smoke a pipe of
tobacco. Furniture used for writing is found here. The objects in the
room date from the 18th century to early 19th century and the
furniture is in the Neo-Classical or Louis XVI style. The earthenware
is of Delft and Chinese origin and was made for household use. The
paintings depict military scenes and a horse rider.
The bedroom on the eastern side with its view of the garden,
vineyards and sea is situated next to the study. This is the main
bedroom and the owner of the farm and his wife slept here. The
furniture and other objects date from the 18th and 19th centuries. The
four-poster bed is reputed to have belonged to the Afrikaans poet J H
Hofmeyr and is typical of four-poster beds used at the Cape. During
this time houses did not have bathrooms and toilet facilities. The
baby bath and bidet are examples of portable washing facilities used.
The kitchen contains objects from the 17th to 19th centuries.
The spindle chairs, described by some as slave chairs, were found in
kitchens of the time. The Frisian tail clock or staartklok was
traditionally used in Friesland as a kitchen clock and would also have
been used as such in the Cape.
The dining hall is the biggest room in the house and is the
enlarged passage of the original Van der Stel house. Here the Cloetes
entertained visitors and guests, apparently every day. The room is
furnished with objects used in dining-rooms during the 18th and 19th
centuries. The paintings have a seafaring theme.
The workroom was originally used as a bedroom. Objects in the
room date from the 18th and 19th centuries. The paintings have
interiors as their theme.
The bedroom on the western side is furnished with objects from
the 18th to 19th centuries.
The women used to gather or kept themselves busy with handiwork in the
drawing-room or sitting-room. At the time of the Cloetes, the room had
many mirrors as is presently the case. The furniture in the room dates
from the 18th century and is in the Rococo or Louis XV style.
The cellars below the house are probably those of the ground
floor of the original Van der Stel house. The rooms were used by the
Cloetes as storage area for good-quality bottled wine, vegetables and
fruit. The rooms with windows were used as living space and workplaces
for slaves and later for house servants. The area below the bedroom on
the western side is a chicken run.
The Wine Museum is situated in a part of the historic wine
cellar. Storage and drinking vessels for wine, dating from antiquity
to the early 20th century are presently exhibited. A room next to the
wine cellar was used by the Cloetes as an office for wine sales, with
the desk they used as one of the exhibitions.
The Wine Museum is
also used to exhibit a part of the carriage collection, amongst which
are a Sefton Landau, Cape Cart, Ralli Cart, Buggy and a Farm Cart. The
remainder of the carriage collection on the farm is exhibited in the
coach house that forms part of the Jonkershuis complex. Amongst them
are light trolleys or 'molwaens', a wagon drawn by six horses and a
pioneer wagon known as a 'kakebeenwa'. |