Soweto
Soweto,
home to more than 890 000 people, is known around the world for
its role in South Africa's struggle for liberation, its diverse
cultures and its famous residents.
The township boasts a number of accommodation establishments,
conference venues, and historical sites such as the Hector
Petersen memorial museum, the Oppenheimer towers, and Vilakazi
Street - where two Nobel Peace Prize winners, Nelson Mandela and
Desmond Tutu, once lived.
Soweto
The establishment of Soweto is, like Johannesburg, linked
directly to the discovery of Gold in 1885. Thousands of people
from around the world and South Africa flocked to the new town
to seek their fortunes or to offer their labour. Within 4 years
Johannesburg was the second largest city. More than half the
population was black, most living in multi racial shanty towns
near the gold mines in the centre of the town. As the gold
mining industry developed, so did the need for labour increase.
Migrant labour was started and most of these workers lived in
mine compounds. However other workers had to find their own
accommodation often in appalling conditions.
The first residents of what is now known as Soweto were located
into the area called Klipspriut in 1905 following their
relocation from “Coolietown” in the centre of Johannesburg as a
result of an outbreak of bubonic plague. The Johannesburg City
Council took the opportunity to establish racially segregated
residential areas. Some residents were to be relocated to
Alexandra township (near the present day Sandton). This group
comprised black, Indian and coloured families and they received
freehold title to their land (this was subsequently reversed by
the Apartheid Government). Only black families were located into
Klipspruit and the housing was on a rental basis. Klipspruit was
subsequently renamed Pimville.

During the 1930’s the demand for housing for the large numbers
of black people who had moved into Johannesburg grew to such an
extent that new housing was built in an area known as Orlando,
named after the first administrator Edwin Orlando Leaky.
In the 1940’s a controversial character James Mpanza led the
first land invasion and some 20000 squatters occupied land near
Orlando. James Mpanza is known as the “Father of Soweto”.
In 1959 the residents of Sophiatown were forcibly removed to
Soweto and occupied the area known as Meadowlands. Sir Earnest
Oppenheimer, the first chairman of the Anglo American
Corporation, was appalled by the housing shortage and was
instrumental in arranging a loan for the construction of
additional housing and this is commemorated by the Oppenheimer
Tower in Jabulani.
Current status of Soweto.
Soweto falls within the municipality of the Johannesburg Metro
Council in the province of Gauteng which appropriately means
place of Gold.
The original rental houses have now been sold to the tenants who
received a subsidy from the government to cover the cost of the
houses. Private sector housing was developed from the 1980’s
funded by the various banks. Freehold title is available to the
properties.

Origins of the name.
Soweto obtained its name from the first two letters of South
Western Township which was the original description of the area.
“Soweto is a symbol of the New South Africa, caught between
old squatter misery and new prosperity, squalor and an upbeat
lifestyle, it’s a vibrant city which still openly bears the
scars of the Apartheid past.
And yet shows what’s possible in the New South Africa”