The Kimberley Mine Museum is a window back to a time when fortune seekers converged here to dig for diamonds. This mining museum recreates what the town must have looked like. This allows visitors to admire a replica of the stone on which the country’s diamond wealth was founded.
Did you know?
The Big Hole is the largest hand-dug excavation in the world.
The Kimberley Mine Museum offers a trip back in time to when diamonds were first found in South Africa in 1866. Three years later the 83-carat ‘Star of South Africa’ was discovered in the same area.
Then came significant finds in Griqualand West, near the Vaal River, on the farms Bultfontein, Dorstfontein and Vooruitzicht. On a nearby hillock, Colesberg Kopje, the richest treasure house of all was found.
Fortune seekers converged from all over the world and the grey, dusty air around the Kimberley camp was soon filled with the rocking of soil sifting cradles, metal clanging on rocks and honky-tonk. In no time the kopje had disappeared to be replaced by the famous Big Hole.
The town was then a place of weather-discoloured tents and corrugated iron houses. Interspersed with trading stores and many bars and brothels. But the surface and alluvial diamonds became harder and harder to find, forcing many diggers to leave and Kimberley settled to become a respectable, elegant Victorian city.
A snippet of those early days has been captured by the Kimberley Mine Museum, with various displays and exhibitions detailing what life was like for the fortune-seekers who converged on the area hoping to strike it lucky.
There is a lookout point over the famous Big Hole at the museum. The hole itself is 225m deep with a surface area of 17ha and a perimeter of 1.6km. It ceased production on 14 August 1914 when the lower reaches were flooded.
The De Beers Hall in the grounds of this mining museum houses a display of jewellery and uncut diamonds, including a replica of the first Hopetown stone.
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