Tongaat

Tongaat

Aerial view of Tongaat
Tongaat
Tongaat
Tongaat

 Tongaat shown within KwaZulu-Natal

Coordinates: 29°34′00″S 31°07′00″E / 29.56667°S 31.11667°E / -29.56667; 31.11667Coordinates: 29°34′00″S 31°07′00″E / 29.56667°S 31.11667°E / -29.56667; 31.11667
Country South Africa
Province KwaZulu-Natal
Municipality eThekwini
Established 1945
Area[1]
  Total 11.72 km2 (4.53 sq mi)
Population (2011)[1]
  Total 42,554
  Density 3,600/km2 (9,400/sq mi)
Racial makeup (2011)[1]
  Black African 41.1%
  Coloured 1.2%
  Indian/Asian 56.7%
  White 0.4%
  Other 0.5%
First languages (2011)[1]
  English 59.3%
  Zulu 32.3%
  Xhosa 3.6%
  S. Ndebele 1.0%
  Other 3.8%
Postal code (street) 4399
PO box 4400
Area code 032

Tongaat is a town in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, that is situated on the banks of the Tongati River about 37 km north of Durban and 28 km south of Stanger. It now forms part of eThekwini, the Greater Durban metropolitan area. Its population is predominantly people of Indian descent. Aesthetically English colonial but distinctly cosmopolitan in flavour, Tongaat, part of the Sugar Coast, now supports one of the largest sugar-producing districts in the world.

History

Tongaat was established in 1945 and its name was corrupted from the river's name, Tongati, the Zulu word for the Strychnos mackenii trees that flourish on its banks.

Commerce

The town is the centre for the Tongaat Hulett Sugar and the Moreland Molasses Companies. Maidstone Sugar Mill, one of the country's first mills, completed in 1850. Some original sugar-crushing methods are still employed.

Places of worship

Mosques

Churches

Temples

Notable people

The award-winning scientist Quarraisha Abdool Karim was born here in 1960.[2] There is a statue of Dr. Ansuyah Ratipul Singh near the town hall in Tongaat.[3]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Main Place Tongaat". Census 2011.
  2. Gerald M. Oppenheimer; Ronald Bayer (4 June 2007). Shattered Dreams: An Oral History of the South African AIDS Epidemic. Oxford University Press, USA. pp. 247–. ISBN 978-0-19-530730-6.
  3. "Ansuyah Ratipul Singh" South African History Online" (2011).
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