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The McGregors in South Africa

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By tonymac04

Two Scottish clans came together in South Africa in the 1860s and started a
South African dynasty.

The Robertsons
The first was the Robertson clan, established by the Rev Dr William Robertson,
born on 13 July 1805 on his father’s farm Burn Riggs near Inverurie, near
Aberdeen. He went to study at King’s College, Aberdeen at the age of 13.
Three years later he had to abandon his studies as he became very ill with
tuberculosis.
At about the same time, many nautical miles to the south, the new English
governor of the Cape Colony, Lord Charles Somerset, was keen to do
something to improve the educational facilities available to people living in the
colony, and also to address the shortage of properly trained and qualified
ministers in the Dutch Reformed Church. He looked to Scotland to find people
to assist in both these areas of work.
Somerset commissioned an English minister, the Rev Dr. George Thom, who
had joined the Dutch Reformed Church and was on furlough in the United
Kingdom, to find suitable people in Scotland. Dr Thom visited Aberdeen and See all 14
photos
there engaged Church of Scotland minister the Rev Andrew Murray and, as a An unknown artist painted a full length
teacher, William Robertson. portrait of Dr William Robertson, which
And so in February 1822 William Robertson, then still Mr. Robertson, in the was cut down to this.

company of the Rev Andrew Murray, set sail from London for a four month
journey to South Africa in the 180 ton brig Arethusa. They arrived in Table Bay on 2 July, some 17 weeks after leaving the
United Kingdom.
Robertson’s first posting was to Graaff Reinet, where he was to open the Free English School. Andrew Murray was also
sent to Graaff Reinet to become minister of the Dutch Reformed Church there. For the first two years Robertson stayed in
the pastorie (parsonage) with Rev Murray.
Robertson, in spite of his being only 17 years old, was very energetic and soon had the school up and running. The town at
the time had a population of about 1800. On the advice of the Landdrost, Mr Andries Stockenstrom (later Sir Andries)
Robertson started an evening school called the Evening Academy for Secondary Education.
After five years, when his contract expired and his health had improved greatly, Robertson returned to Scotland to resume
his studies at King’s College, Aberdeen, where he graduated with his M.A. in March 1828. He then continued studying
divinity, first at Aberdeen and later at Edinburgh.
Robertson was ordained a minister in the Church of Scotland in January 1831 after which he went to Utrecht in Holland to
improve his Dutch, which he had started to learn in the Cape Colony.
By October of the same year Robertson was back in the Cape Colony where he was ordained as a minister of the Dutch
Reformed Church and appointed to first the church in Clanwilliam and two years later to the church in Swellendam.
He was conferred with the degree of Doctor of Divinity by King’s College in October 1840.
Meanwhile Dr Robertson married Eliza Truter, daughter of a well-known Cape family whose founder had arrived there in
1722 and was for many years the master gardener of the Dutch East India Company.
Dr and Mrs Robertson had ten children, of whom nine survived. The one of relevance of this story is Elizabeth Augusta
Robertson, born in Swellendam in 1839.
This brings us to the connection with the other clan in our story, the McGregors.
Lord Charles Somerset
Eliza Truter

Map of the Overberg region of the Western Cape. This is the area in which both Dr
Robertson and his son-in-law the Rev Andrew McGregor ministered.

The McGregors
In the town of Golspie, Sutherland, in the far north of Scotland, a merchant
called Alexander McGregor ran an enterprise called “The Emporium”. He had
a son, Andrew, born in 1829, who entered the Church of Scotland as a minister
of the Free Tolbooth Church in Edinburgh.
Dr Robertson was in Scotland in 1860 looking for more Scottish ministers to
serve in the Dutch Reformed Church in the Cape Colony. Andrew McGregor
joined the group of ministers Robertson had recruited and arrived in South
Africa in 1862. He went to work in the Robertson parish. This parish was in the
village called Hoopsrivier, which had been renamed Robertson in 1853, in
honour of the great Doctor.
Three months after his arrival in the Cape Andrew McGregor married Elizabeth
Augusta (fondly known in the family as “Lily”) and took his new bride to live
and work with him in Robertson. They lived there until Rev Andrew retired in
1902, when they moved to Cape Town, to live in the house he named “Rob
Roy Villa” in Hillside Road, Tamboerskloof.
While ministering in Robertson Andrew was very actively assisting in a
neighbouring parish in the little town of Lady Grey. As a result of his work this
parish became a separate congregation in its own right. The village was
renamed McGregor in his honour in 1902.
During their time in Robertson Andrew and Lily had ten children, of whom four
died in childhood. All of the surviving children were interesting in their own
The tobstone of Alexander McGregor,
rights.
merchant of Golspie.
The first son was Alexander John McGregor, born in 1864. He was an
outstanding scholar and rose rapidly in the legal profession after obtaining
degrees at the South African College (the forerunner of the University of Cape Town) and Oriel College, Oxford. He was
called to the bar at the Inner Temple and then returned to South Africa where, in 1889, he was admitted as an advocate of
the Supreme Court of the Cape Colony. Thereafter he became Staats Procureur (State Attorney) of the Orange Free State,
later becoming a Judge under first the Republic and then the British colony and finally in the Union of South Africa after
1910.
Judge McGregor married Elizabeth, the youngest daughter of the President of the Republic of the Orange Free State,
President Jan Brand, in 1891. Their only son William (Willy), a Rhodes Scholar, was killed in action in Flanders during the
First World War. Their oldest daughter Sybil married an Inner Temple barrister, Alan Corbett, who for many years was
Commissioner for Inland Revenue of the Union. Their son Michael eventually became a judge himself and later the Chief
Justice of South Africa.
Andrew and Lily McGregor’s first daughter, born in 1869, was also called Elizabeth and also known as Lily. She married a
Beaufort West farmer Mauritz de Villiers and they had five children before Mauritz died at the age of 37. Their first son Frank
was a banker in Springfontein. Their second son Maurice studied at the Royal Military Academy in Woolwich, UK., and came
home to South Africa to join the South African Army. During the Second World War he rose to the rank of Brigadier. The
three daughters of Lily and Mauritz were Elise, who married John Otway Hayes (their son and grandson made names for
themselves as professional golfers); Laetitia, who married Reginald Charles Rand, a Durban businessman; and Pansy, who
married Allanby Henderson-Jones, a banker.
The second daughter, also born in 1869, to Andrew and Lily was Mina Hepburn Wallace McGregor, who married the Rev
Gerrit du Plessis, a dominee of the Dutch Reformed Church in Calitzdorp and later Army Chaplain in Namibia (then still
South West Africa) during the First World War. They had no children.

The Rev Andrew and Mrs McGregor and their family in front of the pastorie
(parsonage) in Robertson
The Rev Gerrit du Plessis and his wife Mina

My own family
Now we come to my direct line of descent, with the second son born to Lily and
Andrew McGregor, also called Andrew, second name Murray after the well-known
Andrew Murray of Graaff Reinet, who was also his godfather. He was born in
1873 and after gaining his BA from the South African College studied at the
Theological Seminary in Stellenbosch. After serving in the ministry in Cape Town
he went on to minister to the concentration camp in East London during the
Anglo-Boer War. From there he was called first to the church in Oudtshoorn and
later to Three Anchor Bay, Cape Town. He retired from this church in 1939 and
answered a call from the Presbyterian Church in Oudtshoorn, where he
ministered until his death in 1943.
Andrew McGregor Jnr married Maria (Miemie) Hofmeyr, who was the daughter of
Ds Arend Hofmeyr of Hanover, Cape.
Miemie and Andrew Jnr had five children, four girls and one boy, who all
graduated from the University of Cape Town. The oldest, Louise, married Alex
Kirstein, a physiotherapist and farmer, who also happened to be blind. He was a
most amazing man who bred race horses, introduced peanut farming to the then
Transvaal (now North West Province) and was the last United Party Member of
Parliament for Klerksdorp, being succeeded in that seat by the forgettable Peet
Pelser.
Louise (usually called Lucy) and Alex farmed on the farm Dennegeur, near
Klerksdorp, where I spent many wonderful holidays with my cousins Andrew, Jan,
Marie, Helena, and Alex Jnr (usually called “Oubaas”). I remember Uncle Alex
pulling a peanut plant out of the ground and explaining its features to me, my
brother Chris and our father. This must have been in 1949 or 1950. I also saw him
stitch up a long gash in the leg of one of his horses which had made an ill-
considered jump over a barbed wire fence.
Elizabeth, the second daughter, married Tielman Roos, the Parliamentary Report in the Cape Times of 21
Librarian. This was the sister who was idolised by my father. She had studied in September 1943 of the death of the Rev
Andrew McGregor (Jnr).
the United States before her marriage, and died after having one son, Johann. I
never met her but knew Uncle Tielman and cousin Johann very well.
The next daughter was Isabel Henrietta (Hetty) who became a teacher and later a lecturer at the Teacher Training College
in Paarl. She never married, and after her father’s death her mother came to live with her there. She lived in three different
houses over the years that I knew her there, and I came to know each of the houses very well. My brother Chris also
boarded with her after he had completed his training on the SA Training Ship General Botha. He went to Paarl Boys’ High
to write his matric prior to going to the South African College of Music in Cape Town.
Murray McGregor, my father, was born in 1908 in Worcester, Cape Colony, and was the fourth child of Andrew and Miemie.
After schooling at Sea Point Boys’ High and two years on the SA Training Ship General Botha, he went on to the University
of Cape Town where he obtained first a BA and then a B. Ed degree. His thesis for his B. Ed was a history of the
amamFengu people of the then Transkei, which showed the way his mind was moving even then. He married Margery
Morris, daughter of James H Morris, a pharmacist from George, in the Cape Colony.
The youngest member of the family was Mary, who qualified in medicine, went to work at a mission hospital in the then
Transkei, where she met and married John Smithen, a teacher at an Anglican mission school in Mthatha. They had three
children, Louise, McGregor and Andrew.

Two Rev Andrew McGregors. Not sure who the lad is. Perhaps my father Murray.
Andrew and Miemie McGregor

Alex Kirstein with one of his horses. I think the young men are his sons Andrew
(left) and Jan
Lily McGregor

Hetty, Murray and Lucy with their mother on the occasion of her 90th birthday
Miemie McGregor and her sister-in-law Hetty (the so-called "Big Aunt Hetty"!)

Back to the older generation of McGregors


Andrew and Lily McGregor’s last daughter, born in 1878, was Henrietta Maria, always known as Hetty. To the family she
was “Big Aunt Hetty” to distinguish her from “Little Aunt Hetty,” my father’s sister, although “Big” aunt Hetty was
physically very much smaller than “Little Aunt Hetty! This Hetty was in one of the first classes of women students to
graduate from the South African College, in I think 1906. She did not marry, as it was thought that she was too frail to marry,
although she outlived by many years all her siblings, dying in 1979 just before her 101st birthday. She was the family
historian and all her life collected material relating to the family, most of which has been passed onto the Jagger Memorial
Library at the University of Cape Town.
Lily and Andrew’s last child was John Robertson, born in 1880. He studied medicine at Edinburgh and Dublin and became
a general practitioner in George. It was on a visit to his Uncle John in George that my father met my mother! John married
Marion de Wet and they had four sons. Two of their sons practised law in George, one joined a financial institution and one
followed in his father’s footsteps and became a doctor, practising on the mines. John died in 1938.

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