The Independent on Saturday

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Muckleneuk was built in 1914 by sugar magnate Sir Marshall Campbell. On the corner of Marriott and Essenwood roads, the house is in the Cape Dutch revival style. Campbell named his home after his father’s farm, Muckle Neuk, at Umdloti. Bought in 1857, Campbell sr first grew arrowroot and then sugar. The farm’s name was derived from the big bend on the Umdloti River.

The picture of the red bougainvil­lea on the pergola at the entrance to the house was specially painted in 1924 by E Struben for a book on South African gardens.

In 1965, the house and the Campbell Collection­s were bequeathed to the University of KwaZulu-Natal. The recent photo shows the same pergola lined with cars of the staff and visitors using the Killie Campbell Library. Killie (1881-1965) was the daughter of Sir Marshall Campbell.

The black-and-white photo, from the Campbell Collection, captures the renowned gardens, probably in the 1940s. Although the stone walls and steps descending to each terrace survive, most of the original plantings have gone, as the recent photo shows. All the pictures were supplied by Mark Levin.

The Independen­t on Saturday appeals to readers who have old pictures of Durban and other parts of the province to send them to us for considerat­ion. If any readers are featured in the old picture, we will do our best to recreate the scene with them in it again.

Readers sending pictures digitally – images should be about 1MB – can address them, with the relevant informatio­n, to satmail@inl.co.za. If the pictures are in hard copy format, they can be posted to The Editor, Old Pictures, The Independen­t on Saturday, PO Box 47549, Greyville, 4023.

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